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Herdman focused on task at hand rather than outside noise of Olympic spying scandal

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TORONTO – A date with Mexico’s Pachuca in Leagues Cup play offers Toronto FC a welcome albeit difficult new challenge.

“Everyone’s excited, to be honest,” said Toronto defender Nickseon Gomis. “Because it’s a cup.”

“Personally I’ve never played against a Mexican team so I’m looking forward to it,” added the 22-year-old Frenchman.

For Toronto coach John Herdman, Sunday’s game at BMO Field is another chance to focus on football rather than the drone spying scandal involving the Canadian women at the Paris Olympics. Canada Soccer has pointed the finger at Herdman, a former Canadian men’s and women’s coach, for having started the practice of spying on rival teams, with an independent investigation now underway.

Herdman has said his record is clean at World Cups and Olympics, where he won two bronze medals with the Canadian women. But he continues to be dogged by the issue.

The moderator of Herdman’s pre-game availability Saturday told journalists only questions regarding the Leagues Cup would be accepted.

But asked how he was managing given the speculation swirling around him, Herdman said he is focusing on the task at hand.

“For me, I get up every day and give it my best with my players.” he said.

“In football, you have to learn to tune out the outside news … Through my football career, you’ve had outside noise in different moments,” he added. “Sometimes the results are going well and it comes in. And sometimes it’s going poorly and you have to respond with the same process, that you can control everything you can control that’s in front of you and the people that you’re responsible for.

“So we’ve just been putting in a shift in this week, enjoying being on the grass and focusing on Toronto FC.”

If he needs a more concrete snapshot of his emotions, he pointed to his Oura Ring, a smart ring used to track sleep and physical activity.

The Leagues Cup features 47 teams, 29 from Major League Soccer and 18 from Mexico’s Liga MX.

Sunday’s matchup will determine first place in East Group 6 with the Red Bulls already eliminated from advancing after penalty shootout losses to both Toronto and Pachuca.

The winner will play the loser of Saturday’s game between defending champion Inter Miami and Mexico’s Tigres. The Toronto-Pachuca loser will face the Miami-Tigres winner.

Toronto would likely play Tigres at home Wednesday or face Miami in Fort Lauderdale on Thursday.

Miami won the cup last year behind newly signed Lionel Messi. The Argentine star led all players at the tournament with 10 goals in seven games.

Pachuca currently sits 12th in Liga MX at 1-2-1 but showed its mettle in June when it blanked MLS champion Columbus 3-0 to win the CONCACAF Champions Cup. Pachuca also won CONCACAF’s elite club competition in 2002, ’07, ’08, ’10 and ’17.

Pachuca defender Bryan González, midfielders Alan Bautista, Nelson Deossa and Oussama Idrissi and forward Salomon Rondon were all part of the Liga MX all-star team that beat their MLS counterparts 4-1 with Idrissi among the scorers July 24 in Columbus.

The 34-year-old Rondon’s resume includes stints in England with West Bromwich Albion, Newcastle and Everton as well as Argentina’s River Plate. He has also played in China, Russia and Spain as well as his native Venezuela.

The Venezuela captain won the CONCACAF Champions Cup Golden Boot Award with nine goals en route to the title.

But the Mexican side is missing defender Ari Contreras and midfielders Alexei Dominguez and Elias Montiel who are with Mexico at the CONCACAF Men’s U-20 Championship. Mexico takes on the U.S. on Sunday in the final of the CONCACAF competing in Leon, Mexico.

And Uruguayan coach Guillermo Almada says the Champions Cup run took its toll, with players needing time off in the run-up to the Mexican season and new players looking to integrate with the squad.

“We’re looking for the best version of the team, considering all those factors,” Almada said through an interpreter.

He called Toronto “a very good team with great players and coach” capable of playing various styles.

The forecast calls for 28 Celsius, feeling like 34 C, for the 8 p.m. local time kickoff. Almada says adapting to the conditions has been an issue for his team

“We suffered the other day, especially in the first half,” he said, referencing Tuesday’s game against the Red Bulls in Harrison, N.J. “We come from a totally different place in terms of climate … There is no way to adapt yourself to humidity, for example, overnight.”

The win over the Red Bulls was the first in Leagues Cup play for Toronto, which exited after the group stage in its first participation following losses to New York City FC (5-0) and Mexico’s Atlas (1-0).

Toronto trained Saturday to the sound of the nearby Veld Music Festival, a three-day event billed as Canada’s biggest electronic dance music festival. Performing artists include Swedish DJ Alesso, America DJ/producers Steve Aoki and Marshmello and Dutch DJ Martin Garrix.

Follow @NeilMDavidson on X platform, formerly known as Twitter

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 3, 2024

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Dix out as health minister as Eby introduces a drastically reshaped B.C. NDP cabinet

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VICTORIA – Premier David Eby says “kitchen table” issues in British Columbia will be the focus for his revamped, postelection cabinet that was sworn in on Monday.

Eby’s new cabinet, comprising 23 ministers and four ministers of state, features a mix of new and familiar faces elected in last month’s narrow one-seat New Democrat election win.

“The things that concern your family around the kitchen table are going to be the issues that concern our team around the cabinet table,” he said after the cabinet introduction ceremony at government house.

“Ours will be a government that listens and ours will be a government that delivers,” said Eby, adding “that was the message that people sent us here to do this job in this recent election.”

“That is something every one of these members and everyone who was elected is going to carry with them in the work they do over the next four years,” he said.

He said the priorities for the new cabinet and the NDP government will include good paying jobs, family doctors for everybody, safe communities and affordable homes.

Eby shuffled veteran ministers Adrian Dix and Mike Farnworth and introduced to cabinet several newly elected members of the legislature.

Dix, the longtime health minister who guided the province through the COVID-19 pandemic, was moved to energy and climate solutions, while Josie Osborne, a two-term MLA and a former mayor of Tofino, will take on health.

Eby said Dix was moved to energy and climate solutions because of his track record of success.

“I need someone who can deliver and Adrian is that minister,” Eby said at a news conference. “It’s critically important for our government.”

Dix will be tasked with ensuring B.C. develops its clean energy systems and markets, he said.

Osborne said as a resident and a former mayor of a rural community, she understood the health-care needs of people outside B.C.’s urban areas.

“Everybody deserves access to health care,” said Osborne, acknowledging that many rural B.C. communities have concerns about recurring hospital emergency department closures. “I hear you. I see you.”

Farnworth, B.C.’s veteran solicitor general and public safety minister, was moved out of those portfolios and into transportation and transit, and will also serve as NDP house leader.

Garry Begg, a former RCMP officer, got one of the biggest cheers when he was introduced by Eby as the new solicitor general and public safety minister, elevating him from the backbench to cabinet.

Eby introduced Begg by the nickname “Landslide” in a nod to his wafer-thin 21-vote victory in Surrey that secured the government its one-seat majority.

Brenda Bailey, the former jobs minister and a Vancouver businesswoman, moves into the crucial finance portfolio.

Newly elected MLAs also featured in the cabinet, with former broadcaster Randene Neill becoming minister of land, water and resource management, and Vancouver Police Department veteran Terry Yung named minister of state for community safety.

Among the senior cabinet ministers who kept their jobs were Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon and Attorney General Niki Sharma, whose first duty upon being reappointed was accepting the Great Seal of British Columbia from Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin.

Austin opened Monday’s swearing-in ceremony by paying tribute to former premier John Horgan, who died of thyroid cancer last week.

She called Horgan “a fine man” who loved B.C., and said she would miss his “dad jokes” and “corny” sense of humour.

Eby said after the ceremony that his team would make affordability a priority issue.

“(For) those families hit hard by inflation and rising costs, our focus will be on controlling your costs, supporting you with the cost of everything from housing to car insurance and delivering a middle-income tax cut to support you and your family in these challenging times,” he said.

During the campaign, Eby promised a $1,000 tax cut for the average family, starting next year and benefiting 90 per cent of British Columbians.

Eby faced the challenge of filling the cabinet from a caucus reduced to 47 members in the Oct. 19 election, which gave the NDP the narrowest of majorities in the 93-seat legislature.

Former B.C. Liberal cabinet minister Mike Bernier, who ran unsuccessfully as an Independent last month in his Dawson Creek-area riding, said Eby had to find ways to bring rural representation into the cabinet even though most of his members were from Metro Vancouver or Vancouver Island.

Brittny Anderson, who won in Kootenay-Central, helped fulfil that goal, being appointed minister of state for local government and rural communities.

Energy and mining were carved into two separate portfolios, with Jagrup Brar taking on the latter, now renamed mining and critical minerals.

“We have two separate ministries dedicated to major economic growth sectors for us,” Eby said.

The legislature’s youngest MLA, Ravi Parmar, entered cabinet as forests minister.

B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad said Eby had been invisible when it comes to rural B.C., and he and his 44-member caucus were looking forward to holding the government to account on numerous issues.

Green Leader Sonia Furstenau said in a statement the party was pleased Eby appointed a cabinet with a strong representation of women in leadership roles and a female majority.

“We are particularly pleased to see Niki Sharma appointed as deputy premier and Attorney General, Tamara Davidson as Minister of Environment and Parks, and Bailey as Minister of Finance,” she said. These critical roles will have a significant impact on shaping the future of British Columbia.”

Eby said the NDP government continued to negotiate will the Greens about how the party’s two elected members could work with the government.

“I hope British Columbians see in this cabinet an experienced team that’s going to be focused on the priorities they sent us to Victoria to address,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 18, 2024.



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Prince Harry in Vancouver as Invictus Games school program launches online

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VANCOUVER – Prince Harry is in Vancouver for the launch of a campaign to raise awareness of the Invictus Games among children and youth, one day after surprising Canadian football fans by appearing at the Grey Cup in the city.

The prince visited Vancouver-area elementary and high school students at Seaforth Armoury.

The visit comes as the Invictus Games launches a lessons program for students from kindergarten to Grade 12, making educational resources on the event’s history and purpose available online.

Prince Harry founded the Invictus Games for wounded, injured and sick veterans and other service personnel about a decade ago, and the games will next be held in Vancouver and Whistler in February.

After meeting the students and engaging in a short game of sitting volleyball on the floor of the armoury, Prince Harry told the crowd the school program could help the Invictus Games “go even wider” and “into schools in Canada and hopefully around the world.”

The prince made a surprise appearance at the Grey Cup game at BC Place Stadium on Sunday, waving to the crowd and giving an interview before joining B.C. Lions owner Amar Doman on the field.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 18, 2024.

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Fall storm could bring ‘hurricane force’ winds to B.C.

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VANCOUVER – Environment Canada is warning about an intensifying storm that is expected to bring powerful winds to Vancouver Island and the British Columbia coast this week.

Matt MacDonald, the lead forecaster for the BC Wildfire Service, says models predict “explosive cyclogenesis,” which is also known as a bomb cyclone, materializing Tuesday night.

Such storms are caused by a rapid drop in atmospheric pressure at the centre of a storm system that results in heavy rain and high winds.

MacDonald says in a social media post that B.C. coastal inlets could see “hurricane force” winds of more than 118 km/h and create waves up to nine metres off Washington and Oregon.

Environment Canada posted a special weather statement saying the storm will develop off the coast of Vancouver Island on Tuesday, bringing high winds and heavy rain to some areas starting in the afternoon.

It says the weather system may cause downed trees, travel delays and power outages, adding that peak winds are expected for most areas Tuesday night, though the severe weather is likely to continue into Wednesday.

B.C. has been hit by a series of powerful fall storms, including an atmospheric river that caused flash flooding in Metro Vancouver in mid-October.

A lightning storm overnight and early Monday covered parts of Metro Vancouver in hail.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 18, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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