Canadian women's soccer team roster revealed for Tokyo Games
Captain Christine Sinclair to lead squad at her 4th Olympic Games
Goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan wept when she heard from coach Bev Priestman that she was on Canada's 18-woman Olympic roster.
She got the news on the NJ/NY Gotham FC team bus in a phone conversation filmed by teammates. They started celebrating when an emotional Sheridan raised her arm in triumph mid-call.
"These are good tears," Sheridan told Priestman. "Good tears."
This time round she had to battle back from surgery after going down in the seventh minute of a game against the U.S. at the SheBelieves Cup in February. The injury came on an innocuous-looking pass to defender Vanessa Gilles. An MRI later revealed that she had torn one of her quad muscles off the bone with about a four-centimetre retraction.
Sheridan underwent surgery March 1 to repair her right quad. Some 115 days and a lot of hard rehab later, her trip to Tokyo was confirmed.
Adriana Leon's comeback was also rewarded. The 28-year-old West Ham forward underwent surgery March 12 after suffering a fracture in the fifth metatarsal — the long bone on the outside of the foot that connects to the little toe — of her left foot in the SheBelieves Cup.
"They were over the moon," Priestman said of the reaction when she told both they had made it. "There were tears."
'Some really difficult decisions'
Priestman said selecting the 18-player roster, plus four alternates, was the most difficult decision of her career.
"Which is a credit to all of the players," she said in an interview. "Some really difficult decisions, but felt at the end of the five days after coming home [from camp in Spain], I did everything I could to watch footage, statistics. Everything you could as a coach to show respect to all of the players.
"I did that and then I also just followed my gut. You could say I made some brave decisions but if I'm asking the players to be brave, I felt I needed to do the same to pick a team that I felt could go on and change the colour of the medal."
Canada won back-to-back bronze medals at the London and Rio Olympics under John Herdman, who is now in charge of the men's program. Priestman, a former Canada Soccer youth and senior assistant coach, succeeded Kenneth Heiner-Moller as coach in October.
The roster includes 12 veterans of the Rio Olympic squad: Sinclair, Janine Beckie, Kadeisha Buchanan, Allysha Chapman, Jessie Fleming, Stephanie Labbe, Ashley Lawrence, Nichelle Prince, Quinn (who goes by one name), Deanne Rose, Desiree Scott and Shelina Zadorsky.
Leon, Gilles, Jayde Riviere, Julia Grosso and Evelyne Viens will be making their Olympic debuts.
Riviere, Grosso and Leon were members of the 2019 World Cup squad in France. The 25-year-old Gilles (six caps) and 24-year-old Viens (seven caps) have impressed under the 35-year-old Priestman.
"What I was determined to do when I came in was to give players who were performing on form a chance and I think those two players really stepped up to the mark," Priestman said of Gilles and Viens.
"Vanessa really stepped in at a time when we really needed her. And will continue to do so," she added, referencing Gilles filling in for Buchanan when she was unavailable for two camps earlier this year. "And Evelyne scores goals. and that's why she's in the squad."
Veteran midfielder Diana Matheson (206 caps) was ruled out due to a nagging foot injury.
Potential action for alternates
Veteran midfielder Sophie Schmidt (205 caps) and goalkeeper Erin McLeod (118 caps) were named as alternates along with 22-year-old fullback Gabrielle Carle (25 caps) and 20-year-old forward Jordyn Huitema (37 caps). All but McLeod, who was recovering from injury, were part of Canada's World Cup roster.
They will travel and train with the team. Carle was also an alternate in Rio.
Priestman said Schmidt was "absolutely devastated as you can imagine." But also ready to help however she can.
"Listen, that was probably the biggest call of my career." said Priestman. "I dreaded making that call to Sophie. Sophie. I can't underestimate the history that Sophie's got. And I think [she] will be an unbelievable alternate. But it was a massive call to make, a difficult one at that.
"I think Sophie will bring a level of experience and calmness to the group. And if Sophie has to come in, you've got someone who can absolutely step in. For that call, it was based on the blend in the midfield and not taking the same type of players. And unfortunately that meant Sophie just missed out."
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