CF Montréal at the Welcome Hall Mission | “In the end, we are all neighbors”

Aerosmith sings Dream On in the speakers. The boxes of linen to be donated are stacked and distributed to the work tables. CF Montreal employees are busy sorting them. Among them, Nathan Saliba and Samuel Piette, who tackle the task with the seriousness they are known for.


We are at the Welcome Hall Mission, on this sunny Wednesday in December. It was the CFM that took the initiative to organize this volunteer activity, with the holiday season approaching.

Piette and Saliba, two local players, did not hesitate for a second before agreeing to take part.

“I am very grateful for the opportunity to give back,” Saliba told The Presstaking a break from his underwear sorting to chat with us.

He also remembers coming exactly here, to this location in the southwest of Montreal, when he was in high school.

“It’s something that touched me when I did it,” said the Longueuil native. I’m extremely happy to do it again. »

PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

Samuel Piette

We chat with Samuel Piette in a door frame. He wears a Bon Accueil Mission sweater over the blue CF Montreal jersey with which he arrived. Behind him, the sorting of pants continues. Nearby, other volunteers move wooden pallets. By our side, a cargo of small onions.

“I think it’s one of the club’s main values,” said the CFM co-captain. To be close to the community, to give back. We, the players, the community, that’s what drives us. […] If we are able to make gestures off the field, to show our human side, to show that we are not just soccer players, robots, I think that is important. »

“It may seem trivial” to sort clothes and food for a few hours, he said. “But if we are able to give that little something extra, happiness for a certain time, that sure gives us pleasure. »

Samuel Watts, president and CEO of the organization, which has existed since 1892, emphasizes that this type of activity on the part of a professional club achieves two goals.

  • Nathan Saliba and Samuel Watts, president and CEO of the Welcome Hall Mission

    PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

    Nathan Saliba and Samuel Watts, president and CEO of the Welcome Hall Mission

  • “I am very grateful for the opportunity to give back,” said Nathan Saliba.

    PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

    “I am very grateful for the opportunity to give back,” said Nathan Saliba.

  • The donations prepared on Wednesday at the Welcome Hall Mission will be distributed within a few weeks

    PHOTO MARTIN CHAMBERLAND, THE PRESS

    The donations prepared on Wednesday at the Welcome Hall Mission will be distributed within a few weeks

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First, the donations prepared on Wednesday will be distributed within a few weeks “to several locations throughout the city.”

But secondly, “for the people who help, it gives the feeling of belonging to a community that is supportive.”

“There’s no us and them,” Watts said. It’s just us. […] It is an essential part of our humanity. Generosity, helping others. In the end, we are all neighbors. »

Becoming “a team not afraid to play” again

Piette returns from vacation with her family. Recent news from CF Montreal, such as the end of Romell Quioto’s contract and the option exercises of other of his teammates? “Honestly, I more or less followed that,” he says.

It’s because he really picked up, without looking at his phone, or almost. “It did a lot of good for my family and me. »

He nevertheless agrees that the big news he is waiting for will be that of the hiring of the new head coach. As co-captain of the team, is he consulted?

“No, I don’t have a say. If [Olivier Renard et Vassili Cremanzidis] want to have my point of view, certainly, I will be happy to share it. »

And what would his opinion be, precisely?

Piette would like his team to find a style of play which allows them to “create things at the defensive level, which presses. A team that is not afraid to play.”

A bit like he did two years ago, under Wilfried Nancy.

For me, it’s the way we have the most fun on the pitch.

Samuel Piette

As for Nathan Saliba, he considers Quioto’s departure as a “loss”. “He took up a lot of space in the locker room. He wasn’t shy around anyone, he could talk to everyone. »

But he adds that the team has “attackers who are ready to take on the challenge”. He mentions the names of Jules-Anthony Vilsaint, Sunusi Ibrahim and Chinonso Offor. “There are sure to be more coming.” »

Piette will be at his chalet with friends on Saturday afternoon and does not plan to watch the MLS Cup final between Maxime Crépeau’s LAFC and Wilfried Nancy’s Crew.

Nathan Saliba, yes. With all the Quebecers and former Montrealers taking part in the final, does he have a bias? “No, I remain neutral! »

“It’s a very good thing,” said the midfielder about the many former soccer artisans between now and the final. As much for Quebecers and Montrealers as for the MLS as such. These are two very good teams on paper facing each other. It’s going to be a very good final. »


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