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Attakora-Gyan, Filigno named Canadian U-20 Players of the Year PDF Print E-mail
06 January 2009
Attakora-Gyan, Filigno named Canadian U-20 Players of the Year

Nana Attakora-Gyan & Jonelle Filigno
The Canadian Soccer Association announced today that Nana Attakora-Gyan and Jonelle Filigno have been named Canadian U-20 Players of the Year for the 2008 soccer season. The two stars were honoured in a vote shared by national-team coaches (50%) and Canadian coaches who have taken the Canadian Soccer Association’s national course at the B and A levels (50%).

Attakora-Gyan is a member of the Canadian U-20 team that has begun preparations for next year’s CONCACAF Men’s Under-20 Championship. He took part in all three U-20 camps, the first of which featured the anniversary rematch against Argentina at BMO Field in Toronto (a 1:1 draw on 11 May).

The Orangeville, ON defender is also a member of Major League Soccer’s Toronto FC. In 2008, he played five games with the big club, making his MLS debut on 5 August 2008. He also took part in the inaugural 2008 Nutrilite Canadian Championship, although he did not feature in Toronto FC’s four games.

Filigno, meanwhile, split the 2008 season between the senior and U-20 teams. With the women’s U-20 team, whose title sponsor is Winners, she helped Canada win a gold medal at the 2008 CONCACAF Women’s Under-20 Championship. She scored four goals in the tournament: a hat trick against Costa Rica in the group phase and the winning goal in the semi-final against Mexico. She then helped Canada win the Torneo 4-Naciones in Chile, scoring the lone goal in the final match of the round-robin tournament. Finally at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Chile 2008, she scored one goal in two matches after missing the opener because of a knee injury.

With the Canadian national team, whose title sponsor is Winners and whose presenting sponsor is Teck, Filigno made 20 appearances as a 17-year old rookie. She helped Canada win the Cyprus Cup in March, finish second at the CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualification Tournament in April, finish second at the Peace Queen Cup in June (albeit she left midway to join the U-20s), and reach the quarter-final stage of the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament. She started 12 of her 20 games and scored her first-ever goal against Trinidad & Tobago in April.

Yesterday, the Canadian Soccer Association announced that Russell Teibert and Monica Lam-Feist were both named the Canadian U-17 Players of the Year. Later this week, the Canadian Soccer Association will announce the 2008 adidas Canadian Players of the Year.

Fan voting for the 2008 CanadaSoccer.com Fan’s Choices, meanwhile, runs through 9 January 2009. Fans can still make their two selections (one male, one female) to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

FINAL LIST
Male Nominees (born 1989 or later) / Nominés masculins (né en 1989 ou après)
1. Nana Attakora-Gyan (25.5)
2. Brandon Bonifacio (17.4)
3. Ethan Gage (15.0)
4. Adam Street (13.6)
5. Shaun Saiko (9.7)
6. Marcus Haber (8.2)
7. Derek Gaudet (2.1)
7. Adam Straith (2.1)
9. Mozesh Gyorio (0.4)

Female Nominees (born 1988 or later) from the Winners – Women’s U-20 team / Nominées féminines (né en 1988 ou après) de l’équipe féminine Winners U-20
1. Jonelle Filigno (30.4)
2. Allysha Chapman (20.7)
3. Kaylyn Kyle (16.9)
4. Sophie Schmidt (9.3)
5. Erin McNulty (6.7)
6. Jodi-Ann Robinson (5.6)
7. Myriam Bouchard (4.4)
8. Chelsea Stewart (4.3)
 
Teibert, Lam-Feist named Canadian U-17 Players of the Year PDF Print E-mail
Teibert, Lam-Feist named Canadian U-17 Players of the Year

Russell Teibert & Monica Lam-Feist
Canadian teenagers Russell Teibert and Monica Lam-Feist have been named Canadian U-17 Players of the Year for the 2008 soccer season. The two stars were honoured in a vote shared by national-team coaches (50%) and Canadian coaches who have taken the Canadian Soccer Association’s national course at the B and A levels (50%).

Teibert is a member of the BMO Financial Group - Canadian men’s U-17 team. He took part in the Canadian team’s first camp in November as the team began preparations for the 2009 CONCACAF Men’s Under-17 Championship. He started the 2008 season as a member of the Canadian Soccer Association’s National Training Centre in Ontario, but also played briefly for TFC Academy’s U-16 side. In August, he joined the Vancouver Whitecaps residency program; in December, he traveled with the Whitecaps FC Residency squad to Japan.

The Niagara Falls midfielder also won a silver medal at the 2008 BMO National Championships All Stars in Brossard, QC. At the Canadian U-17 camp in Mexico, he scored one goal and one assist in four games against local club teams. He even wore the captain’s arm band for part of the trip.

As for Lam-Feist, she is now a two-time winner of the Canadian U-17 Player of the Year award. She actually only spent part of her season with the Canadian women’s U-17 team (whose title sponsor is BMO Financial Group) as she spent most of it one level up with the women’s U-20 team (whose title sponsor is Winners). In June, she helped Canada win the CONCACAF Women’s Under-20 Championship in Puebla, Mexico. She scored in each of the two opening matches. In September, she helped Canada with the Torneo 4-Naciones in Melipilla, Chile. In November, she scored two goals for Canada at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Chile 2008.

The Surrey, BC forward also got to play briefly with the national team, taking part in the team’s trip to China in January for the Four Nations Tournament. While she did not feature, she was the youngest player called into the national team this past season.

Tomorrow, the Canadian Soccer Association will announce the Canadian U-20 Players of the Year. The 2008 adidas Canadian Players of the Year will be announced later this week.


FINAL LIST / LISTE FINALE

Male Nominees (born 1992 or later) from the BMO Financial Group - Men’s U-17 team / Nominés masculins (né en 1992 ou après) de l’équipe masculine BMO Financial Group U-17
1. Russell Teibert (34.5)
2. Derrick Bassi (27.2)
3. Abdoulaye Sylla (18.0)
4. Riccardo Ferreira (6.3)
5. Karl Ouimette (5.6)
6. Allando Matheson (3.6)

Female Nominees (born 1991 or later) from the BMO Financial – Women’s U-17 team / Nominées féminines (né en 1991 ou après) de l’équipe féminine BMO Financial U-17
1. Monica Lam-Feist (44.0)
2. Tiffany Cameron (21.4)
3. Rachel Lamarre (11.4)
4. Danica Wu (9.0)
5. Bryanna McCarthy (5.7)
6. Caroline Szwed (2.6)
7. Nkem Ezurike (2.1)
 
Coach Donlavey passes away PDF Print E-mail
01 January 2009
Coach Donlavey passes away

Frank Donlavey
Former Canadian youth coach Frank Donlavey has passed away. The Glasgow-born footballer was Canada’s men’s youth coach for five years and McMaster University’s women’s coach for 15 years. He led McMaster University to a national championship in 1991.

As a player, Donlavey played professionally in Great Britain, South America, South Africa, United States and Canada. He spent five years in the North American Soccer League in the early 1970s, suiting up for the Washington Darts/Miami Gatos, Toronto Metros and New York Cosmos.

In 1988, Donlavey succeeded Tony Taylor as Canada’s men’s U-20 head coach. Donlavey coached Canada at the 1988, 1990 and 1992 CONCACAF Men’s Under-20 Championships. After not reaching the final group in 1988 or 1990, Donlavey helped Canada finish third at 1992 tournament in Burnaby, BC.

In preparation for the 1992 championship, coach Donlavey took Canada’s U-20 team to the XI Pan American Games Havana 1991. Canada lost three games to older U-23 teams from Honduras, Suriname and USA. One month earlier against Mexico and USA’s U-20 teams, he led Canada to victory at the 1991 Gillette Cup in Kelowna, BC. Niall Thompson scored three goals in the final, a 4:0 victory over USA.

From 1989 to 2003, Donlavey served as McMaster University’s women’s soccer coach. He took McMaster to the national championships four times, helping the Marauders win the Gladys Bean Memorial Trophy in 1991. Donlavey also won a bronze medal in 1997 and was the CIAU Coach of Year award in 1991. He was honoured with the McMaster Athletics and Recreation, Friend of Distinction in 2000.

Donlavey passed away on 1 January 2009 in Hamilton, ON. The Canadian soccer community sends its condolences to Mr. Donlavey’s family.
 
ancredi goal sparked Olympic season PDF Print E-mail
31 December 2008
Tancredi goal sparked Olympic season

Melissa Tancredi
Photo: Mexsport
Melissa Tancredi produced the moment of the year when she scored the winning goal in Canada's first-ever qualification for the Women's Olympic Football Tournament. The Canadian striker took advantage after Mexican defender Rubi Sandoval slipped with the ball at her feet.

Tancredi made no mistake as she scored the lone goal in a 1:0 victory over Mexico - in Mexico. It was Tancredi's third of four goals at the 2008 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualification Tournament in Juarez, Mexico. The victory erased four years of Olympic frustration dating back to the last qualification tournament in Costa Rica - back to Canada's 1:2 elimination loss to Mexico on 3 March 2004.

Taking part in the Olympic Games was the highlight of the 2008 season. Canada reached the quarter-final stage before bowing out in a 1:2 loss to USA after extra time. Canada held the world number-one ranked country to a 1-1 tie until the 101st minute when Natasha Kai scored the eventual winner.
Canada won 2:1 over Argentina, drew 1:1 against China, and lost 1:2 to Sweden in the group phase. CanadaSoccer.com's busiest day in 2008 was the 15 August quarter-final against USA.

In all, Canada played 25 games in 2008, the most ever in the women's program history. On the road to Mexico, Canada played three games in January at the Four Nations Tournament (0:4 to USA, 0:0 against host China and 1:1 against Finland) and four games in March in Europe (2:1 over Russia, 3:0 over Japan, 0:2 to Scotland and 0:0 against France). Actually, a fifth unofficial game in March came against USA's U-20 team in the Cyprus Cup final - a 3:2 Canadian victory.

In April, Canada finished second at the CONCACAF Women's Olympic Football Tournament. It won 6:0 over Trinidad & Tobago and 1:0 over Costa Rica in the group phase. It then won 1:0 over Mexico in the semi final and drew 1:1 with USA in the final. Canada then lost the final on penalties to USA.
Along with Tancredi's goal-scoring heroics, goalkeeper Erin McLeod set a national-team record with her sixth clean sheet of the season in the 9 April semi-final win over Mexico. In fact, she helped Canada set a CONCACAF record with 509 consecutive shutout minutes.

After a short break, Canada continued its residency camp in May and resumed its match schedule against USA. This time, Canada was on the tough end of an 0:6 loss. Canada then flew to Australia where it lost 1:2. In June, Canada played four games in the Peace Queen Cup in Korea Republic: a 5:0 win over Argentina, a 3:1 win over Korea Republic, a 2:0 win over New Zealand, and an 0:1 loss to USA in the final.

In July, Canada's women's team played its first home match at the new BMO Field, playing to a 1:1 draw against Brazil. Less than a week later in Vancouver, coach Even Pellerud announced his roster for the Olympics and the team left for Asia. It then played in two final friendly matches before the big competition began: a 1:1 draw with New Zealand and an 8:0 romp over Singapore.
Canada's top goal scorer in 2008 was again captain Christine Sinclair. This year, she fired 13 goals, thus climbing to 95 for her senior-team career. She scored two goals at the Women's Olympic Football Tournament, including one rocket in the semi-final against USA. Tancredi and Lang were second on the team with six goals apiece.

Randee Hermus became the fourth player to make 100 appearances for Canada, doing so in March against France. Sinclair, meanwhile, finished the season with 122 career starts, tying the national record held by Charmaine Hooper. Candace Chapman set the record for most appearances (23) and most minutes (2028) in a single year while Brittany Timko set the record for most substitutions (16) in a year.

Canada, whose title sponsor is Winners and whose presenting sponsor is Teck, finished the year with a record of 10 wins, seven draws and seven losses. It was the third time Canada finished with 10 wins in a season. Canada's all-time record is now 89 wins, 30 draws and 103 losses. At home, Canada has 26 wins, five draws and 16 losses; in official FIFA/CONCACAF tournaments, Canada has 33 wins, eight draws and 20 losses.
 
CONCACAF victory highlight of 2008 youth season PDF Print E-mail

(CANADASOCCER.com)

 

Canada’s women’s U-20 team provided the Association’s youth program’s moment of the year when it won the 2008 CONCACAF Women’s Under-20 Championship in June. It was Canada’s second confederation championship in three tries against USA since 2004.

Karla Schacher scored the winning goal in the 1:0 victory on 28 June in Puebla, Mexico. Goalkeeper Erin McNulty provided the clean sheet with defenders Rheanne Sleiman, Lexi Marton, Myriam Bouchard and Allysha Chapman in front of her.

Both Canada’s women’s U-20 and U-17 teams qualified for FIFA World Cups in 2008, the U-20s for Chile 2008 and the U-17s for New Zealand 2008. One month after the U-20s finished first in Puebla, the U-17s finished third in Trinidad & Tobago at the 2008 CONCACAF Under-17 Championship.

Canada’s women’s U-20 team, whose title sponsor is Winners, posted a record of nine wins, three draws and three losses in 2008. After finishing first in CONCACAF, it failed to advance beyond a tough group phase at the FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup Chile 2008. Canada is one of five nations to have participated in four-straight FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cups.

Canada’s top U-20 goal scorer in 2008 was Jonelle Filigno, who scored seven goals including a hat trick at the CONCACAF championship. Filigno missed the opening match at Chile 2008, but then scored her seventh youth goal of the year in a 4:0 win over Congo DR. Seventeen-year old star Monica Lam-Feist scored five goals in 2008, including a team-best two at Chile 2008.

Goalkeeper Erin McNulty played in 14 of Canada’s 15 international matches. She posted six clean sheets. Justine Bernier posted a clean sheet in her lone match of the season (a 3:0 win over Mexico back in May).

Canada’s women’s U-17 team, whose title sponsor is BMO Financial Group, posted a record of five wins, two draws and four losses in 2008. After finishing third in CONCACAF, it reached the quarter-final stage at the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup New Zealand 2008. Rachel Lamarre scored the first-ever goal while Canada recorded the first-ever win at the new tournament.

Canada’s top U-17 goal scorer in 2008 was Tiffany Cameron with six goals including the winner in the bronze-medal match at the CONCACAF championship. Nkem Ezurike, meanwhile, finished second with four international goals including two at New Zealand 2008.

On the men’s side, both the U-20 and U-17 teams began preparations for the 2009 CONCACAF championships. The U-20 team played two full internationals – both 1:1 draws (May against Argentina and November against Switzerland). The U-17 team did not play any international matches, but did make a trip to Mexico for some exhibition games against local clubs.

Also in 2008, the Canadian Soccer Association named its new Technical Director, Mr. Stephen Hart. As for the four head coaches, they are Ian Bridge (U-20 women since October), Bryan Rosenfeld (U-17 women), Tony Fonseca (U-20 men since November) and Sean Fleming (U-17 women).
 
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