CSC MISSISSAUGA vs SC WATERLOO IN OPENER

The Canadian Soccer League First Division will open its 2019 season earlier than previously scheduled and announced to now see CSC Mississauga at home to visiting SC Waterloo on Sunday, May 19, a 9 pm kickoff at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga. The earlier kickoff date will accommodate a five-month long regular season through to early October, to be followed by the post season playoffs and the CSL Championship Final later that month.

There will be five matches the following weekend when all 10 First Division teams will be in action, starting with the current CSL champions FC Vorkuta at home to expansion team Kingsman A SC, as previously announced. The opening games in the CSL First Division are:

Sun. May 19, Hershey Centre 9 pm CSC Mississauga vs SC Waterloo

Sat. May 25, Ontario Soccer Centre 6 pm FC Vorkuta vs Kingsman A SC

Sat. May 25, Heritage Field 6:30 pm Hamilton City  vs SC Waterloo

Sat. May 25, Heritage Field 8:30 pm Brantford Galaxy vs Serbian White Eagles

Sun. May 26, Centennial Stadium 7:30 pm FC Ukraine United  vs Real Mississauga SC

Sun. May 26, Birchmount Stadium 8 pm Scarborough SC vs CSC Mississauga

Six teams will kick off the  CSL Second Division mid- June, each playing a 15-game schedule through to September followed by the CSL Second Division championship playoffs leading to the championship final in October. The teams are: Brantford Galaxy B, CSC Mississauga B,  Hamilton City B, Kingsman B, Serbian White Eagles B and FC Vorkuta B.

 

FIVE-MONTH LONG CSL SEASON KICKS OFF MAY 19

SC Waterloo travels to CSC Mississauga for the CSL season opener May 19 to be followed by  five matches the following weekend  to kickoff  a new Canadian Soccer League five-month long regular season, a campaign stretching to early October, followed by the post-season playoffs leading to the CSL championship final later that month.

Defending CSL champions FC Vorkuta are at home to expansion team Kingsman SC at the OSA Soccer Centre in Vaughan and Hamilton City will begin its season against SC Waterloo at the Heritage Field in Hamilton followed by Brantford Galaxy vs Serbian White Eagles. FC Ukraine United kickoff their home season against Real Mississauga at Centennial Stadium.

Vorkuta enjoyed instant success on venturing into professional soccer after nine years of amateur competition in Toronto and just north of the city.  in 2017, the inaugural year in the CSL, the Richmond Hill-based club took the CSL First Division title and reached the semifinal of the championship playoffs. In 2018, Vorkuta won the CSL championship and there were also successes by the Vorkuta reserve team during both years, including the Second Division title in 2018.

FC Ukraine United has also been prominent in three years in the CSL following an impressive 10 years in the amateur Ontario Soccer League. Ukraine United entered local soccer in 2006, winning several competitions including promotion to the Central Premier Division in 2011. The Toronto-based club was accepted into the CSL in 2016, gaining a runner-up finish in the First Division, winning the Second Division in 2017 and taking the top division in 2018 by a superior goal differential over FC Vorkuta.

Scarborough SC team that came close to top honors following a very good 2018 regular season with just three defeats in the 16-game schedule for a fourth position finish. This was followed by a cliffhanger championship final that ended the season with Scarborough losing to Vorkuta on penalty kicks. It was a 1-1 draw following extra time. By contrast, CSC Mississauga ended its inaugural 2018 CSL season with just one victory and are expected to be stronger opponents in the upcoming campaign.

Opening games are:

Fri. May 19, Hershey Centre 9 pm CSC Mississauga vs SC Waterloo

Sat. May 25, Ontario Soccer Centre 6 pm FC Vorkuta vs Kingsman A  SC

Sat. May 25, Heritage Field 6:30 pm Hamilton City vs SC Waterloo

Sat May 25, Heritage Field 8:30 pm Brantford Galaxy vs Serbian White Eagles

Sun. May 26, Centennial Stadium 7:30 pm FC Ukraine United vs Real Mississauga SC

Sun. May 26, Birchmount Stadium  8 pm Scarborough SC vs CSC Mississauga

CSL KICKOFF HAS THE BIG PICTURE IN MIND

In just four weeks, ten teams will kickoff a new Canadian Soccer League season in a year that’s considered to be the beginning of a new era in professional soccer in Canada.

The CSL has announced the 2019 First Division line-up as FC Vorkuta (current CSL champions), Scarborough SC (2018 CSL Championship finalist), Brantford Galaxy, CSC Mississauga, Hamilton City, Kingsman SC, Real Mississauga SC, Serbian White Eagles, FC Ukraine United, SC Waterloo.

Kingsman SC was the one successful  expansion team of five that applied for 2019 First Division entry.

It’s been 95 years – in 1924 – since Canada ventured on to the world soccer stage, but its men’s national team has made only one appearance in the World Cup finals since that time. That was in 1986 when the team failed to score a goal in the three games played in Mexico.

Much has been said about Canada’s failure to gain a place in the World Cup finals since 1986, while many countries with less player and economic resources have basked in the glory of at least making an appearance.

Canada is all about hockey after all, it has been said. But demographics reveal a vastly different story, showing that the soccer community has been rich in player population for 20 years now – more than any other team sport – with an abundance of technical expertise following a flood of post-war arrivals of immigrants from countries steeped in soccer tradition. Dozens of coaches and players have settled in Canada after experiencing high level soccer elsewhere.

The lack of sufficient professional soccer, which includes the semi-professional game, for promising players to step into is now believed to be a major reason for Canada’s failure to develop a sufficient number of high level players for its men’s national team, a team strong enough for an appearance in the World Cup finals. It’s not every special player who wants to go outside of Canada during those early stages of uncertainty.

More high level soccer in Canada, consisting of Major League Soccer, the Canadian Soccer League and the launch of the Canadian Premier League on April 27, is expected to start paying dividends that will show results in the years to come.

“We will play our part and  continue a longstanding CSL practice and tradition of encouraging special Canadian players to strive for excellence that may give them a chance of entry into one of the youth national teams and eventually the men’s national side,” said CSL president Doug Bakoc.

In 2026, Canada should also be given a chance to compete in a World Cup as co-host with Mexico and the United States.

The CSL First Division regular season will run from mid-May to September with the post season playoffs leading to the CSL Championship in October.

THE CSL SEES A NEW ERA IN CANADIAN PROFESSIONAL SOCCER

FC Ukraine United and FC Vorkuta clash at Centennial Park Stadium in 2018, two recent teams in a a new era of professional soccer  in  Canada .  PHOTO: Michael Fayehun/F10 Sports Photography

NEW  ERA OF PROFESSIONAL SOCCER IN CANADA

When the Canadian Soccer League kicks off its 2019 season mid-May there will be a special determination by its members that today’s league  – which first kicked off on June 19, 1926, a match between Toronto Ulster and Windsor Rovers — will not soon end up in the history books.  Instead, the league, described by former Toronto Star sports writer Bob Koep as being ‘one of a kind’, and author Colin Jose  ‘has stood the test of time’, will continue to play an important part in edging soccer ever closer to becoming a mainstream sport in Canada, to find its deserved place in the Canadian sports community.

The CSL, rebranded from time to time, is after all, the longest running soccer league in the country, to   survive where many have faded into obscurity.

When the CSL’s forerunner National Soccer League kicked off  in 1926, so did the Interprovincial League, and numerous major leagues through the ages to what now appears to be a new era of stability in North American professional soccer.

The Canadian Soccer League sees a new era in this country, with the success of top flight teams Montreal Impact, Toronto FC and Vancouver Whitecaps in Major League Soccer, the introduction of the Canadian Premier League and a rejuvenated CSL. The tough CSL has a reputation for introducing promising young local players to a professional environment with almost 50 of them making their way to youth national teams following time in the CSL during the past 10 years. Several have advanced to high level clubs and the national squad, the most successful being Atiba Hutchinson, who made a brief appearance in the CSL before joining top clubs in Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and Turkey, while the most recent was Jonathan Osorio of Toronto FC and Canada who earned the Rookie of the Year Award in his debut CSL season.

The league has benefitted by the use in recent years of import players, with half of the CSL’s First Division clubs signing established pros from Europe. A few of the many outstanding imports have been Sasa Viciknez of Serbian White Eagles who played in the European Champions League, Nikola Budalic, also of Serbian Eagles and now GM of Orlando of Major League Soccer,  Vitaliy Sidirov from Russia with Kingston FC, Janer Guaza Lucumi with SC Toronto following his selection to the Colombian U-20 team, Krum Bibishkov, Scarborough SC and Real Mississauga who was prominent in Bulgaria and Portugal and stirred the interest of Bayern Munich, Aleksandar Stojiljkovic of  SC Waterloo and Scarborough SC following time with high level clubs in Serbia, and  Sergii Ivliev of Ukraine United, then FC Vorkuta, was prominent in Ukraine and Poland.

It’s perhaps no coincidence that the CSL’s new offices are located close to Toronto Airport where a procession of players from Europe arrive weekly to join teams strengthened and made more attractive by their presence.

 

ISAC CAMBAS BROUGHT SOCCER TO THE PORTUGUESE COMMUNITY

ISAC CAMBAS BROUGHT SOCCER TO THE PORTUGUESE COMMUNITY

Isac Cambas loved the game so much he once owned a team and called it after himself. But not to steal the spotlight, he reversed his first name to call the amateur soccer team Casi Soccer Club.

 Cambas learned all about football growing up supporting Porto, one of Portugal’s top sides and one of the leading teams of Europe. On arrival in Canada he soon became an established member of the soccer community, entering a stage called the Goan Soccer League, one of many amateur leagues playing attractive soccer and governed by the Toronto Soccer Association. It was humble football beginnings in Canada for sure, eventually leading to a life of soccer that kept the semi-professional and the professional game central to the Portuguese community in Southern Ontario following the demise of the First Portuguese team in the 1990s. 

 Isac Cambas died on March 1, following a battle with cancer diagnosed in the summer of 2018. He was 56.

 Cambas was instrumental in the formation of the Puma League, which launched in 1995 as an ethnically-based concept appealing to Toronto’s growing diverse community. His team, Portuguese United, moved to the professional Canadian National Soccer League in 1996 to be known as Toronto Supra. In 1997 the CNSL was renamed the Canadian Professional Soccer League (CPSL) and following a period in amateur soccer,  Cambas in 2001 entered Toronto Supra as an expansion franchise in the pro CPSL.  His team was later named Portuguese FC which in 2011 merged with SC Toronto which became the Portuguese entity in soccer until 2013. The club is now in amateur soccer with broad programs for player development and competition with various age groups.

Tony Camacho, who also followed a similar path from Portugal to Canada to become one of Canada’s top soccer referees, earning the coveted FIFA badge in 1992, has held various top level positions as a match official administrator and is presently leading a long-term developmental program to increase Canada’s high level match officials, spoke recently of  Cambas: “Isac loved the game and it showed in his willingness to discuss the laws of the game as well as controversial referee calls and he was interested in an  improved standard of officiating. Always pleasant and open to discussion”, he said.

Dragan Bakoc, president of the Canadian Soccer League in which Isac Cambas was an equity owner for 13 years, commented: “I am saddened by the loss of Isac, a colleague and friend for many years and a great member of the soccer community. He was generous in the game and signed up several players who turned out to be outstanding at higher levels. A nice man, and from the CSL our condolences go to his family and his many friends.”

Danny Amaral, one of the CSL’s top players over the years with several seasons at a high level in Portugal and Spain and now head coach of Portugal AC of Canada’s Premier Arena Soccer League, explained recently how Isac Cambas brought local soccer to the Portuguese community and kept the Portuguese teams in Southern Ontario in the spotlight. “Isac was a credit to soccer in Canada and the Portuguese community here, a hard worker and generous in many ways. He’ll be missed,” said Amaral.

KINGSMAN IN THE CSL –

AND KINGSMAN IN THE CSL

The Canadian Soccer League will kickoff mid-May with new teams in both divisions for a five-month long 2019 campaign stretching through to the championship final in October.

New team  expansion team Kingsman Soccer Club, based in King City just north of Toronto. Kingsman SC B, the club’s reserve squad, will be in the CSL Second Division.

Sergiy Shchavyelyev is president and part owner of new club Kingsman Soccer Club based in King City, just north of Toronto to be the first club from that community to venture into professional soccer.  Partners in the ownership are Sergiy Przhebelskyy, the club’s vice president and Oleg Kalyadin, director of marketing.

Kingsman will also be adding an academy to the club, focusing on older teens to develop skills with a view to early first step entry into the reserve team. The home ground location has yet to be announced.

FC Vorkuta are current CSL champions, having defeated Scarborough SC in the 2018 final, and the FC Vorkuta B reserve team captured the CSL Second Division championship, defeating Halton United B in the final. FC Ukraine United won the regular season CSL First Division and FC Vorkuta B won the regular season CSL Second Division.

 

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?       

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

        CSL players moving up……………Part 2

FROM THE CSL TO EUROPE

More CSL players ventured to Europe during the past decade, including Fidan Nika of St. Catharines Roma Wolves to German clubs FC Passau, SG Bogen II,  SV Poppenreuth and most recently SV Mitterteich, while Gil Hong and Christian Kusiewicz of Mississauga Eagles FC was transferred to Gyori ETO FC  Hungary and today is with Oakville Blue Devils of Ontario League 1. Marcus Godinho of Toronto FC II moved to Heart of Midlothian in the Scottish Premier League and in 2018 with Berwick Rangers, also of Scotland. David Monsalve of North York Astros was signed by FC Inter Turku of Finland, and returned to Canada recently to play for Ottawa Fury of the USL. Igor Pisanjuk of Mississauga Eagles FC and later Vasas Astros SC, both of the CSL, was with Hungarian clubs Ferencvarosi, Szolnoki MAV FC, Kecskemeti, Egri FC and Vasas FC.

THE EUROPEAN TOUCH

Jonathan Lao (above picture) an impressive Toronto area attacking midfielder over the years, played in the CSL for Toronto FC II, was signed by FC Rot-Weiss Erfurt of Germany and was later a standout for the York University side including winning the Joe Johnson Memorial Award as the most outstanding university player in 2016. Jonathan, 25, considers that talented young Canadian players should seek a spot in Europe to experience the difference in culture and mentality for the game if they desire to pursue professional football. Lao was in the Canadian youth program as early as 15 and represented Canada in the 2009 CONCACAF U-17 Championship in Mexico.

FROM THE CSL TO INTERNATIONAL DUTY

During the period following 2010, a procession of players were travelling extensively from CSL clubs to represent their country at the youth level, including Odaine Demar, Julien Edwards and Taylor Benjamin of the CSL’s  Capital City of  Ottawa. Demar was selected for the Jamaica U-20 national team in the CONCACAF championships, Edwards and Benjamin were selected for their native Guyana. Stephane Emard, playing for Kingston FC was selected for the St. Lucia national team for the Gold Cup qualifiers. Canadian Soccer Association coaches  also stepped in to identify the promising players under contract with CSL clubs and several players with Montreal Impact II playing in the CSL were selected They included midfielder Allesandro Riggi, striker Stephan Vukovic, (the CSL’s top scorer in 2011), midfielder Kevin Luarca and defender Kai Morton. Striker Reda Agourram, midfielder Pierre Rudolph Mayard, former Trois-Riviers Attak defender Karl Ouimette, and full back Aron Mkungilwa were also selected to Canada’s youth teams.

SKYLAR THOMAS FIRST WINNIPEG SIGNING

Skylar Thomas showed good natural ability when in 2012 he entered the CSL with the Toronto FC reserve squad while also playing at Syracuse where he captained the university team. The tall (6’ 3”) Scarborough-born defender was signed by Reading United in the U.S.-based USL League Two, where in 2014 he played before returning to the Toronto FC club to make 47 appearances in the reserve team.  He then signed for Charleston Battery of the USL in 2017 and played regularly through the 2018 season. Thomas, 25, is the first signing for Valour FC, the Winnipeg team in the newly-formed Premier Soccer League (PSL) which is scheduled to kickoff in 2019. Valour head coach and GM Ron Gale described Thomas on Global News radio as being “a strong centre-back, athletic and quick, and good in the air”. Thomas has made seven appearances for Canada’s U-23 squad.

SERGIO CAMARGO A CAVALRYMAN

The soccer career of Sergio Camargo kicked off in earnest when in 2009 when the Colombia-born midfielder turned out for Toronto FC II in the CSL during the 2009 season. In 2010 Camargo won both the CSL Reserve Division MVP and Rookie of the Year awards before playing college soccer with Coastal Carolina and in Syracuse with a string of achievements. In 2015 he was captain of the Waterloo, Ontario-based K-W United when the team won the USL Premier Division Championship and in 2017 was signed by Toronto FC. In 2018 Camargo, now 24, played for Calgary Foothills of USL League Two and has signed for Cavalry FC, the Calgary team to kickoff in the Canadian Premier League’s inaugural 2019 season. Camargo made his debut for Canada in the 2011 FIFA U-17 World Cup.

DRAGOSLAV SEKULARAC

Dragoslav Sekularac, the former Red Star Belgrade attacking midfielder considered to be one of the top legendary players in world soccer and who managed a successful re-launch of Serbian White Eagles of the CSL in 2006, died at age 81 last Saturday, January 5.  Sekularac was considered one of the most popular players to wear a Red Star shirt due to his exceptional ball skills that raised the stadium noise volume whenever he took possession. Sekularac made his debut for Red Star Belgrade in 1955, playing 470 games scoring 119 goals in 11 seasons. He played 41 times for the Yugoslavia national team. Sekularac was not new to Canada when appointed GM in 1966, having spent time with Serbian White Eagles of the CSL’s forerunner National Soccer League in 1975. His presence in 2006 attracted some of the largest crowds to watch a CSL game and there was considerable success on the field of play, winning the International Conference with both the best offensive and defensive record with 17 wins, 4 draws and 1 defeat.

 

THE 2018 CSL SEASON IN REVIEW

ALL SET TO GO

Expansion teams CSC Mississauga and Real Mississauga joined Brantford Galaxy, Hamilton City , Scarborough SC, Serbian White Eagles, FC Ukraine United, FC Vorkuta and SC Waterloo to form the 2018 CSL First Division with a new season kickoff date of May 13.

Halton United B also entered the CSL, to start its campaign in the CSL Second Division with Brantford Galaxy B, Milton B, Scarborough B, Serbian White Eagles B and FC Vorkuta B to form the division two teams that completed the 2018 competition.

 

HOW IT ENDED

Without a serious challenge from any one of three or four teams in the CSL First Division, the regular season league title was expected to go to FC Vorkuta or FC Ukraine United. As the five-month long season unfolded, these two teams – both recent in Canada’s only professional soccer league – took over at the top, each ending with 38 points, nine points ahead of teams 3rd and 4th in the table.  Ukraine United eventually won the First Division and Vorkuta won the Canadian Soccer League Championship. The following are events of interest in the five-month long campaign:

 

MAY KICKOFF

FC Vorkuta and FC Ukraine United, the two most successful teams in 2017, came together for the 2018 CSL First Division season opener on May 13, a 2-1 opening victory for Vorkuta at Centennial Stadium. The winner was scored from the penalty spot midway through the second half by Oleh Kerchu, the Vorkuta captain, who entered the CSL in 2016 with today’s opposition, FC Ukraine United, before being transferred to Vorkuta in 2017. The CSL Second Division kicked off two weeks later on May 25 when Vorkuta reserve team dominated Serbian White Eagles reserves, 12-1.

 

GREAT SCORING

Number 4 is a lucky number for Alexander Stojiljkovic of Scarborough SC who led his side with four goals to a 5-1 defeat of Hamilton City on May 27. It was not the first time Stojiljkovic scored four goals, the Serbian-born striker hit four against Milton in a 7-0 victory on September 2, 2017 and followed up with another four in a 5-0 win against Brantford Galaxy which assured him of the CSL 2017 scoring title with total 17 goals.

 

JUNE’S DOUBLE HAT-TRICK

It’s not often one team scores two hat-tricks in a match, but this occured on June 30 when forward Yevhen Falkovskyi and midfielder Pavlo Lukianets both scored a three goals for FC Ukraine United in a 9-0 First Division victory against SC Waterloo at RIM Park. Falkovskyi and Lukianets each had distinguished careers in Ukraine before arriving in Canada during the 2016-17 period to play for FC Ukraine United in the CSL.

 

FROM CENTENNIAL STADIUM TO RUSSIA IN JULY

Not many years ago, Joe Fletcher ran the line in Canadian Soccer League games at Centennial Stadium in Etobicoke and other grounds on the CSL circuit. In earlier times, Fletcher was known as a speedy player before a decision to become a match official in soccer, to be noticed eventually by CSL referee-in-chief Tony Camacho who offered the Niagara Falls teenager an opportunity to run the line in a nearby Roma Wolves home game at the Club Roma Stadium on Vansickle Road in St. Catharines.

The now 41 year old Chartered Accountant is still running the line, but to a different audience. Seen by billions of soccer fans around the world, the estimated TV audience watching the 1918 World Cup in Russia, Fletcher was Assistant Referee for the England vs Colombia World Cup match in Moscow on July 3. It was his second World Cup assignment after being selected to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Eight years in the CSL led to assignments in Major League Soccer, followed by key games in CONCACAF and other international matches. He was on the line for the FIFA U-20 World Cup in Canada and was assigned to matches at the Olympic Games in London in 2012.

 

SUCCESSFUL AUGUST RETURN

August 3 marked the return to the microphone at CSL matches of announcer Enio Peruzza for game number 3,527 since his pro soccer announcing debut 32 years ago on August 3, 1986. That was a Toronto Blizzard home game to be followed over the years with the announcing of Benfica from Portugal, Red Star Belgrade from Serbia, the Italian Military Team, the Mexico U-20 national team and others sprinkled from time to time between regular CSL games. Italian-born Peruzza, 52, returned to announce the Serbian White Eagles vs Hamilton City at Centennial Stadium that Friday night August 3 during in the season just ended, a  return that followed successful by-pass surgery.

 

AUGUST MEMORIES OF A VISIT FROM SAO PAULO

It was on August 28 that Anarqui Futebol & Amigos, a Brazilian veterans team visited Toronto to play a CSL All Star veterans side at the St. Joan of Arc Stadium in Maple, just north of the city. The visit of the team based in Sao Paulo, Brazil, was the first of four exhibition matches in North America, with visits to Montreal, Quebec City and Orlando, Florida to follow.  Anarqui Futebol & Amigos usually tour Europe, a routine followed for the past 11 years and there have also been visits to the African continent. This was the first visit to North America. Sao Paulo is well known as a place to see the best of football in South America including Santos, one of Brazil’s most successful clubs and the team Pele played for. The CSL Veteran All Stars won 6-2 on August 28, an entertaining encounter, and while the stature of the teams cannot be compared, the recent match brought back memories of the Santos (with Pele) visit to Toronto in 1973 which filled Varsity Stadium and the neighboring rooftops. Santos beat Italy’s Bologna, 2-1.

 

SEPTEMBER RARITY

Goalkeeper Senad Poracanin scored the opening goal for Real Mississauga on September 7, a rarity that helped his team to a 2-0 victory against Brantford Galaxy. It was a penalty kick decision and Poracanin was selected as the most likely player to find the net.

 

ALL SQUARE IN SEPTEMBER – EXCEPT THE GOALS

The First Division league title was undecided until the last regular season game when FC Ukraine United clinched the top position with a superior goal differential. Both Ukraine United and FC Vorkuta ended the regular season with 12 wins, 2 losses, 2 draws and 38 points. Both conceded 16 goals, but Ukraine United found the net 60 times compared to Vorkuta’s 55.

 

A GALLANT OCTOBER EFFORT

Halton United, a Mississauga-based expansion team playing its inaugural pro soccer season in the CSL Second Division, took an impressive step forward after finishing in the runner-up spot in the regular season standings. The team with a strong academy player development environment then advanced to the CSL Second Division Championship Final, losing narrowly 3-2 to Vorkuta B.

FC Vorkuta won the coveted championship trophy in October to be CSL overall champions and FC Vorkuta Reserves won the Second Division championship, a feat achieved only once in CSL history, by SC Waterloo which captured the double in 2013.

 

 

CSL CHAMPIONSHIP SUMMARY

Quarterfinals

SC Waterloo 2, Serbian White Eagles 1

Scarborough SC 4, Hamilton City 1

FC Ukraine United 0, Brantford Galaxy 0 (after extra time) FC Ukraine United won 8-7 on penalty kicks

FC Vorkuta 2, Real Mississauga 1

Semifinals

FC Vorkuta 2, SC Waterloo 2 (after extra time) Vorkuta won 4-3 on penalty kicks

Scarborough SC 2, Ukraine United 1

CSL Championship Final

FC Vorkuta 1, Scarborough SC 1 (after extra time) FC Vorkuta won 6-5 on penalty kicks

CSL SECOND DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP

Semifinals

FC Vorkuta B 3, Brantford Galaxy B 1

Halton United B 3, Scarborough SC B 1

CSL Second Division Championship

FC Vorkuta B 3, Halton United 2

WHERE ARE THEY NOW …….CSL players moving up

The first of series.

We all know what former Canadian Soccer League player Jonathan Osorio is doing these days as one of the most visible members of the Toronto FC team with a club record of 171 appearances. Osorio, also now a Canadian national team regular with 22 appearances and now on a break from competition during the off season, first entered local professional soccer with CSL first division team SC Toronto in 2012. A prolific goal scorer, Osorio was awarded the Rookie of the Year Award in his debut CSL season.

But what about other players who have shone in the CSL and, like Osorio, have moved on to higher levels in Canada and elsewhere. Where are they now? This is the first of a series to detail the experiences in North America and overseas countries of players introduced to professional soccer in the Canadian Soccer League, or by its predecessor league, the Canadian Professional Soccer League (CPSL) the league’s name before re-branding in 2006.

Let’s start with Kitchener native David Edgar who started his soccer career with the CPSL’s London City, playing briefly in 2001 before trialing with Newcastle United in the English Premier League. The tall defender made his debut for Newcastle United reserve team in 2003 and made his debut for Canada’s U-20 team the same year. Edgar’s first team debut for Newcastle came on December 26, 2006 and a week later, on New Year’s Day January 1, 2007, he was in the spotlight in his home debut by scoring a goal against Manchester United, a game that ended in a 2-2 draw. Edgar was transferred to English team Burnley in 2009, making 99 appearances before moving to Swansea, Birmingham City, Huddersfield Town and Sheffield United, before returning to Canada to play for Vancouver Whitecaps. Edger, now 31, played at Nashville recently and is now under contract with Ottawa Fury in the US-based USL. He is Canadian men’s team regular with 42 caps.

Doneil Henry, a defender, was captain of the Toronto FC II side for two seasons in the CSL and was the first reserve team player to sign for the Toronto FC senior team in Major League Soccer. In 2014, Henry was transferred to Appollon Limassol of the Cypriot first division, returning on loan to Toronto FC before signing for West Ham United in England. Henry has been on loan to Blackburn Rovers of England and Horsens of Denmark before returning to Canada and playing for the Vancouver Whitecaps in 2018. The Whitecaps have picked up the option on Henry’s contract and he is presently on loan to Ottawa Fury. Now 25, the Brampton, Ontario, native has represented Canada at the senior level 24 times.

Nikola Budalic, a talented midfielder played for Glen Shields Sun Devils in the CPSL in 2001 before elevating his playing career in Canada with the Toronto Lynx of the US-based A-League before going overseas to play for Orebro of Sweden. Budalic then returned to Canada and the Impact, then signed for Haugesund of Norway before returning to the CSL in 2008 to join Serbian White Eagles. Budalic was then loaned to Toronto FC reserves before returning to Serbian Eagles to coach the CSL team. In 2016 Budalic was appointed assistant GM of Orlando City in MLS and was promoted to General Manager.

Atiba Hutchinson, who played briefly for York Region Shooters in the CPSL back in 2002, is a regular with the Canadian national team while near the end of a sparkling career in Europe. Hutchinson’s career took the midfielder from the CPSL to the Toronto Lynx before his European career started with top clubs Oster and Helsingborg (Sweden), then Copenhagen (Denmark) and PSV Eindoven (Netherlands). Now 35, Hutchinson is today with Besiktas, a top club in Turkey. The Brampton, Ontario native has won the Canadian Men’s Player of the Year award five times, and has indicated his wish to retire as a player in 2019.

Andre Manders, a talented Bermudian full back sometimes midfielder with the CSPL’s Capital City of Ottawa in 2002, who signed for York Region Shooters the following season, went on to play in Antigua and is presently with Whitechurch United in the Wessex League in England. At 32, Manders has 14 international caps with his native Bermuda, including World Cup qualifiers.

Nikola Paunic, who played in the CSL for Serbian White Eagles, was selected in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft by Vancouver Whitecaps but eventually signed for Orange County Blues, an affiliate of Los Angeles FC in MLS. Paunic, a defender, captained the Toronto SF Academy team and was selected for the Canada U-20 side.

Ashtone Morgan, an impressive young defender with Toronto FC in recent years, played in the CSL with Toronto FC II during the seasons 2009 and 2010 and has since made 118 appearances for the Reds’ senior team. Morgan, a regular with the Canadian men’s team, has contract options with his club and is expected to continue at the BMO Field in the upcoming 2019 season.

Karl Ouimette was standout defender in seasons 2009 and 2010 for Trois-Rivieres Attak, a team in the CSL affiliated with Montreal Impact. The Quebec native signed for the Impact in 2012 where he was picked up by New York Bulls of MLS, was then signed by Jacksonville Amada of the NPSL, followed by the San Francisco Deltas of the NASL and in 2018 played for Indy Eleven of the USL. Ouimette has played 18 times for the Canadian men’s team following games with Canada’s U-17 and U-23.

Paul Munster arrived at Kitchener, Ontario from Northern Ireland in 2004 and was put on a trial in the CPSL’s London City reserve side where he scored an impressive 12 goals in his first three matches, earning a quick place in City’s first team. The young striker then led the CPSL scoring with 25 goals to end the season with a record 10-goal lead. He was voted winner of the league’s Rookie of the Year Award. The Irishman became an immediate fan favourite at London City and attracted the attention of Slavia Prague of the Czech Republic to embark upon a European career which took him from Prague to Sweden, then back to the Czech Republic. Three seasons with Linfield in his native Northern Ireland followed, then a brief period playing in Germany. Munster was then appointed manager of Assyriska BK of the Swedish second division and was appointed to managerial and head coach responsibilities in three other clubs. Munster, 36, is today in India where in 2018 he was appointed technical director of Minerva Punjab in the Indian I-League.

Andrew Ornoch entered professional soccer briefly in 2002 with Mississauga Olympians of the CSL and following university soccer trialed successfully with Papai FC of Hungary, then Esbjerg of Denmark. Brief stints with Harecles Almelo, then Veendam of the Netherlands followed before the midfielder, sometimes forward, returned to the CSL playing three games with Mississauga Eagles. Ornoch then played for Telstar in the Netherlands, returned to Canada in 2014 at age 30 and signed for Vaughan Azzurri. He represented Canada three times.

IMPORT PLAYERS FOR A BRIGHTER CANADIAN SOCCER LEAGUE

IMPORT PLAYERS FOR A BRIGHTER CANADIAN SOCCER LEAGUE

There is no doubt that Oleh Kerchu, team captain and a leader off the field of play, played a big part in FC Vorkuta’s remarkable success in winning three titles since the York Region-based club became an expansion team in the Canadian Soccer League’s 2017 season.

Kerchu, 34, is an example of many players who have ventured to Canada for the express purpose of playing football in the Canadian Soccer League. Import signings strengthens the teams and provides many benefits for the league as a whole. Games become more attractive for the fans, the players bring strong technical skills following many years’ experience at high levels, particularly coaching expertise to the benefit of players in the local soccer community.

Ukrainian-born Kerchu, like several players in this year’s CSL championship side, entered the Canada as an import player following an extensive professional career in Europe. Now a midfielder, Kerchu started his football career as a defender in Bukovyna in Central Europe in 2001 and following stints with two other Ukrainian clubs. He was a member of the Bukovyna championship side both in the 2005-6 season and again in 2009/10 following a return to that club in 2008.

Other Vorkuta players had similar career paths. Goalkeeper Oleksandr Musiienko, 31, played for several teams in the Ukraine before arriving in Canada in 2017, Serhii Ursulenko, 31, was with FC Balkany Zorya when the team was promoted to the Ukrainian first league, and striker Sergii Ivlieve, 35, a veteran in the Ukraine who played more recently in Poland, signed in 2016 for CSL’s FC Ukraine United, then transferred to Vorkuta in 2017 to top the scoring in the CSL First Division with 13 goals in the season just past.  These, and others,  arrived in recent times to play a role in the success of FC Vorkuta, formed by members of the Russian community in Canada while paying tribute to its namesake city in Russia north of the Arctic Circle.

Myakhaylo Riabyi,  35, is considered to be the engine on the field of play for the Vorkuta professional team. In addition, FC Vorkuta is a busy member of the York Region soccer community with amateur teams in Richmond Hill and Thornhill, just north of Toronto.

Serbian White Eagles was the first CSL club to set a trend with a procession of professional players from Central and Eastern Europe after joining the league as an expansion team in 2006 and Sasa Viciknez was one of the most exciting imports to make an early arrival.  A forward, mostly on the left wing, Viciknez came to the CSL in 2006 following 10 years at a high level, highlighted by UEFA Champions League games in the 1998-99 seasons which included a memorable game against Bayern Munich.  The Serbian-born Viciknez was a master of the dead ball free kick which, when taken just outside the box, usually skimmed the inside of the post to find the net without the goalkeeper making a move. Viciknez was named to the CSL All Stars and earned the league’s MVP award in 2006 and 2009.

Serbian Eagles also landed Dragoslav Sekularac to coach the team when entering the CSL in 2006.  Sekularac was considered in the 1960s to be one of the top players in the world, a celebrity with a household name in Central and Eastern Europe.

Other prominent players signed from Europe by Serbian White Eagles included Branislav Vukomanovic who played first division football in Serbia and Montenegro , Slovakia , Romania and Bosnia – Herzegovina,  Uros Stamatovic, who has coached the team in recent years, played first division in Serbia, Dusan Belic, a first division goalkeeper in Serbia and Belgium, and Radenko Kamberovic , a solid defender who played first division in Serbia and Montenegro. Marko Krasic, a central midfielder played in Europe and Hong Kong. Others who arrived over the years were Marko Marovic, a midfielder, who played in Serbia and Romania, Bozo Milic,  Goran Svonja, and the impressive Mirko Medic who was voted the CSL defender of the year in 2009, all played at a high level overseas. Milan Mijailovic is the present coach of Serbian White Eagles following a sterling European career that included 236 games in the Serbia’s  SuperLiga.

Brantford Galaxy was also one of the early clubs in the CSL to sign European professionals, a decision that brought the CSL Championship to the Southwestern Ontario community in that debut season.  Signings in 2010 included Miodrag Andelkovic, a goalscorer who played in no less than 14 countries during his professional career, Ranko Golijanin , who also played in Europe and the A-League in the United States before arriving in Canada to play for the Galaxy, Swiss-born defender Patrick Gerhardt, who played in Switzerland, Australia, Bosnia-Herzigovina, as well as being selected for the Liberian national team for which he qualified through heritage. Nenad Begovic signed following an impressive career playing in Serbia and Montenegro, Kazakhstan, Russia, Azerbaijan and Israel. Drazen Govic played in Croatia and Belgium and Boris Milicic, at 39 one of the most experienced players in the CSL following a career in Serbia and Hungary, is still under contract with the Galaxy until the upcoming end of November.

FC Ukraine United has met with considerable success while signing players from Europe in the three seasons playing in the CSL. Attractive soccer and teamwork has been a feature of the side throughout. Several players have many years of overseas experience and topping the list could be Ukrainian-born defender Mykhailo Gurka. The prominence of  Pavlo Lukianets with his goalscoring power, stands out on the score sheet.

CSC Mississauga were strengthened by Croatian-born Pero Menalo, previously with the CSL’s Toronto Croatia who played in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzigovina, also Mykhaylo Berezovyy and forward Vitalii Koliesnikov from the Ukraine.

New CSL entry Real Mississauga benefited in 2018 with the presence of Krum Bibishikov who played more than 300 professional games for several teams overseas, including Levski Sofia and Lokomotive Sofia of Bulgaria, Steaua Bukarest of Romania,  Penafiel of Portugal and Bayern Munich’s reserve team in Germany .Bibishikov played one International game for Bulgaria and now holds a UEFA B coaching license which he is putting to good use in Canada.

Joining Scarborough SC since the club was formed in 2014 were import players Dobrin Orlovski from Bulgaria, Serbian striker Aleksander Stojiljkovic, a prolific scorer who led the CSL’s first division with 17 goals in 2017, Zoran Knezevic, who played mostly in Serbia and Russia,  Kavin Bryan, 34, a Jamaican international forward who played in the Jamaican Premier League, in Norway and for several teams in Vietnam before signing for York Region Shooters then Scarborough in the CSL. Others are goalkeeper Mladen Kukrika, 27, who played in Bosnia- Herzegovina and Albania, Kiril Dimitrov from the Belasitsa Petrich team in Bulgaria to play for Serbian White Eagles and SC Waterloo before being instrumental in returning professional soccer to Scarborough where he  both plays for and manages the new franchise.

Hamilton City SC has signed several import players since joining the CSL in 2016, including forward defender Nikola Stanojevic previously with FK Zemun of Serbia, Igor Krmar with an extensive career in Serbia, the Czech Republic, Bosnia and Herzegovina and lately in Macedonia. Midfielder Haris Fazlagic, who signed for several CSL teams since arriving to play for Brantford Galaxy in 2010, played in Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, forward  Drazen Vukovic, 36, played most of his career in Croatia,  midfielder Zdenko Jurcevic, 32, from Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.

SC Waterloo won the overall CSL championship and Second Division title in 2013 and was a finalist two years later with an attractive side that included head coach Lazo Dzepina, who played for and later coached NK Dinara of Croatia, and played in Serbia and Bosnia-Herzigovina. The championship team was sprinkled with impressive players including Vladimir Zelebaba, now 36, a well-travelled midfielder who has played in Serbia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Thailand and Bosnia-Herzegovina and who scored twice in the memorable championship final. Aleksander Stojiljikovic and Keril Dimitrov (both now Scarborough) joined later.

Milton SC, now in the CSL Second Division, recruited several players with experience elsewhere when the club was formed in 2014. Milton recruited Adam Shaban, now 36, a Kenyan international with 34 caps, who came from Kenya’s Premier League. Shaban later played in the Norwegian first division, then Oman on the Arabian Peninsula. The Kenyan defender first signed for Kingston FC in 2014, then transferred to Milton. Radovan Ivkovic played in Croatia and Serbia before signing and full back Zoran Belosevic, who played in Serbia, Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Greece played briefly. Vladimir Vujovic, with a long career in Serbia, scored five goals for Milton in 2018.

CSL clubs will continue to bring high level players from Europe and elsewhere while remaining focused developing and signing Canadian-born talent to provide what appears to be an ideal blend for the league’s future and further expansion.

 

 

 

 

SANY DEY OVERCAME TORRENTIAL RAIN TO WIN SCORING TITLE….Kezic top scorer in CSL Second Division

 

SANY DEY OVERCAME TORRENTIAL RAIN TO WIN SCORING TITLE….Kezic top scorer in CSL Second Division

             

Striker Sany Dey became the Canadian Soccer League’s First Division top scorer in driving rain during final regular season game at the Heritage Field on September 25. That’s a big achievement in the tough CSL, but it’s become somewhat routine for the Ghana-born striker to take top soccer honors since arriving in Canada from that country in 2016.

Playing for Mohawk College following arrival, Sani Dey raised eyebrows when the 19 year-old struck all four goals for Mohawk’s men’s team in an OCAA 4-0 victory over Lambton Lions at Sarnia on September 26, 2016.

In 2017, Dey scored the goals that brought the U-21 North American youth cup to Hamilton and was named top scorer and best player in the tournament after scoring 11 goals in the four knockout games.

Dey entered the CSL in 2017, signing for Burlington SC in the Second Division, a transfer from Erin Mills Soccer Club of the Ontario U-21 Provincial League.

Dey was trailing the CSL regular season goals coring until that rain-soaked match, but the two strikes lifted the prolific forward to 13 goals and top position, a single more than Pavlo Lukianets of FC Ukraine United with 12.

Kristijan Kezic of Vorkuta B took the top goal scorer award in the CSL Second Division, a total of 12 in the regular season campaign, two more than Milton B forward Marko Mitrusic.

Croatian-born Kezic’s family moved to Germany in 1995 and was signed by FC Rastatt 04 Youth before moving to Canada in 1999 where he then played for Richmond Hill Madrid. He became known for prolific goal scoring, receiving the top goal scorer award and was attracted to and signed by CSL expansion team Vorkuta in 2017.

VORKUTA, VORKUTA, VORKUTA SPELLS THREE CSL TITLES

VORKUTA, VORKUTA, VORKUTA SPELLS THREE CSL TITLES

Vorkuta, Vorkuta, Vorkuta ! chanted fans at Centennial Stadium in Toronto’s west end, urging their team on in during a hotly contested, entertaining CSL Championship Final against Scarborough SC Saturday afternoon.

And the encouragement was for good reason. The York Region-based Vorkuta had already secured the CSL Second Division Championship with its reserve team in the first game of a championship double header just an hour earlier – a second 2018 title following the team’s Second Division league win back in mid-September.

A CSL Championship victory would set a unprecedented three titles in the same Canadian Soccer League season and that was the outcome as FC Vorkuta fought off a gallant Scarborough side to win on penalty kicks following a 1-1 tie at 90 minutes and the same score at the end of extra time 30 minutes later.
Vorkuta’s found the net with all six penalty kicks, Scarborough dropped one of its six and the team named after a community in northern Russia, entered the CSL as recent as 2017, took its third title to end the 2018 CSL season.

Both sides set a strong pace and Scarborough came close early when forward Kiril Dimitrov’s drive from the right wing deflected just wide.
Vorkuta took a 1-0 lead at 29 minutes when referee Marcos Jaramillo pointed to the penalty spot after Oleh Kerchu was brought down in the box. Defender Lubomyr Halchuk easily found the nest past Scarborough goalkeeper John Trye.

Five minutes later Scarborough had another setback when referee Jaramillo showed Scarborough defender Alen Kucalovic the red card following a second caution, and it was 1-0 at the break.

Scarborough went on the offensive in the second half and rallied to equalize at 77 minutes when midfielder Odain Omaro Simpson headed in from a left wing cross.

Both teams kept up the tempo in a physical encounter that brought down players from both sides. There were missed opportunities and regulation time came with a 1-1 tie. The overtime 30 minutes each way was similar, but scoreless, leading to the penalty kicks decider. Vorkuta completed scoring all six, while Scarborough struck five and one was saved.

Commenting on Vorkuta’s achievements in winning three titles, head coach Samad Kadirov emphasized team play as being important, “But we also have some quality players, some performing well just at the right time and others were unexpected heroes,” he said.

FC VORKUTA: Volodymyr Bidlovskyi (defender), Denys Diachenko (midfielder), Valerii Doroshenko (midfielder), Vadym Gostiev (defender), Liubomyr Halchuk (defender), Valerii Haidarzhi (midfielder), Sergii Ivliev (forward), Oleh Kerchu (midfielder), Oleksandr Lozinskyy (goalkeeper), Oleksandr Muslienko (goalkeeper), Bohdan Riabets (midfielder), Mykhailo Riabyl (midfielder), Iaroslav Solonynko (midfielder), Oleksandr Tarasenko (defender), Serhii Ursulenko (midfielder), Oleksandr Volchkov (defender), Oleksandr Yaremchuk (defender), Valerii Yarmosh (midfielder). Head coach: Samad Kadirov, Assistant coach: Yanchuk Denys

SCARBOROUGH SC: Angel Angelov (defender), Hammud Ali Atif (forward), Kavin Bryan (forward), Ivan Cendic (defender), Kiril Dimitrov (forward, Adrian Ibanez (goalkeeper), Zoran Knezevic (midfielder), Alen Kucalovic (defender), Neven Radakovic (midfielder), Zoran Rajovic (midfielder), Momcilo Rudan (defender), Odain Omaro Simpson (midfielder), Milorad Stefanovic (midfielder), Stefan Stojiljkovic (midfielder) , Aleksander Stojiljkovic (forward), John Trye(goalkeeper), Ivan Prieto (midfielder), Cruz Coronel(defender). Head coach: Zoran Rajovic, Assistant coach: Imad Hukara.
TWO GOALS BY KEZIC LEADS VORKUTA B TO CSL SECOND CHAMPIONSHIP

In the earlier CSL Second Division Championship match, Christian Truyen opened the scoring for Halton United B at the 13th minute mark, heading into the net out of reach of FC Vorkuta B goalkeeper Oleksandr Lozinskyy and Vorkuta B tied 1-1 when Kristijan Kezic found the net one minute later.
This was followed shortly after the restart when Ihor Melnyk made it 2-1 for Vorkuta B at 15 minutes and Robert Melo equalized for Halton United B, 2-2 at the 35th minute mark. It was 2-2 at halftime.
Vorkuta B went ahead 3-2, Kezic scoring his second goal and the winner at 71 minutes and the score held to the final whistle.

CSL CHAMPIONSHIP SUMMARY

Quarterfinals
SC Waterloo 2, Serbian White Eagles 1
Scarborough SC 4, Hamilton City 1
FC Ukraine United 0, Brantford Galaxy 0 (after extra time) FC Ukraine United won 8-7 on penalty kicks
FC Vorkuta 2, Real Mississauga 1

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta 2, SC Waterloo 2 (after extra time) Vorkuta won 4-3 on penalty kicks
Scarborough SC 2, Ukraine United 1

CSL Championship Final
FC Vorkuta 1, Scarborough SC 1 (after extra time) FC Vorkuta won 6-5 on penalty kicks

CSL SECOND DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta B 3, Brantford Galaxy B 1
Halton United B 3, Scarborough SC B 1

CSL Second Division Championship
FC Vorkuta B 3, Halton United 2

HALTON UNITED B ADVANCE TO SECOND DIVISION FINAL WITH 3-1 VICTORY TUESDAY

HALTON UNITED B ADVANCE TO SECOND DIVISION FINAL WITH 3-1 VICTORY TUESDAY

Halton United B, a team in its inaugural year in the Canadian Soccer League, defeated Scarborough SC B by a 3-1 score in the playoff semifinal Tuesday night to advance to the Second Division Championship game against FC Vorkuta B this coming Saturday.

Halton United B ended the regular season in the runner-up position in the Second Division standings, while Scarborough B finished third.

Scarborough opened the scoring at the 31st minute mark at the Norton Field when Edgar Oswaldo found the net past Halton goalkeeper Grainger Munro and 11 minutes later Christian Truyen equalized for the home side for a 1-1 score at the break.

Karl Manzi put Halton United in the lead at 47 minutes and Truyen drove the ball past Scarborough goalkeeper Austin Litow-Daye for his second goal at 63 minutes, a 3-1 score which held to the final whistle.

Halton United B will meet Vorkuta B in the opening game of Saturday’s double header, the CSL Second Division Championship at 1 pm, to be followed by the FC Vorkuta vs Scarborough SC CSL Championship encounter at 3 pm, both games at Centennial Stadium in Etobicoke.

CSL CHAMPIONSHIP UPDATE

Quarterfinals
SC Waterloo 2, Serbian White Eagles 1
Scarborough SC 4, Hamilton City 1
FC Ukraine United 0, Brantford Galaxy 0 (after extra time) FC Ukraine United won 8-7 on penalty kicks
FC Vorkuta 2, Real Mississauga 1

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta 2, SC Waterloo 2 (after extra time) Vorkuta won 4-3 on penalty kicks
Scarborough SC 2, Ukraine United 1

CSL Championship Final – Saturday, October 13, Centennial Stadium, 3 pm
FC Vorkuta vs Scarborough SC

CSL SECOND DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta B 3, Brantford Galaxy B 1
Halton United B 3, Scarborough SC B 1

CSL Second Division Championship – Saturday, October 13, Centennial Stadium, 1 pm
FC Vorkuta B vs Halton United B

STOJILJKOVIC WINNER PUTS SCARBOROUGH IN CSL CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL

STOJILJKOVIC WINNER PUTS SCARBOROUGH IN CSL CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL

A picture goal from a free kick by striker Aleksander Stojiljkovic of Scarborough SC had all the hallmarks of a winner following a sometime furious, but well played 90 minutes of CSL playoff soccer at Centennial Stadium in Toronto’s west end Sunday afternoon.

The winning goal, which came at 91 minutes, broke the 1-1 deadlock for a 2-1 final score in the CSL Championship semifinal between FC Ukraine United and Scarborough, to put the visiting Scarborough through to the final game against FC Vorkuta on this same ground next Saturday.

Stojiljkovic has mastered the dead ball before with similar result, but this left footer from 25 yards did appear to be something special while floating through the Ukraine United wall to enter the net just inside the right post out of reach of goalkeeper Oleksandr Popravka. With just a minute or so remaining in the game, the top-of-the-table Ukraine United team was all but eliminated from the championship.

Scarborough had opened the scoring at 68 minutes, a goal by Kavin Bryan who was fed a pass on the left wing to cut in and beat Popravka. Ukraine United recovered to tie the game 1-1 from the penalty spot following a hand ball infringement at 89 minutes. Midfielder Ihor Malysh made no mistake from the spot.

FC Vorkuta and Scarborough SC will meet for the overall CSL championship on Saturday, October 13, a 3 pm kickoff, to be preceded at 1 pm by the CSL Second Division Championship Final between FC Vorkuta B and the winner of the upcoming semifinal between Halton United B and Scarborough B being played Tuesday, October 9 at the Norton Field at Burlington, a 9 pm kickoff.

CSL CHAMPIONSHIP UPDATE
Quarterfinals
SC Waterloo 2, Serbian White Eagles 1
Scarborough SC 4, Hamilton City 1
FC Ukraine United 0, Brantford Galaxy 0 (after extra time) FC Ukraine United won 8-7 on penalty kicks
FC Vorkuta 2, Real Mississauga 1

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta 2, SC Waterloo 2 (after extra time) Vorkuta won 4-3 on penalty kicks
Scarborough SC 2, Ukraine United 1

CSL SECOND DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIP

Semifinals
FC Vorkuta B 3, Brantford Galaxy B 1
Halton United B vs Scarborough SC B to be played on Tuesday October 9 at 9 pm Norton Field, Burlington.