November 15th, 2024

Canadian Championship represents unfinished business for CPL powerhouse Forge FC

By Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press on April 17, 2023.

Vancouver Whitecaps' Russell Teibert, centre, hoists the Voyageurs Cup after Vancouver defeated Toronto FC in penalty kicks during the Canadian Championship soccer final, in Vancouver, on Tuesday, July 26, 2022. The 14-team Canadian Championship kicks off this week, starting with matches Tuesday in Hamilton and Montreal as Forge FC hosts FC Laval and CF Montreal entertains Vaughan SC in first-round matches. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Mark the Canadian Championship under unfinished business for CPL powerhouse Forge FC.

The Hamilton-based club, which won the Canadian Premier League title in 2019, ’20 and ’22, and was runner-up in 2021, lost a penalty shootout (8-7) to CF Montreal in the 2021 Canadian Championship semifinal and again to Toronto FC on spot kicks (5-4) in the 2020 final, which did not take place until last June due to the pandemic.

“It’s a competition that we want,” said Forge coach Bobby Smyrniotis. “The club’s been successful in our first four years, winning three North Star Shields. This is obviously a trophy that we don’t have in our cabinet.”

Forge FC hosts FC Laval and CF Montreal entertains Vaughan SC on Tuesday as the 14-team cup competition kicks off again this year.

The four-round Canadian Championship features teams from Major League Soccer, the CPL, League1 BC, League1 Ontario and Quebec’s PLSQ (Premiere ligue de soccer du Quebec).

New to the competition are CPL expansion side Vancouver FC, League1 B.C.’s TSS Rovers from Richmond, and Laval, which was formed in 2021 when CS Fabrose merged with CS Chomedey and Delta Laval.

Forge, which opened the CPL season Saturday with a 2-2 draw with Cavalry FC, is looking forward to another crack at the Voyageurs Cup.

“These are special nights. These are special games,” said Smyrniotis. “We don’t have any continental competition this year with the reshuffling of the (Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League and Scotiabank CONCACAF League) tournaments so this is everything outside the Canadian Premier League season.”

Montreal, which sits 27th overall in Major League Soccer at 1-6-0, is looking for something, anything, to smile about. The slumping club has been outscored 17-3 in league play this season – including 10-0 on its current three-game losing streak – while failing to score in six of seven outings.

There are four other Canadian Championship first-round matches this week.

On Wednesday, it’s HFX Wanderers FC versus Atletico Ottawa and York United FC versus Vancouver FC in a doubleheader at Toronto’s York Lions Stadium, and TSS Rovers FC versus Valour FC at Swangard Stadium in Burnaby, B.C.

On Thursday, Pacific FC hosts Cavalry at Starlight Stadium in Langford, B.C.

Calgary’s Cavalry, Winnipeg’s Valour, Halifax and Vancouver are opening the tournament on the road because of stadium availability and weather conditions.

The Vancouver Whitecaps and Toronto FC received first-round byes as the 2022 champion and runner-up. The Whitecaps won in a penalty shootout (5-3) on July 26 after the final at B.C. Place Stadium finished tied at 1-1.

The Whitecaps will face the York-Vancouver FC winner in the quarterfinal. Toronto awaits either Montreal or Vaughan.

Forge opened the CPL season by rallying for a 2-2 tie against visiting Cavalry, thanks to a 76th-minute volley by substitute Noah Jensen.

Laval, which clinched the PLSQ title in October, has yet to start its season.

Forge defender Garven Metusala, selected eighth overall out of Concordia, in the 2021 CPL-U Sports draft, played in the PLSQ for CS St-Hubert,CS Fabrose and AS Blainville, winning the PLSQ Cup in 2019 with CS Fabrose.

He knows how hungry underdog Laval will be.

“They have a lot of players who are talented, so they’re going to try to prove themselves and showcase their talent,” said Metusala.

“For them it’s a massive event,” added Smyrniotis. “So we’ve got to make sure that we’re sharp from the beginning because this means a lot to them as well.”

Forge kicked off the 2022 Canadian Championship with a 2-0 win over PLSQ’s CS Mont-Royal Outremont before losing 3-0 at Montreal in the quarterfinal.

Expansion Vancouver FC opened its CPL account with a 1-0 loss Saturday at Pacific FC, which needed an 81st-minute goal by Manny Aparicio to decide the match. The two B.C. clubs are under the same ownership group.

The Canadian Championship winner gets to hoist the Voyageurs Cup as well as qualify for the CONCACAF Champions League, the elite club competition in the region.

Toronto has won the Canadian Championship eight times, compared to five for Montreal and twice for the Whitecaps.

Follow @NeilMDavidson on Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 17, 2023

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