Being in a two-goal deficit against a dominant rival in a playoff final is a hard place to be in, and a harder place to come back from. This weekend, the Thunderbirds beat those odds.
On Saturday, November 4, the UBC men's soccer team stunned the Trinity Western University Spartans (TWU) and roused their fans with a 3-2 overtime victory in the Canada West playoff final. With the win, UBC earned a berth to the U Sports national championships.
The first half started with many close opportunities for UBC, but a failure to connect in a lot of key moments meant that they came up short. Still, the ’Birds held their defensive line and bombarded the Spartans' goal with attacks.
Things went wrong for the ’Birds as the first half drew to a close. In the 45th minute, a free kick from Spartans forward Leighton Johnson found teammate Vito Poletto in the UBC box. Poletto, unmarked, polished the strike off.
Poletto returned the favour in the second half when he set up Johnson for a goal of his own in the 59th minute.
“[The players] were gutted, they were disappointed, to give up a goal, right before half … but we reminded them again, of the number of times that we’ve been down and come back,” said UBC head coach Mike Mosher.
Despite the setback, the Thunderbirds remained calm, and kept attacking the Trinity Western goal. They were down but not out.
The T-Birds found their groove later in the second half. In the 69th, UBC forward Zach Verhoven weaved between two Spartans defenders in the left corner of their half and let loose a cross into the box. UBC forward Kyle Sohi connected first-year forward Victory Shumbusho with the ball, and Shumbusho scored the T-Bird's first goal.
“We kept saying, ‘we need one. We get one, it changes the game.’ Sometimes you get that goal and the tendency is to sit back,” said Mosher. “No, I think you gotta keep getting pressure higher up the field and not get bunkered in, and that’s kind what happened for them, for a lot of the second half.”
Mosher gave some credit to two of his assistant coaches — David Henry and David Partridge — for the comeback.
“They were just [saying], ‘We’ve got to go for it. We’ve got to go three at the back. We’ve gotta change it. We’ve got to have our impact players who can score our goals for us in spots.’ So they sketched something up and we went with it.”
In the 80th, UBC defender Connor Guilherme scored the equalizer. He converted a superb cross from midfielder Kerman Pannu into a one-touch strike. The 'Birds were back in the game.
With both teams tied at 90 minutes, the game went into overtime. Mosher believed that these extra minutes of play would favor his side a little more. The 'Birds had won the day before in a decisive 3-1 victory against the Thompson Rivers University Wolfpack while the Spartans had gone into a tiring overtime battle against the University of Alberta Golden Bears.
In the 97th minute, the T-Birds took their first lead of the game. Guilherme scored a header off of a corner kick — his second goal of the match and the game winner.
“I am so happy for [Connor Guilherme]. The injuries that the kid has suffered… ,” said Mosher. “In all my years, he’s maybe the hardest working player I’ve ever had and I couldn’t be happier to see that kid get rewarded with an all star recognition, two goals tonight, a championship.”
“Gosh, if anybody deserves it, he does.”
Another standout on the night was UBC goalkeeper Chad Bush, who kept the 'Birds lead intact in crucial moments. This was especially true in overtime when he saved a point-blank shot from the Spartan defender Caleb Johnson.
For the rest of game, the Thunderbirds held their ground and defended hard until the final whistle. It paid off — when the whistle came, the 'Birds were the Canada West champions.
Next week, the 'Birds will be going toe-to-toe against other Canadian university heavyweights in the U Sports national championships in Kamloops, BC. Mosher has seen the competition and knows it is going to be “a tough tournament”
“Every year, it seems like the tournament gets tougher and tougher. It’s going to be stiff competition… There’s going to be no easy games,” said Mosher.
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