Whitecaps 2, Valor FC 0: Caps banish their Canadian Championship first-round ghosts


Two early first-half goals in a four-minute span were enough for the Caps to crater the visitors’ hopes

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With 45 minutes to kickoff, Vancouver Whitecaps head coach Vanni Sartini strolled around the perimeter of the BC Place field, chatting with security guards, hosts, opposing coaches, and the few fans dotting the stands. He was relaxed, carefree, and casual, not looking like a coach fighting for his job with Jeff Mallett studiously watching from the owners’ suite.

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The guillotine dropped on the last coach who failed the Canadian Championship challenge, but Sartini’s head will stay firmly attached to his neck — and to his job — after the Whitecaps cruised past Valor FC 2-0 on Wednesday night.


NEXT GAME

saturday

San Jose Earthquakes vs. Vancouver Whitecaps

4pm, BC Place, TV: TSN, Radio: AM730


Two early first-half goals in a four-minute span were enough for the Caps to crater the visitors’ hopes faster than cryptocurrency, as they’d had hoped to accomplish what Vancouver’s two previous Canadian Premier League opponents had done: beat an MLS side .

Here’s what we learned…


Vancouver Whitecaps forward Russell Teibert (31) celebrates a goal with defender Florian Jungwirth (26) during the first half at BC Place.
Vancouver Whitecaps forward Russell Teibert (31) celebrates a goal with defender Florian Jungwirth (26) during the first half at BC Place. Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin /USA TODAY Sports

CAPTAIN CANADAS

It was none other than the ageless and maligned Russell Teibert to poke a hole in the Valor balloon 19 minutes into the game, poking home a rebound of a Ryan Raposo shot.

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It was, surprisingly, the first Canadian Championship goal for the club’s all-time CC games-played leader (26).

Four minutes later, Deiber Caicedo gifted Raposo a goal with a perfect square ball to the wide-open Canadian winger, and he blasted it into an open net for his second career CC goal.

He’s now the club’s leading scorer in 2022, with two goals. Seven other players have scored eleven.

The Caps started five Canadians — Lucas Cavallini, Marcus Godinho, Michael Baldisimo, Teibert and Raposo — while Valor had nine.


Vancouver Whitecaps forward Lucas Cavallini (9) reaches for the ball against Valor FC defender Stefan Cebara (14) during the first half at BC Place.  Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA Today Sports
Vancouver Whitecaps forward Lucas Cavallini (9) reaches for the ball against Valor FC defender Stefan Cebara (14) during the first half at BC Place. Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA Today Sports Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin /USA TODAY Sports

BY THE NUMBERS

4: For the second straight game, the Caps went with four at the back, with Jake Nerwinski and Godinho bracketing Flo Jungwirth and Ranko Veselinovic. The formation gave the Caps much more defensive stability, holding Value to two shots on target.

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25: As on May 25, when the Whitecaps will travel to Calgary to take on Cavalry FC in a rematch of 2019 for the quarterfinal round. The Cavs beat Edmonton FC 2-1 on Tuesday to advance. The winner of the game will move on to face the victor of the Pacific FC-York United game on June 21-23.

3: The number of days the Caps have to rest up before their next league game, Saturday night against the San Jose Earthquakes. Vancouver is currently 28th out of 28 MLS teams, but could jump past the Quakes — 11th in the West with nine points — with a win. With that in mind, Sartini used all five substitutes, the only one he hadn’t planned was a 35th-minute swap of Sebastian Berhalter for an injured Michael Baldisimo.

7,803: The official attendance announced for Wednesday’s game at BC Place.

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May 11, 2022;  Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;  Vancouver Whitecaps goaltender Cody Cropper (55) reaches for the ball after a shot by the Valor FC during the first half at BC Place.  Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA Today Sports
May 11, 2022; Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Vancouver Whitecaps goaltender Cody Cropper (55) reaches for the ball after a shot by the Valor FC during the first half at BC Place. Mandatory Credit: Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA Today Sports Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin /USA TODAY Sports

LESSONS LEARNED

After a decade as an assistant, Phil Dos Santos was ready to take center stage.

He was the No. 2 to brother Marc in Ottawa and San Francisco, to Martin Rennie with Indy Eleven, and to Caio Zanardi on the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. He’s now the coach/GM of Valor FC.

He could have stayed on garden duty through the end of 2021, but elected to take the job in Winnipeg, jumping right back into the coaching ranks.

And he took with him the lessons he’d learned over the last 10 years and, more importantly, the lessons he learned the last two. The disastrous 2019 campaign with the Whitecaps came after they blew up the entire roster and tried to do a complete overhauling over a short period of time.

“It’s important, yes, to better the team, but it needs to be progressive. You can’t think that you’re going to change 15 guys and you’ll have 80 or 90 per cent success rate or even a 50 per cent success rate,” he said of taking over Value.

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“These guys, when they come into a new environment, they need a bit of time, they need to settle, they need to understand the league. Some will be automatic but a lot of them will need that season to get out of the way.

“That’s why we tried to identify very quickly the profiles that fit where we wanted to build and how we wanted to play here, and then make the changes where we really felt changes needed to be.

“If we were going to change a quarter for four quarters for a buck, it was better to stay with people that were familiar with the house, how the club works, and then progressively better the team as we go.”

[email protected]

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NEXT GAME

saturday

San Jose Earthquakes vs. Vancouver Whitecaps

4pm, BC Place, TV: TSN, Radio: AM730


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