New Whitecaps coach Sartini ecstatic over first win
Vanni Sartini got emotional Sunday night.
So did Vancouver
Whitecaps players – but in a good way.
Sartini, the club’s
new interim coach, guided the Whitecaps to a 4-1 victory over Real Salt Lake in
Major League Soccer action at B.C. Place Stadium. The game was as lopsided as
the score indicated, with RSL only managing to score off a couple of timely
bounces in the game’s final minute.
"It
couldn't go better,” said Sartini. “I'm very happy right now. I'm like a little
kid when he's happy. I want everybody to know that I'm happy."(
With the win, the
Caps extended their MLS unbeaten streak to a record nine games, surpassing the
mark set in 2014, and moved closer to playoff contention.
"I
was everything on the scale,” said Sartini of his emotions. “I was excited,
scared preoccupied, inspired. I was every adjective and now I'm just happy."(
Caps extend
unbeaten streak
Sartini made his head
coaching debut, moving from his post as the Whitecaps Academy’s director of methodology,
after the club unceremoniously fired Marc Dos Santos on Friday. The dismissal
came a day after a humiliating 4-3 loss to lower-tier Pacific FC in Canadian
championship preliminary round play in Victoria.
The Whitecaps (6-7-8)
delivered a much more inspired effort Sunday than they did in the B.C. capital.
"I think it's kind of simple to say, but the win
cures everything,” said Sartini. “When you win, everything looks in a better
perspective, and the guys were also happy and they should be happy -- and proud
of their performance."
RSL also sported
an interim coach, former assistant Pablo Mastroeni, who was promoted on Friday
after Freddy Juarez unexpectedly bolted to Seattle, , albeit for an assistant’s
position, according to reports. Juarez made the unusual decision with his club
above the playoff bar because of his uncertain contract status with RSL next
season and the team’s anticipated sale by the end of 2021, The Athletic and
other media outlets reported.
The temporary
Whitecaps and RSL coaches acknowledged their unusual situations in a brief
conversation.
“Crazy”
situation
"We just said that the world of soccer is crazy,
because Thursday we had completely different jobs, the both of us, and then we
were there now leading the team. As I said, this situation is kind of unusual,
but that's how it works. We need to adapt or die. In Italy, we say, either we
swim or we drown. So let's swim. And, let's see how much longer we can
swim."
Sartini said he walked between the teams as they were
about to walk onto the pitch after half-time because felt trouble brewing.
"There was the start of a confrontation or
something. I just wanted to avoid any problem, to walk with our players and
their players, because we were up in the score and we didn't want to risk
anything -- red cards or having a brawl or something."
Instead, the Whitecaps
showed their fight through strong offence and defence.
Designated player
Ryan Gauld led the Whitecaps offensively for the second straight home game,
scoring a goal and setting up two others, including an RSL own-goal. Brian
White and Florian Jungwirth also scored for the Caps.
Anderson Julio
tallied for RSL (7-8-6) shortly before the final whistle. RSL suffered its
second straight loss and fourth in six games.
Jungwirth said the
Whitecaps wanted to respond after letting down Dos Santos and his brother Phil,
an assistant coach who was also fired, with a bad effort on Thursday.
Whitecaps “felt
the guilt”
“We felt the guilt,”
said Jungwirth, who scored his first goal since 2018 while playing for the San
Jose Earthquakes. “We came out flying today. There was a lot of anger in us.”
Gauld took the corner kick that led to a Salt Lake
own-goal in the 33rd minute and enabled Vancouver to take a 1-0 lead
into half-time. After Brian White gave the Caps a 2-0 lead in 53rd
minute, tapping in a rebound after RSL goalkeeper Andrew Putna mishandled a
cross, Gauld scored on a header 10 minutes later.
Jungwirth rewarded
Sartini for giving the centre back his first start as a Whitecap since being acquired
in a trade from San Jose earlier in the month as he home another Gauld
corner-kick.
After scoring,
Jungwirth reluctantly did a dance routine with Leonard Owusu and other
teammates. Owusu had choreographed the moves in training.
“When he came (following the goal), I was already
celebrating,” said Jungwirtth. “I had to laugh. He insisted to do the dance. I
hope it didn't look too embarrassing for me, because I know Leo's a far better
dancer, I think I still did pretty well."
Jungwirth displayed emotion in a different way in the
first half as he shoved RSL’s Noah Powder in the back after he took down Bruno
Gaspar hard, earning a yellow card for the infraction.
"That's
the way I play,” said Jungwirth. “I leave it all for the team. When I'm on the
field, I'm a wild dog. I go in every duel. I don't mind what happens. And when
someone attacks my teammates, I'm gonna protect them in every way. … I've
never received a red card in my whole career, so I know which buttons I have to
push in my opponents to provoke them. That's the way I play. That's the way
I've performed for years. It's worked out well for me, and I hope the fans and
the coaching staff like that."
Sartini had no complaints about Jungwirth or any
other Vancouver players. However, RSL interim field boss Mastroeni was less
than impressed with his charges.
RSL coach: Wrong mentality
“I feel like we
didn’t have the right mentality,” Mastroeni told reporters. “Physically, I
think they were first to most balls and picked up all the loose balls. It was a
very difficult match.”
RSL’s only goal resulted after a shot bounced off a
Whitecaps defender, hit the crossbar and came right to Julio. Before then, RSL’s
best chance came late in the first half. Justin Meram booted Powder’s rebound on
a hard shot from distance over an open net.
While the Whitecaps
hoped to build on the win, RSL players wanted to forget their loss. Salt Lake
captain Albert Rusnak said his club’s effort “went wrong pretty much
everywhere.”
“This is one of
those games you don't take anything from into the next game,” said Rusnak.
Good story Monte.
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