With trip to Nationals at stake,Laval beats º«¹úÂãÎè
![redmen soccer](/channels/files/channels/styles/fullwidth_breakpoints_theme_moriarty_small_1x/public/channels/image/103736_Redmensoccer080.jpg?itok=oDzIAzOx×tamp=1346681658)
Ìý
Perhaps it was because starting defender Graeme Tingey was
suspended for the game, having drawn a red card in last week's game
against Concordia. Perhaps it was because the home field advantage
was nullified by a Laval-partisan crowd. Or perhaps it was because
it was Halloween. Whatever the reason, an ominous aura hung over
Molson Stadium on Friday night and the Redmen couldn't overcome it.
The seventh-ranked men's soccer team was upset by the Laval Rouge
et Or in a Quebec semifinal by a score of 3-1.
Recent history had favoured the Redmen, who had surprised many by
finishing second in the Quebec league at 7-1-4. º«¹úÂãÎè outscored
Laval 3-0 in two wins during the regular season, and won both games
on the strength of their defence. But the playoff pressure,
combined with Tingey's absence, yielded a different outcome.
"We weren't good enough for the playoffs," said º«¹úÂãÎè goalkeeper
Olivier Boulva, one of only a few Redmen who played all 90 minutes.
"They outplayed us. They played a great first half, and we didn't
show up like we should have."
One great half was all Laval needed. First-year midfielder Julien
Priol matched his output for the entire season, scoring three times
in the first half, and sending the shocked Redmen into the locker
room at halftime down 3-0.
In the 10th minute of play, Priol scored his first highlight reel
goal, after taking a long pass just past midfield. As the Redmen
defencemen pleaded for offsides, Priol pulled away, and with a
convincing stutter-step, caused Boulva to dive to his left, leaving
a wide-open goal for the freshman. 10 minutes later, forward
Gabriel Moreau flicked the ball to a streaking Priol, who didn't
have to work hard to maneuver to find some free space to shoot the
ball past a scrambling Boulva. The Redmen once again were caught
off-guard with their hands raised, begging for an offsides call.
The linesmen never came to their rescue.
"Our defence didn't play well at all," said º«¹úÂãÎè Head Coach
Philippe Eullaffroy, who earlier in the week was named Quebec Coach
of the Year for the third consecutive season. "There was
miscommunication, or no communication at all. … Laval communicated
much better than we did, and they deserved to win. There is a
difference between willing to win and showing that you want to win.
And that was the difference between the two teams."
Being named Coach of the Year did not provide Eullaffroy with much
solace.
"I'm doing this job in order to win games," said Eullaffroy. "Coach
of the Year does not give me a victory. I would easily switch my
Coach of the Year title for a win tonight."
Priol added his third goal one minute before the end of the half,
and all hope seemed lost for the Redmen. Every time they attempted
a long pass, the Rouge et Or would either intercept or redirect the
ball, stifling º«¹úÂãÎè's attack. As a result, the Redmen had few
scoring opportunities in the first half.
But the second half proved different. Eullaffroy removed most of
his starters as the half progressed, and the difference in energy
showed. Twenty-five minutes into the half, the Rouge et Or
defenders were caught napping-the ball skipped towards the middle
of the box, and Laval goaltender Vincent Cournoyer could not
recover in time to stop forward Peter Valente's shot. Despite
firing from point-blank range, Valente, who had subbed in at
halftime, sent the ball sailing over the goal. Forward Michael
Stein, a normally sure-footed freshman who shared the team lead
with four goals on the season, missed a similar opportunity 10
minutes later.
"We missed a couple of chances to get back in the game in the
second half, and we could have changed the game, but we weren't the
same team that had played the whole season," said midfielder Shawn
Amarasekera. "I knew it was going to be tough, down 3-0, but … even
at the end, I really believed that we could have done something. We
had a really fighting spirit throughout the season. We just missed
our chances [tonight]."
The Redmen kept the pressure on despite their missed
opportunities, and got a penalty kick when Laval was called for a
hand-ball in the box. Midfielder James Scholefield converted the
penalty kick with seven minutes to play. The clock wound down,
however, and the Redmen were left stunned when the final whistle
blew.
"All season, we've done the same thing. We were solid at the back.
For some reason, in the first half, it just wasn't there," said
Amarasekera. "You win some, you lose some. That's soccer. That's
life."
Though it certainly didn't take the sting of watching from the
stands away from Tingey, whose presence was sorely missed, the
sophomore was named to the All-Conference first team, along with
Scholefield and midfielder Thomas Lucas. Boulva was named to the
second team, along with midfielders Yohann Capolungo and Axel
Dovi.
"We'll grow from it," said Boulva, who is in his last year along
with Scholefield, Amarasekera, defender Omar John, and forward
Gareth Pugh. "It's a great bunch of rookies, and they learned from
it. We've built up a great program for years to come."