Soccer

Respect the order of the day between TFC, Sounders ahead of MLS Cup final

Respect was the order of the day Thursday as the Seattle Sounders and Toronto FC met the media ahead of Sunday's MLS Cup final. Seattle midfielder Cristian Roldan even confided he had a Michael Bradley jersey growing up.

Striker Jozy Altidore offers bleak injury update, still hopes to play part in game

Toronto FC midfielder Michael Bradley talks to reporters on Thursday during a news conference in Seattle. Toronto will face the Seattle Sounders on Sunday in the MLS Cup final. (Ted S. Warren/Associated Press)

Respect was the order of the day Thursday as the Seattle Sounders and Toronto FC met the media ahead of Sunday's MLS Cup final.

Seattle midfielder Cristian Roldan even confided he had a Michael Bradley jersey growing up.

"When we played them here this year I was extremely motivated, because that's someone I really look up to," the 24-year-old Roldan said of the 32-year-old Toronto captain. "The way he carries himself. I've now seen it firsthand for a year and half, two years now [with the U.S. team]. He's the ultimate professional, a true leader, a true captain.

"Any time I'm facing him, I want him to feel that I'm good enough to be on the same field as him. I've played alongside him and what a competitor he is. Any time I get to have a conversation with him, learn (from him), enjoy the moment that I have with him, is really a unique experience. I remember I had his jersey growing up, so it's going to be really fun to face him again."

Hardly bulletin board material.

WATCH | Toronto takes down Atlanta in East final:

Game Wrap: Toronto FC beats Atlanta, advance to MLS Cup

5 years ago
Duration 1:35
TFC survived an early attack in Atlanta to win 2-1 and advance to their third MLS Cup in the last four years.

For his part, Bradley said there's "not much there" when it comes to Toronto-Seattle in the true sense of a derby. The two teams are 3,300 kilometres apart and have only met 16 times — including twice for the MLS title — over the years.

"But obviously when you have two teams that in the span of four years play each other in a final three times, then that starts to count for something for sure," he said.

"I think it's a cool thing for the league to have two teams, two clubs that try to do things the right way, want to push the envelope, want to have good players, have great fan bases. It's a great thing for the league that clubs like that do well."

Clubs setting good example

Toronto defender Omar Gonzalez joined the Toronto-Seattle love fest.

"The league had high expectations for choosing these cities to bring MLS clubs to. And here we are, playing the final in Seattle with two great clubs who have done so well these past 10 years. I think it speaks volumes to how much the league has grown and how well the clubs are run these days."

Toronto, which entered the league in 2007, suffered through a string of down years before finally making the playoffs in 2015. Seattle has never missed the post-season since coming on board in 2009.

The teams meet for the MLS championship for their third time in four years. Seattle claimed the title via penalty shootout in 2016 while Toronto won 2-0 in 2017. Both games were at BMO Field. This time a sellout crowd of more than 69,000 is expected at CenturyLink Field.

The Sounders won the lone meeting between the two during the regular season, a 3-2 decision on April 13 in Seattle.

Seattle goalkeeper Stefan Frei, who played 82 league games for Toronto from 2009 to '13, was complimentary about the city and the organization.

"I look back fondly at my time in Toronto, to be honest," he said. "I felt welcomed. The city was a good city — good people, great restaurants. Really [the] lifestyle is amazing in Toronto, I think the people are amazing there.

"Yes we had our struggles as a football team. But it was also nice to make history there and win the first Canadian [Championship in 2009]."

And he said the Toronto organization was always committed to the cause.

"The organization put so much money into that franchise. I mean going through so many coaches, a state-of-the-art training facility. These are things that cannot be overlooked and I think it ultimately got them to the success that they had."

Altidore status still murky

Another day, another bleak injury update from Jozy Altidore.

"I haven't played any soccer in a month. So that's where I'm at," the Toronto FC striker said with a exasperated chuckle Thursday when asked about his recovery from a quad strain suffered in the regular-season finale Oct. 6 against Columbus.

"I'm trying to jog and trying to change pace and trying to do those type of things. But like I said I have to let the muscle heal first or else you put yourself at risk.

"I'm not telling you no false truths or nothing like that. I'm actually being very candid. That's where I am. I'm not happy about it but it is what it is."

Earlier this week, Altidore said he needed "a little bit of a miracle" to see action in Sunday's MLS Cup final against Seattle.

"I should never have used that word," Altidore said, drawing laughs. "Now you're all doing this to me."

The injury occurred when Altidore took a shot and his foot hit a sliding Jonathan Mensah's leg, causing him to lose his balance and hit the turf at BMO Field.

"I still have to progress. There's still things like kicking the ball," he said with a quick laugh. "I know it sounds silly but there are still things that I have to do that with this kind of injury are tricky. I'm trying my very best. I'm doing everything I can.

"We're all hoping, I'm hoping to obviously play some sort of part in the game."

Pozuelo has been pushed farther up front in Altidore's absence in the playoffs.