Canada open with crucial 1:0 win over Haiti in away leg of the Second Round of FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ Qualifying
Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team defeated Haiti 1:0 to earn an important first leg victory in the Second Round of Qualifying for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022. Cyle Larin’s goal in the 14’ earned Canada the critical away goal. Canada will now head back to Chicago for the second leg on 15 June loo…
Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team defeated Haiti 1:0 to earn an important first leg victory in the Second Round of Qualifying for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022. Cyle Larin’s goal in the 14’ earned Canada the critical away goal. Canada will now head back to Chicago for the second leg on 15 June looking to secure their spot in the Final Round.
Fans can watch the second leg Tuesday 15 June at 9 p.m. ET,
6 p.m. PT LIVE on OneSoccer. Fans will find
extended coverage across Canada Soccer’s digital channels on Twitter,
Instagram, Facebook and YouTube featuring the hashtag #CANMNT.
“This is about getting to the Octagon, it’s about getting
the result we needed, one goal, a win, away goal and now we’re headed back to
Chicago,” said John Herdman, Men’s National Team Head Coach. “In the second
half, we weathered the storm, we weathered the chaos. The guys that came in did
the job that they were primed to do and I’m really proud of them.”
Larin’s goal was the 14thof his international
career and 10thin FIFA World Cup Qualifiers, moving him into second
place behind Alex Bunbury (11) on Canada’s all-time goals list in the
competition.
HIGHLIGHTS: #CANMNT 1:0 HAI #WCQ2022 https://t.co/yCaEJrDsm8 — Canada Soccer (@CanadaSoccerEN) June 13, 2021
Canada started the game against an aggressive Haitian press
earning them a yellow card in the 2’ as Pierrot Frantzdy chopped down Alphonso
Davies. Centreback Scott Kennedy got his head up and played a brilliant ball
over the top to Cyle Larin in the 5’ that was flagged for offside.
Canada took the lead that earned the win in the 14’. Richie
Laryea found room on the wing and played back to Stephen Eustáquio who laid off
for Mark-Anthony Kaye. Kaye played through to Jonathan Osorio whose ball into
the box skipped over Haitian GK Johny Placide and Larin made no mistake.
Larin nearly made it 2:0 in the 18’ on a direct ball over
the top, but Haitian goalkeeper Placide was up to the task. Defender Alistair
Johnston made his presence known meeting the Haitian aggression with a well
time, tough tackle in the 28’.
The Hatians’ forceful play against Alphonso Davies continued
in the 41’ as Jeppe Friborg picked up a card after dragging Davies down by the
jersey after a burst of speed from the winger.
Canada’s best chance to equalize came early in the second
half as Jonathan David was played through on goal. With a clear path to goal,
David worked to get onto his favoured left foot and Placide was able to block
the shot from the Canadian attacker in the 52’.
Just a minute later Haiti forced a massive save from
Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan. Borjan’s back-pedalling tip kept Canada’s
lead. Borjan again made a big save in the 57’ after Pierrot was played over the
top.
Davies and David, who were instrumental in the 4:0 victory
in the last match against Suriname, nearly found that spark again in the 75’
after Davies showed his pace on the ball in the middle of the park. Davies
played David wide left at the top of the box but the tough angle shot was
handled by Placide.
A late free kick for Stephen Eustáquio
found second half substitute Lucas Cavallini who knocked it down for Scott
Kennedy with a pass that wasn’t quite heavy enough and Placide took the ball
away.
A pair of late corners allowed the
Canadians to eat up the final minutes of injury time to secure the 1:0 victory.
“It was a very good win and we wanted to have a clean sheet
as well, we accomplished that on turf which was difficult for the lads but we
stuck together and won,” said Stephen Eustáquio. “You just have to be smart and
secure at the back. We have players in our attack that can decide the game like
Cyle did today. The early goal gave us confidence of course and we just had to
manage from there.”
Canada’s starting XI featured Milan
Borjan in goal, Alistair Johnston at right back, Steven Vitória at centre back,
Scott Kennedy at left back, and Richie Laryea, Alphonso Davies, Stephen
Eustáquio, Mark-Anthony Kaye, Jonathan Osorio, Jonathan David and Cyle Larin
from the midfield up through to the attack. In the second half, coach John Herdman
replaced Kaye with Samuel Adekugbe (61’), Laryea for Tajon Buchanan and Larin
for Doneil Henry (78’), and David for Lucas Cavallini and Osorio for Samuel
Piette (82’).
FIFA WORLD CUP QATAR 2022 ™ QUALIFIERS
In all, 35 Concacaf nations are competing
in FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ Qualifiers, with already 24 nations eliminated.
There are six nations in the Concacaf Second Round, from which three winners
will advance to the Concacaf Final Round to join Costa Rica, Honduras, Jamaica,
Mexico and USA. The three head-to-head series in the Concacaf Second Round are
Canada against Haiti, El Salvador against St. Kitts and Nevis, and Curaçao
against Panama.
Canada were perfect 4-0-0 in the Concacaf
First Round Group B, the first-time ever that Canada won four-straight matches
in FIFA World Cup™ Qualifiers since they entered the competition in 1957.
Canada’s 4:0 victory over Suriname marked the first time since 1985 that Canada
won a FIFA World Cup Qualifiers round finale in which a loss would have
eliminated them.
“We’ve created something here, a
brotherhood based on a shared purpose to qualify this team to the FIFA World
Cup,” said Herdman. “They care about each other and that’s the first thing.
They care about taking this team to the FIFA World Cup and you saw it in March
when they had a chance to be back together and build on that spirit in the
Canada shirt.”
CANADA SOCCER’S MEN’S NATIONAL TEAM
PROGRAM
Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team,
two-time Concacaf champions, were one of only four nations that have finished top-six
across all three of Concacaf major tournaments across the past three years:
fifth place in Concacaf Nations League A and sixth place at both the 2017 and
2019 Concacaf Gold Cups. In 2019 against Concacaf’s top three nations, Canada
earned a victory against USA in Concacaf Nations League as well as eliminated
both Mexico (U-15) and Costa Rica (U-17) in Concacaf youth competitions.
It will be an exciting yet busy summer of
soccer for Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team Program in 2021. On the heels of
FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ Qualifiers in June, Canada will participate in the
30th anniversary edition of the Concacaf Gold Cup, with their Group B match-es
scheduled in Kansas City on 11 July against Martinique, 15 July against a
yet-to-be-determined Caribbean nation from the preliminary round, and 18 July
against USA. The top-two nations from Group B advance to the final round with
the Quarterfinals on 24 July, the Semifi-nals on 29 July, and the Final on 1
August.