Heartbreak for Impact
March 6, 2009 11:40 AM | Posted by Jason de VosI have always been the glass-half-full type of person. It’s a choice you make, I suppose. You can be a negative influence and criticize everything and everyone around you; or you can try to be positive, keeping your goals in focus, despite the hurdles that are placed in front of you.
It is a philosophy that has served me well over the years, especially in my football career. I’ve lost count of the number of times I could have given up, quit the game and gone back to having a “normal” life. Football can really kick you in the teeth sometimes, and it takes strong character to keep going when all around you seems to be falling apart.
Well last night, it all fell apart for the Montreal Impact.
Commanding lead vanished
After going a goal down in the first 15 minutes, the Impact fought back to lead Santos Laguna 2-1 at halftime of the second leg of their CONCACAF Champions League quarter-final in Torreon, Mexico. They led the Mexicans 4-1 on aggregate, and even if they conceded three second half goals, Montreal would still advance to the semifinals by virtue of having scored two goals away from home. Santos needed to score four goals in the second half to win the tie 5-4.
Even as late as the 90th minute, it seemed an impossible task. Santos had clawed back two goals and led 3-2 on the night, but they still trailed the Impact 4-3 on aggregate.
The game should have been over.
When Montreal intercepted the ball, they should have moved it into the Santos half and kept possession, or at least knocked it out for a throw in. That would have relieved the pressure on their goal, and it would have allowed their defenders to push out of the 18-yard box. If the other team doesn’t have the ball, they can’t score, can they?
But Montreal failed to do that, and time and time again, they gifted the ball back to Santos.
Darwin Quintero had a phenomenal second half for Santos, and he tormented the Impact by running at their defenders every time he picked up the ball. He deserved the two goals he scored in extra time to give Santos a 5-2 victory, 5-4 on aggregate, sending the Mexicans through to the semifinals. Montreal, on the other hand, is left to rue what might have been.
Collapse shouldn't overshadow season
It would be easy to describe Montreal’s demise as a monumental collapse, because it was. When you lead a game by two goals in the 90th minute and end up losing, there is no other way to describe it. They clutched defeat from the jaws of victory.
But I don’t want to do that. As I said before, it’s easy to be negative. I would rather focus on the tremendous performances I’ve seen from so many different players on the Impact roster throughout this tournament. Guys like Nevio Pizzolitto, Sandro Grande, Matt Jordan and Cedric Joqueviel.
Others too, like David Testo, Joey Gjertsen, Leo Di Lorenzo and Eduardo Sebrango. In fairness, I could list just about every Impact player and point to a major contribution that he made to allow Montreal to reach the quarter-final stage. Tony Donatelli hardly played last night, yet it was his goals that saw Montreal succeed in the group stage of the competition.
It will be of no consolation to the Montreal players, however. They will know how close they came to reaching the semifinals, and no amount of back-patting is going to make the pain of losing go away.
'They'll measure up just fine'
You learn a great deal about yourself when you lose big games. One of my favourite quotes, from Martin Luther King Jr., sums it up best, "The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."
This is a challenging time for the Montreal Impact. How the players respond to this will say more about them, as individuals and as a team, than how they respond to winning games.
From what I’ve seen of them over the last year, I think they’ll measure up just fine.
About the Author
Jason de Vos
Former professional soccer player Jason de Vos brings more than 18 years of experience on the pitch to his analyst role on CBC's Major League Soccer and FIFA telecasts.
De Vos began his professional career with the Montreal Impact before joining Darlington in England in 1996. In 1998, De Vos joined Dundee United of the Scottish Premier League and later moved over to the English Premier League with Wigan Athletic and Ipswich Town FC before retiring at the end of the 2007-08 season.
The stalwart defender was also captain of Canada's national team from 1999 to 2004. He scored the winning goal in Canada's 2-0 victory over Colombia in the final of the 2000 CONCACAF Gold Cup, the only major international tournament the Canadian team has won.
Categories
- Hockey (462)
-
- Bob Cole (2)
- Cassie Campbell (34)
- Craig Simpson (36)
- Elliotte Friedman (83)
- Glenn Healy (6)
- Guy Carbonneau (13)
- Jeff Marek (37)
- Jennifer Botterill (3)
- Jim Hughson (33)
- Kelly Hrudey (33)
- Kevin Weekes (11)
- Marc Crawford (18)
- Mike Milbury (30)
- PJ Stock (19)
- Scott Morrison (66)
- Trade Deadline (25)
- Soccer (220)
-
- Greg Sutton (6)
- Jason de Vos (64)
- John Molinaro (69)
- Nigel Reed (72)
- Ron Kuipers (8)
- Baseball (1)
-
- Jesse Barfield (1)
- Basketball (26)
-
- Paul Jay (26)
- Amateur Sports (71)
-
- Scott Russell (72)
- Curling (4)
-
- Kevin Martin (3)
- Figure Skating (43)
-
- Pj Kwong (40)
- Scott Russell (6)
- Aerial Skiing (4)
-
- Veronika Bauer (4)
- Alpine Skiing (16)
-
- Britt Janyk (1)
- Kelly VanderBeek (15)
- Bobsleigh (13)
-
- Heather Moyse (13)
- Boxing (44)
-
- Chris Iorfida (44)
- Football
-
- Short Track (14)
-
- Jessica Gregg (14)
- Sports (1)
-
- Rowing (5)
-
- Kevin Light (5)
- Snowboarding (9)
-
- Katie Tsuyuki (9)
- Mixed Martial Arts (2)
-
- Jeff Marek (2)
- Badminton (6)
-
- Anna Rice (6)
- Paralympics (3)
-
- Matt Hallat (3)
- Authors (14)
-
- Anna Rice (6)
- Bob Cole (2)
- Britt Janyk (1)
- Cassie Campbell (32)
- Chris Iorfida (40)
- Craig Simpson (36)
- Elliotte Friedman (79)
- Glenn Healy (6)
- Greg Sutton (6)
- Guy Carbonneau (13)
- Heather Moyse (13)
- Jason de Vos (58)
- Jeff Marek (38)
- Jennifer Botterill (3)
- Jesse Barfield (1)
- Jessica Gregg (14)
- Jim Hughson (30)
- John Molinaro (48)
- Katie Tsuyuki (7)
- Kelly Hrudey (32)
- Kelly VanderBeek (14)
- Kevin Light (5)
- Kevin Martin (3)
- Kevin Weekes (10)
- Marc Crawford (18)
- Matt Hallat (3)
- Mike Milbury (30)
- Nigel Reed (67)
- P.J. Stock (19)
- Paul Jay (26)
- Pj Kwong (36)
- Ron Kuipers (4)
- Scott Morrison (62)
- Scott Morrison - My Greatest Day (10)
- Scott Russell (72)
- Veronika Bauer (4)
Recent Post
- Carl Robinson deserved a proper send-off from TFC
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Getting serious about headshots starts now
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Winning formula determined by trades, team philosophy
- Monday, March 8, 2010
- Five questions: Montreal’s relative deadline inactivity, Olympic hangover
- Sunday, March 7, 2010
- Olympics reinforce value of talented defenceman
- Friday, March 5, 2010
Archives
- March 2010 (12)
- February 2010 (33)
- January 2010 (51)
- December 2009 (60)
- November 2009 (74)
- October 2009 (65)
- September 2009 (53)
- August 2009 (26)
- July 2009 (35)
- June 2009 (48)
- May 2009 (27)
- April 2009 (40)
- March 2009 (79)
- February 2009 (70)
- January 2009 (64)
- December 2008 (58)
- November 2008 (71)
- October 2008 (71)
- September 2008 (5)


