Words fail to describe the upside-down end of the game between CF Montreal and the Philadelphia Union.
“Superb,” summed up Montreal pilot Hernán Losada after his team’s 3-2 victory in extremis on Saturday night at Olympic Stadium.
“Clownesque”, replies his Philadelphia counterpart.
The games seemed done. CFM trailed the defending MLS runners-up 2-1 with just over 20 minutes to go. An expulsion on the side of the visitors gave hope to the CFM which was not really dangerous before stoppage time. But he did not need more.
The Bleu-blanc-noir found its fans for the first time after suffering three consecutive losses on the road to start the campaign. Fans had a chance to celebrate Montreal’s first goal in 273 minutes of play this season, courtesy of Romell Quioto, in the third minute. However, two quick goals from the visitors sawed off the Montrealers’ legs, at least until Julián Carranza’s second yellow card.
Then a succession of events, each more incredible than the next, made everyone experience a roller coaster of emotions. An episode that defies all logic and which would probably have remained in the first draft stage if it had been proposed during a production meeting.
Chinonso Offor allows the CFM to ward off bad luck when it vibrates the strings at the 90e minute. Supporters are jubilant. The club are on their way to getting their first point of the season.
The referee is asked to consult the video replay for a possible offside on the sequence. A few tens of seconds later, he decides: no goal.
Then Victor Wanyama – captain due to the absence of Samuel Piette – receives orders from the bench. On the video replay, a Union player escapes the frame. The Kenyan asks the fourth official and the main referee to go back to see the footage. What theyre doing.
While the spectators all chanted the word “Goal”, a new verdict fell: Offor was not in an offside position and the net counted.
Let’s recap. First, there is purpose. Then, said goal is disallowed. Then, finally, the goal is good. The game resumes with the score 2-2 and a handful of minutes to go.
A few moments later, Quioto, alone in the box, redirects the ball with his head into the net and that’s how the Montreal team slips away with its first victory of the campaign. In collective euphoria and total confusion.
That’s soccer. It’s not for nothing that it’s the most popular sport on the planet. Fans came to see this.
Hernán Losada, CFM head coach
CFM goalkeeper Jonathan Sirois said it was an “indescribable” feeling before saying he will “remember this game for the rest of my life”.
Union head coach Jim Curtin will also remember this encounter for the rest of his life. But he specifies that a sequence without tail nor head like the one which led to the equalizing goal is ridiculous.
It’s not good for anyone. If you watch an MLS game for the first time and you see that, you tell yourself that it’s not a professional league.
Union Head Coach Jim Curtin
Long-time CF Montreal and CONCACAF fans will likely agree that this isn’t the first time. And probably not the last.
Dare to win
Hernán Losada’s first victory as head coach of the CFM is no coincidence. With ten minutes left in the game, he made four one-shot changes, mostly offensive, in hopes of pulling off a result.
Among the four players who made their entrance, there is Offor, the possible striker. What Losada is most proud of in their game management is that the players never gave up to get the equalizer. In fact, he specifies.
The best thing that happened tonight was that when we equalized we tried to go for the win. We kept pushing and felt like we could take more than a point. This is the mentality that we must have.
Hernán Losada, CFM head coach
The CFM will continue on its way having already overcome many of its demons. He scored his first goal of the season, got his first points and even his first victory. The Montreal club therefore begins the international break with a smile and three points in the bank.