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PREVIEW: Toronto FC vs. Simcoe County Rovers FC — 2024 TELUS Canadian Championship

2024 TELUS Canadian Championship — Preliminary Round
Toronto FC vs. Simcoe County Rovers FC
April 24, 2024 at 7:30 p.m. ET
BMO Field in Toronto, Ontario
Watch Live: OneSoccer.ca & TELUS Ch. 980

In addition to its website and app, OneSoccer is now available on TELUS channel 980 and on Fubo TV. Call your local cable provider to ask for OneSoccer today.


The 2024 Canadian Championship’s first David versus Goliath battle will be at BMO Field, as League1 Ontario champions Simcoe County Rovers visit the tournament’s most successful club, eight-time Voyageurs’ Cup winners Toronto FC.

This clash will mark the first time TFC have played a semi-professional side in the competition, as well as the first time a League1 side has played against its province’s Major League Soccer team.

Simcoe County will be hoping to kindle a little magic akin to other domestic cup tournaments around the world, as they go toe-to-toe with side two levels above them in TFC. The Rovers squad will not be heading down Highway 400 alone, though, with over 2,000 fans expected to make the trip down to Toronto along with them to provide a raucous away end at BMO Field.

Founded in 2021, the Rovers earned their spot in this year’s Canadian Championship by winning the L1O championship last year, defeating Scrosoppi FC 4-2 in the final. According to the club’s president and CEO Peter Raco, they’ve retained the bulk of that title-winning team’s core, including nine of the 11 starters, although head coach Zico Mahrady has taken over the reins for 2024 after operating as an assistant under Jason Beckford last season.

There’s plenty of connection between the Rovers and TFC. The League1 club is co-owned by several icons of Canadian soccer, including men’s national team legends Julian De Guzman, Atiba Hutchinson, Cyle Larin and Doneil Henry as well as women’s team star Janine Beckie.


RELATED: ‘They’re local heroes’: Simcoe County Rovers inspiring Barrie community ahead of ‘dream’ Toronto FC clash


Henry, of course, was TFC’s first ever academy graduate to the first team and won three Canadian Championships with the club. He, along with Hutchinson, Larin and Beckie, is also extremely familiar with TFC’s head coach John Herdman from the manager’s time with the Canadian national teams.

“I’m proud of what those players have done,” Herdman said this week about his former Canada charges. “These people have been trying to leave a legacy for this country, a lot of what they were doing behind the scenes at Canada Soccer, no one will ever know. … They were always pushing to do the right things and leave a legacy, so to see them owning a club, I just wish it wasn’t us they were playing. I’m proud of what they’ve committed to Canadian football.”

Speaking of TFC academy products, the Rovers have a handful in their squad for this game too, with players like Ijah Halley and Javier George previously spending time in the club’s youth system.

Toronto, meanwhile, are aware of the pressure on them as they begin this year’s Canadian Championship. They may have won the Voyageurs’ Cup eight times, but they haven’t done so in a full-length tournament since 2018. They won the 2020 title in the one-off final match against Forge FC, but they’ve failed to lift the trophy in the last four full competitions which is the longest drought in club history.

The Reds might be starting to find their footing in 2024, though. After finishing at the bottom of the MLS table last season, they’ve started this year in better form. Through nine games they’re 4-1-4, with three wins and one loss in their four home matches, and they sit fifth in the Eastern Conference.

No League1 Canada club has ever defeated an MLS side; Vaughan Azzurri had a good crack at CF Montréal last year, but they still ultimately lost 2-0. Awaiting the winner of Wednesday’s game at BMO Field is a two-legged quarter-final tie against either Halifax Wanderers FC or Ligue1 Québec champions CS Saint-Laurent.

The odds are stacked heavily in favour of TFC, who haven’t lost a Canadian Championship match to a non-MLS team since 2017.

Odds, however, are for bookmakers. On Wednesday, Simcoe County Rovers will be dealing in the business of dreams.

Orlendis Benitez. (Photo courtesy of Simcoe County Rovers)

All CPL and Canadian Championship matches will be broadcast live on OneSoccer, available as a linear channel on Telus’ Optik TV (Channel 980) as well as online at OneSoccer.ca, through the OneSoccer app and on the fuboTV Canada platform.


3 THINGS TO WATCH

  • Rovers hoping to surprise on biggest stage: For most likely every player in the Simcoe County squad, Wednesday night will be the biggest game of their career. The club has been hard at work since February preparing for this one match, with their League1 Ontario season not even starting until this Sunday. As is usually the case in these kinds of cup matches between differing levels, expect the Rovers to try and suffocate TFC’s best players and look to strike either on the counter-attack or through set-pieces. Of course, Simcoe County do have some talent in attack; Orlendis Benítez was the club’s leading scorer in L1O last year with 15 goals and should be their biggest threat again. He and Alejandro Portal will be revved up for their first match at BMO Field since playing for the Cuban national team against Canada there in 2021, prior to their defection from Cuba. Another likely talisman for Rovers should be creative playmaker Alex Zis, who has previously been a standout for Guelph United in L1O and Guelph University in U SPORTS.

 

  • Exuberant away end could boost underdogs: With over 2,000 fans making the trip from the Barrie area to Toronto, Simcoe County Rovers will have a boisterous section of away support on Wednesday night. The club sold out their ticket allotment in BMO Field’s north end, prompting TFC to add an additional section for visiting fans in the upper east stand. In League1 Ontario play last year, the Rovers were often boosted by the excellent home support they had at JC Massie Field, and they won the championship in front of a packed-out Ontario Soccer Centre in Vaughan. The duelling cacophony between Simcoe County’s fans in the north end and TFC supporters in the south could make for a special atmosphere, reminiscent of other major domestic cup ties from around the world.

 

  • Toronto FC expected to rotate for midweek game: After playing New England Revolution on Saturday with a trip to Orlando coming up next weekend, TFC will undoubtedly make several changes to their team for this cup clash. To begin with, they have to make at least one — Canadian Championship rules require three starters to be Canadian, but Kobe Franklin and Jonathan Osorio were the only two in TFC’s most recent lineup. Herdman hinted on Tuesday the club will call up a couple of players from TFC II, while also rotating in some first team players who have spent a lot of this year on the bench so far. They’ll be without a few notable names due to injury: Richie Laryea (hamstring), Brandon Servania (ACL), Lorenzo Insigne (hamstring), Shane O’Neill (hamstring) and Deandre Kerr (foot) are all confirmed to be out.

ALL-TIME SERIES

First meeting between these clubs.

KEY QUOTES

“Watching cup games, what you always know is there’s a few banana skins in those opening rounds, there’s always upsets and surprises. If I’m sitting in the Simcoe camp they’ll be pretty excited and hoping for one of the biggest upsets in Canadian football history. You either look at that as a curse or an opportunity, and it’s probably a little bit of both. For us it’s about advancing to the next round, winning the cup is on the agenda for this group of players.” — Toronto FC head coach John Herdman

“Now they get to go against the big boys in Canada, now they get to go skin for skin, body for body, blood, bones, whatever you want to call it. They’re going to see where they are and how far they are from becoming a professional. This is the ultimate test. You can tell them everything, you can let them see it, they can watch it on TV, but until they get to step on the field and earn that right, ultimately it means nothing. This is going to be where they get to see where they are, and if this is their dream, how much more sacrifice they’ll have to give.” — Simcoe County Rovers co-owner Doneil Henry