Impact Montréal FC 1-1 Toronto FC
It’s all going to come down to 90 minutes.
Canadian rivals Impact Montréal FC and Toronto FC are all even after 90 minutes in the 2017 Canadian Championship final after the two sides played to a 1:1 draw in the opening leg at Stade Saputo on Wednesday 21 June. The return leg is next Tuesday 27 June at BMO Field in Toronto with a 19.30 local kick off. The match will be broadcast live across the country on TSN1, TSN3, TSN4, TSN5, and RDS (19.30 ET / 16.30 PT).
It marks the sixth time in seven years that the opening leg has ended in a draw.
Matteo Mancosu opened the scoring in the 19th minute on a header from close range. Laurent Ciman initiated the play with a long drive that Clint Irwin did well to save, but conceded a corner kick. On the corner that was played high to Marco Donadel, the long drive was initially stopped by Irwin, but the rebound was headed in by Mancosu.
Just 10 minutes later, Toronto FC equalised on a Jozy Altidore left-footed shot from the top of the box. With an Impact player down following a three-man collision, Raheem Edwards beat two other defenders to win the header in the air to move the ball to Altidore. The Toronto striker then took a touch with his right foot before he fired the equaliser with his left foot.
Edwards had actually nearly equalised the score two minutes earlier when he hit the post down the left wing in the 27th minute. Montréal then had a chance in the second half on a penalty, but Ignacio Piatti missed the attempt with a shot that sailed over the crossbar.
As the only all-Canada competition that leads to the international stage, including the CONCACAF Champions League and FIFA Club World Cup, the Canadian Championship is viewed as a prestigious event unparalleled in Canada.
New Canadian Content rules introduced by Canada Soccer in 2017 include the requirement that a minimum of three Canadians are in the starting lineup for all Canadian Championship matches which will result in more Canadian players taking the pitch than in any previous editions of the competition’s 10-year history.
In the 21 June match, six Canadians dressed for the two sides. Impact Montréal FC started Maxime Crépeau, Wandrille Lefèvre, and captain Patrice Bernier while Toronto FC dressed Jonathan Osorio, Raheem Edwards, and Jordan Hamilton.
1st Leg 21 June at Stade Saputo
2nd Leg 27 June at BMO FieldTSN1, TSN3, TSN4, TSN5, RDS pic.twitter.com/8XqB2f4MDp
— Canada Soccer (@CanadaSoccerEN) June 22, 2017
The Battle of the North
“The Battle of the North comes down to two teams that are familiar foes and true rivals,” said Steve Reed, Canada Soccer President. “We are expecting a real fight for Canadian bragging rights as well as a shot at international glory”
The Path to the FIFA Club World Cup
The path to the FIFA Club World Cup started with the Qualifying Round, with Ottawa Fury FC now joining Canada’s three MLS teams for home and away Semi-final series. The home and away Final round will culminate with the final match on 27 June where the winner will be crowned 2017 Canadian Champion and raise the Voyageurs Cup. A special one-match Battle of the North playoff between the 2016 Canadian Championships winners Toronto FC and the 2017 winners will be played on 9 August in Toronto to determine who will advance, unless Toronto FC repeats as Canadian winners.
The winners of the Battle of the North will have earned its spot to compete in the Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League, the region’s most prestigious club tournament, that qualifies its champion directly to the FIFA Club World Cup.
One of the most distinguished club level trophies in soccer, the FIFA Club World Cup pits the winners of CONCACAF Champions League against the winners of the five other continental championships: Asia’s AFC Champions League, Africa’s CAF Champions League, South America’s Copa Libertadores, Oceania’s OFC Champions League, and Europe’s UEFA Champions League. The competition also features the host nation’s national champions.