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Canadian women turn on the offence late en route to 6-0 win over Trinidad

Jul 5, 2022 | 9:12 PM

GUADALUPE, Mexico — Captain Christine Sinclair scored international goal No. 190 and Julia Grosso added two goals as Canada turned on the offence late to defeat Trinidad and Tobago 6-0 at the CONCACAF W Championship on Tuesday.

The goals were the first at the senior level for Grosso, a 21-year-old midfielder who plays in Italy for Juventus. Jessie Fleming, Janine Beckie and Jordyn Huitema also scored for Canada, which was held to one goal through two-thirds of the match.

After Sinclair opened the scoring in the 27th minute with a majestic header, Canada endured a drought in front of goal before Grosso, from a nice setup by fellow substitute Huitema, scored on a low left-footed shot in the 67th minute.

Grosso struck again in the 79th after Trinidad failed to clear a cross. The ball went to Grosso who shifted it to her right foot to get past a defender before firing it home.

Fleming made it 4-0 in the 84th minute, sweeping home a Beckie cross. Trinidad goalkeeper Kimika Forbes could have done better on the goal. Beckie made it 5-0 in the 86th with the Trinidad defence in tatters and Huitema completed the rout one minute into stoppage time.

Canada, the defending Olympic champion, is ranked sixth in the world compared to No. 76 for Trinidad and Tobago.

The eight-team tournament, which runs through July 18, serves as the qualifier in North and Central America and the Caribbean for both the 2023 Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand and the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

Previously World Cup and Olympic qualifying were separate in the region.

It was one-way traffic on the night and Canada could have gone into halftime up 8-0 but determined Trinidad defending and some errant finishing restricted the Canadian lead to 1-0 at the break.

Canada had 60 per cent possession in the first 45 minutes and outshot Trinidad 16-0 (7-0 in shots on target).

Canada controlled the game from the get-go and came close to going ahead in the 16th minute when Sinclair, in her 311th national team appearance, hit the goalpost after a nice buildup by Deanne Rose and Beckie.

Trinidad’s defence held fast early but its clearing attempts invariably found a Canadian, usually in the Trinidad end, and the attack started again.

Sinclair broke through in the 27th minute, capping a 12-pass Canadian buildup by heading home an Ashley Lawrence cross past Forbes.

Eleven of Sinclair’s world-record goals total have come at the CONCACAF championship.

Sinclair was chopped down in the 29th minute, prompting Mexican referee Katia Garcia to go to a pitchside monitor to review the play before pointing to the penalty spot. Fleming stepped up but missed, firing high in the 34th.

Canada appealed unsuccessfully for another penalty when Beckie went down in the 37th minute. Forbes reached high to deny Rose’s high, hard shot in the 45th minute.

Beckie scored in first-half stoppage time, on an unselfish feed from Sinclair, but the offside flag went up.

Looking to spark the offence, Bev Priestman made a quadruple change with Grosso, Huitema, Allysha Chapman and Adriana Leon coming on with 30 minutes remaining.

Canada and Trinidad are playing in Pool B, along with No. 37 Costa Rica and No. 57 Panama. Group A consists of the top-ranked U.S., No. 26 Mexico, No. 51 Jamaica and No. 60 Haiti. 

Costa Rica blanked Panama 3-0 in the earlier game Tuesday at Estadio BBVA in Guadalupe, located in a suburb of Monterrey. The 51,000-seat stadium is home to Monterrey CF.

Canada takes on Panama on Thursday in Monterrey’s Estado Universitaro.

Canada relied on a hard-nosed defence en route to Olympic gold last summer in Tokyo, outscoring the opposition 6-4 across six games with two of them finishing in penalty shootouts.

And in the 10 previous games since the Olympics, Canada had scored more than one goal just three times while posting a 4-2-4 record. Canada had registered six goals in its six previous games (2-1-3) this year.

The top two teams from each of the two groups move on to the semifinals, qualifying directly for the 2023 World Cup. The two third-place teams move on to a World Cup intercontinental playoff.

The CONCACAF W champion qualifies for both the 2024 Olympics and the inaugural CONCACAF W Gold Cup, also slated for 2024. The runner-up and third-place team will meet in a CONCACAF Olympic playoff, scheduled for September 2023, with the winner booking its ticket to the 2024 Olympics and Gold Cup.

Priestman fielded her A-team, led by the 39-year-old Sinclair. Lawrence, Beckie, Fleming, Kadeisha Buchanan, Desiree Scott and Quinn, who goes by one name, also started in front of goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan. 

The Canadian women have won all nine meetings with Trinidad and Tobago, outscoring the Soca Warriors 40-0. Canada also won 6-0 the last time they met, at the 2016 CONCACAF Women’s Olympic Qualifying Championship in Houston.

Canada has won the CONCACAF championship twice (1998 and 2010) and was runner-up five times (1991, 1994, 2002, 2006 and 2018). It came into the match with a 29 9-1 record at the tournament.

Trinidad’s best finish was a third in 1991. Before Tuesday, its career record at the tournament was 7-21-5.

Trinidad, a young team with 16 of its 23 players born in 1998 or later, is coached by former Trinidad international striker Kenwyne Jones. His club career included stints with England’s Southampton, Sunderland, Stoke City and Major League Soccer’s Atlanta United.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 5, 2022

The Canadian Press

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