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PREVIEW 2010 CIS men's soccer championship: Laval looking for repeat performance
OTTAWA (CIS) – One year removed from their first-ever
Canadian Interuniversity Sport men’s soccer title, the Laval
Rouge et Or look poised to repeat as Sam Davidson memorial trophy
champions.
The 41st CIS championship gets under way on Thursday at the
University of Toronto’s Varsity Stadium and culminates on
Sunday with the gold-medal final set for 4 p.m. The CIS individual
award winners and all-Canadian teams for the 2010 season will be
announced prior to the event, on Wednesday evening.
All 11 games from the eight-team, single-elimination tournament
will be webcast by SSN Canada (www.ssncanada.ca ).
Joining Quebec champion Laval in Toronto this week will be the
tournament host – and OUA champion - Varsity Blues, the Saint
Mary’s Huskies (AUS champions), UBC thunderbirds (Canada West
champions), UQAM Citadins (Quebec finalists), York Lions (OUA
finalists), Alberta Golden Bears (Canada West regular season
champions), as well as the Western Ontario Mustangs (OUA bronze
medallists).
The Rouge et Or kick off their title defence Thursday at 11 a.m.
against York in the first quarter-final matchup of opening day.
Saint Mary’s is set to square off against Alberta at 1:30
p.m., UBC will battle Western at 4 p.m., and host Toronto takes on
UQAM at 6:30 p.m.
The winners of the first round move on to Saturday’s
semifinals, while the losers resume play Friday on the consolation
side of the bracket.
Laval enjoyed yet another solid campaign in Quebec this fall. The
Rouge et Or easily took first place in the RSEQ standings with a
10-2 record – eight points ahead of their closest rivals
– and avenged their only two losses of the season in the
playoffs with a 2-1 semifinal win over perennial contender Montreal
and a 2-0 gold-medal victory over UQAM, en route to their second
straight RSEQ banner.
The Rouge et Or, who will make their sixth straight appearance
– and sixth in history – at the CIS tourney this week,
had been knocking on the door for a number of years at the national
championship prior to their breakthrough performance of 2009. They
had reached the Final Four three years running from 2006 to 2008
and their first CIS final in 2007, a game they lost 2-1 to UBC.
Following the Quebec title match against UQAM last Sunday, Laval
head coach Samir Ghrib talked about his team’s depth and how
dropping two games earlier this fall might not have been such a bad
thing.
“A coach never wants to lose, but when you do, you hope your
players learn from it,” said Ghrib, named the CIS coach of
the year in 2009 and once again the Quebec nominee this season.
“A loss can sometimes be a good thing. It calms players who
may get a little excited, a little ahead of themselves.”
“We won our two playoff matches without out two top goal
scorers (2009 CIS championship MVP) Gabriel Moreau and Ilyes
Benmiloud, who were both sidelined with injuries. It’s a
testament to the depth of our line-up.”
While the Laval mentor is satisfied with his pupils’ season
so far, he knows there is still work to be done.
“We still have three mountains to climb to reach the
top,” said Ghrib, whose troops overcame a two-goal deficit to
beat league rival McGill 3-2 in last year’s CIS final.
The Varsity Blues are the only other returnees from the 2009
Nationals. Toronto was one of Laval’s victims last November
in Langley, B.C., losing 3-0 to the Rouge et Or in the semifinals
before dropping a penalty kicks decision to Trinity Western in the
bronze-medal match.
Even though they’ve known for months they would have another
shot at the Davidson trophy this year, the Blues didn’t want
to get in thanks only to the host berth. They kept an impressive
10-1-3 record in conference play before adding three straight wins
in the playoffs, including a 1-0 PK victory over York for their
first OUA title since 2003.
The only previous time the U of T hosted the CIS tournament, in
1986, the Blues reached the final but had to settle for silver
following a 4-0 defeat against UBC. Toronto claimed its lone
national title two years later.
Four of the other six teams hoping to hoist the coveted trophy on
Sunday have captured at least one CIS banner in the past including
UBC and Alberta, both of whom boast mindboggling all-time marks at
the event.
The Thunderbirds hold the record of 11 CIS titles – seven
more than any other team – and have reached the national
final 14 times in 15 previous appearances. They are 32-4-2 (.868)
all-time at the competition.
“Our approach is going to be very similar this week to what
it was at the Canada West Final Four. We want to play tight
defensively and keep a clean sheet - that style makes it really
hard to beat you,” said UBC head coach Mike Mosher, whose
T-Birds blanked Saskatchewan 1-0 in the conference final.
“The quality of the teams that have qualified looks to be
very strong and there are going to be no easy games,” added
Mosher, who has led UBC to six CIS titles, two as the head coach,
one as an assistant and three as a player.
The Golden Bears are tied with Victoria for second place all-time
with four Davidson trophy triumphs and have played for gold 10
times in 11 previous participations.
The Lions and Mustangs have each been crowned twice. While York
went 31 years between titles (1977, 2008), Western won back-to-back
banners in 1998 and 1999.
Saint Mary’s has come oh-so-close on a number of occasions
and has four silver medals to its credit. The Huskies have lost
three CIS finals by a single goal with their most recent heartbreak
coming in 2003, a 2-1 OT decision to Alberta.
Quebec finalist UQAM will play at the national level for only the
second time in history. The Citadins claimed CIS bronze in their
lone previous appearance in 1998.
TEAM
PROFILES
Laval Rouge et Or (RSEQ champions)
Media Guide (PDF 2 MB)
Head Coach: Samir Ghrib (11th season)
Regular season record: 10-2-0
Regular season standing: 1st RSEQ
Playoff record: 2-0
Playoff finish: RSEQ champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 4
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 1 (7 weeks: first 7 polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 10
Conference award winners: Julien Priol (MVP), Samuel Georget
(Student-Athlete Community Service Award), Samir Ghrib (coach of
the year)
Conference 1st team all-stars: Vincent Cournoyer (G), Karim Ziouane
(D), Julien Priol (M), Samuel Georget (M), Gabriel Moreau (S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Pascal Bragagnolo (D), Leduc
M’Bizi (D), Eduardo Davalos (M), Karim Byouline (M),
Ilyès Benmiloud (S)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 6 (2010, 2009, 2008,
2007, 2006, 2005)
CIS championship all-time record: 7-7-0 (.500)
CIS championship all-time medals: 2 (1 gold, 1 silver)
CIS championship best result: 1-time champions (2009)
CIS championship last appearance: 2009 (champions)
CIS championship sequence: 6th straight appearance
Saint Mary’s Huskies (AUS champions)
Media Guide (PDF 2.22 MB)
Head Coach: Stewart Galloway (19th season)
Regular season record: 8-2-3
Regular season standing: 2nd AUS
Playoff record: 2-0
Playoff finish: AUS champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 8
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 5 (1 week: 4th poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 8
Conference award winners: None
Conference 1st team all-stars: Shawn Kodejs (D), Jonattan Cordoba
(M)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Adam Miller (G), Rory Kennedy (D),
Peter Garonis (M), Elvir Gigolaj (S)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 12
CIS championship all-time record: 13-12-3 (.518)
CIS championship all-time medals: 5 (4 silver, 1 bronze) *
CIS championship best result: 4-time finalists (2003, 2000, 1989,
1979)
CIS championship last appearance: 2007 (6th place)
CIS championship sequence: 8th appearance in 11 years
* Finished tied for third in 1988 and 1981 when no bronze-medal
games were played.
Toronto Varsity Blues (OUA champions)
Media Guide (Click here)
Head Coach: Anthony Capotosto (4th season)
Regular season record: 10-1-3
Regular season standing: 1st OUA East
Playoff record: 3-0
Playoff finish: OUA champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 5
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 2 (1 week: 3rd poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 10
Conference award winners (OUA East): Darragh McGee (MVP), Ezequiel
Lubocki (rookie of the year), Lawrence Buchan (Student-Athlete
Community Service Award)
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA East): Darragh McGee (D),
Ezequiel Lubocki (M), Nordo Gooden (S), Alexander Raphael (S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA East): John Smits (G), Dylan Bam
(M)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 13
CIS championship all-time record: 8-16-1 (.340)
CIS championship all-time medals: 3 (1 gold, 2 silver) *
CIS championship best result: 1-time champions (1988)
CIS championship last appearance: 2009 (4th place)
CIS championship sequence: 2nd straight appearance (5th in 7
years)
* Finished tied for third in 1990, 1982 and 1976 when no
bronze-medal games were played.
UBC Thunderbirds (Canada West champions)
Media Guide (PDF 3.73 MB)
Head Coach: Mike Mosher (15th season)
Regular season record: 8-3-3
Regular season standing: 2nd Canada West
Playoff record: 2-0
Playoff finish: Canada West champions
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 7
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 2 (1 week: 4th poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 10
Conference award winners: None
Conference 1st team all-stars: Jason Gill (D), Will Hyde (D),
Brandon Bonifacio (M), Gagan Dosanjh (S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Matt Allard (D)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 16
CIS championship all-time record: 32-4-2 (.868)
CIS championship all-time medals: 14 (11 gold, 3 silver)
CIS championship best result: CIS record 11-time champions (2007,
2005, 1994, 1992, 1991, 1990, 1989, 1986, 1985, 1984, 1974)
CIS championship last appearance: 2007 (champions)
CIS championship sequence: 3rd appearance in 6 years (2010, 2007,
2005)
UQAM Citadins (RSEQ finalists)
Media Guide (PDF 1.76 MB)
Head Coach: Christophe Dutarte (14th season)
Regular season record: 7-4-1
Regular season standing: 3rd RSEQ
Playoff record: 1-1
Playoff finish: RSEQ finalists
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 10
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 9 (1 week: 9th poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 3
Conference award winners: None
Conference 1st team all-stars: Marvin Omie (D), Manuel Chaffort
(M)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Raphael Scott (G), Maxime Pharand
(D), Jawad Guizaoui (M), Nicolas Bertrand (S)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 2 (2010, 1998)
CIS championship all-time record: 2-1-0 (.666)
CIS championship all-time medals: 1 (bronze)
CIS championship best result: 1-time bronze medallists
CIS championship last appearance: 1998 (bronze)
CIS championship sequence: 1st appearance since 1998 (2nd
all-time)
York Lions (OUA finalists)
Media Guide (PDF 970 KB)
Head Coach: Carmine Isacco (4th season)
Regular season record: 12-2-2
Regular season standing: 1st OUA West
Playoff record: 2-1
Playoff finish: OUA finalists
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 2
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 2 (1 week: final poll)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 8
Conference award winners (OUA West): Adrian Pena (MVP), Alon Badat
(rookie of the year), Carmine Isacco (coach of the year)
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA West): Jamaal Smith (D), Dominic
Antonini (D), Moreno Alberti (M), Ilya Orlov (M), Adrian Pena
(S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA West): Alon Badat (S)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 6 (2010, 2008, 2007,
1997, 1996, 1977)
CIS championship all-time record: 8-4-2 (.643)
CIS championship all-time medals: 3 (2 gold, 1 bronze)
CIS championship best result: 2-time champions (2008, 1977)
CIS championship last appearance: 2008 (champions)
CIS championship sequence: 3rd appearance in 4 years
Alberta Golden Bears (Canada West regular season
champions)
Media Guide (PDF 644 KB)
Head Coach: Len Vickery (26th season)
Regular season record: 11-2-1
Regular season standing: 1st Canada West
Playoff record: 1-1
Playoff finish: Canada West bronze medallists
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 3
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 3 (2 weeks: 8th and 10th
polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 7
Conference award winners: Marcus Johnstone (rookie of the year),
Len Vickery (coach of the year)
Conference 1st team all-stars: Jas Gill (G), Harman Braich (D),
Zenon Markevych (D), Sam Lam (M), Milan Timotijevic (M), Marcus
Johnstone (S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars: Antonio Rago (M)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 12
CIS championship all-time record: 19-7-3 (.707)
CIS championship all-time medals: 10 (4 gold, 6 silver)
CIS championship best result: 4-time champions (2006, 2003, 1979,
1972)
CIS championship last appearance: 2006 (champions)
CIS championship sequence: 1st appearance since 2006
Western Ontario Mustangs (OUA bronze medallists)
Media Guide (PDF 5.71 MB)
Head Coach: Rock Basacco (14th season)
Regular season record: 11-1-4
Regular season standing: 2nd OUA West
Playoff record: 2-1
Playoff finish: OUA bronze medallists
Final Top 10 ranking (Nov. 2): No. 6
Best Top 10 ranking (10 weeks): No. 2 (2 weeks: 5th and 6th
polls)
Number of weeks in Top 10 (10 weeks): 8
Conference award winners (OUA West): None
Conference 1st team all-stars (OUA West): Paul D'Amario (D), Vince
Caminiti (M), Niko Mavrikos (S)
Conference 2nd team all-stars (OUA West): Andrew Murdoch (G),
Andrew Walton (D)
CIS championship appearances (including 2010): 11
CIS championship all-time record: 15-8-4 (.630)
CIS championship all-time medals: 5 (2 gold, 1 silver, 2
bronze)
CIS championship best result: 2-time champions (1999, 1998)
CIS championship last appearance: 2007 (bronze)
CIS championship sequence: 1st appearance since 2007 (4th in 7
years)
SAM DAVIDSON
MEMORIAL TROPHY CHAMPIONS
2009 Laval (at Trinity Western)
2008 York (at Carleton)
2007 UBC (at UBC)
2006 Alberta (at Alberta)
2005 UBC (at UPEI)
2004 Victoria (at Montreal / McGill)
2003 Alberta (at Montreal / McGill)
2002 Brock (at Carleton)
2001 Laurier (at Saint Mary's)
2000 Laurier (at McMaster)
1999 Western (at Victoria)
1998 Western (at McGill)
1997 McGill (at Dalhousie)
1996 Victoria (at York)
1995 Dalhousie (at UQTR)
1994 UBC (at UBC)
1993 Sherbrooke (at Acadia)
1992 UBC (at Guelph)
1991 UBC (at Queen's)
1990 UBC (at Guelph)
1989 UBC (at UBC)
1988 Toronto (at UBC)
1987 Victoria (at McGill)
1986 UBC (at Toronto)
1985 UBC (at UBC)
1984 UBC (at Carleton)
1983 Laurentian (at Laurentian)
1982 McGill (at McGill)
1981 McGill (at Alberta)
1980 UNB (at UNB)
1979 Alberta (at Alberta)
1978 Manitoba (at Concordia)
1977 York (at Waterloo)
1976 Concordia (at Concordia)
1975 Victoria (at Victoria)
1974 UBC (at Concordia)
1973 Loyola (at Memorial)
1972 Alberta (at York)
1971 Laurentian
1970 Memorial
CHAMPIONSHIP
SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Nov. 10
18:30 All-Canadian Awards Banquet
Thursday, Nov. 11
11:00 Quarterfinal 1: Laval vs. York (SSN Canada webcast)
13:30 Quarterfinal 2: Saint Mary’s vs. Alberta (SSN Canada
webcast)
16:00 Quarterfinal 3: UBC vs. Western (SSN Canada webcast)
18:30 Quarterfinal 4: Toronto vs. UQAM (SSN Canada webcast)
Friday, Nov. 12
13:30 Consolation 1: Loser QF 1 vs. Loser QF 2 (SSN Canada
webcast)
16:00 Consolation 2: Loser QF 3 vs. Loser QF 4 (SSN Canada
webcast)
Saturday, Nov. 13
11:00 Semi-final 1: Winner QF 1 vs. Winner QF 2 (SSN Canada
webcast)
14:00 Semi-final 2: Winner QF 3 vs. Winner QF 4 (SSN Canada
webcast)
16:30 Consolation final (SSN Canada webcast)
Sunday, Nov. 14
13:00 Bronze medal (SSN Canada webcast)
16:00 Championship final (SSN Canada webcast)
-CIS-

















