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Canada West Final: UBC claims gold
Photo credit Uwe Welz
EDMONTON - The UBC Thunderbirds claimed the 13th conference
title in program history on the strength of a 1-0 victory over the
Saskatchewan Huskies at the Canada West Final Four in Edmonton. The
victory also clinched a berth for the T-Birds at the 2010 CIS men's
soccer national championship in Toronto next week.
Gagandeep Dosanjh, a CW first-team all-star, got his 'Birds off to
a great start, capitalizing on a Saskatchewan miscue to score less
than 60 seconds into the match.
A long thrown-in from fellow CW first-teamer Will Hyde some how
found its way to Dosanjh all alone in front of the Huskie goal and
he calmly deposited what turned out to be the match winner.
"Of course it's nice to get one early on and it really settled our
group," said UBC head coach Mike Mosher. "At the same time, any
team that gets scored on that early gets unsettled but full credit
to Saskatchewan today. They battled back hard and are a quality
team."
Although the Huskies worked the next 90 minutes in search of an
equalizer, they didn't get many golden opportunities as the T-Bird
defence held them to only three shots on target.
"Our back four was outstanding this weekend - every single guy was
just great. Jason, Matty, and Will all got conference recognition
but Graeme Webber is one heck of central defender in his own
right," said Mosher of his fearsome foursome.
Zach Kalthoff picked up his sixth clean sheet in the tenth start of
his rookie season. The T-Birds tallied eight shots on target with
Huskie keeper Mark Diakiw stopping all but one in the loss.
Joining UBC in Toronto next week are CW league champions Alberta,
who picked up conference bronze on Sunday after having already
secured their spot at the CIS tournament by virtue of their regular
season performance.
Mosher's confident his squad has what it takes to be a factor next
weekend but he knows it won't be easy.
"Our approach is going to be very similar to what it was this
weekend. We want to play tight defensively and keep a clean sheet -
that style makes it really hard to beat you," said the UBC bench
boss. "The quality of the teams that had already qualified looks to
very strong and there are going to be no easy games."
The tournament gets underway next next Thursday in Toronto.
Source:
UBC Sports Info



















