Postgame Quotes | #VANvMIN

USATSI_16490637

Head Coach Adrian Heath

On the penalty awarded to Vancouver at the end of the game…

“I think the referee [Lukasz Szpala] was the only one who thought it was [a penalty], but considering the night he had, I shouldn’t be surprised that he’s probably made a really poor decision in the 93rd minute because he’s made them most of the evening, I felt. He’s not had a good night, but it is what it is. Not going to change it now. It’s disappointing, it feels like a defeat but it’s not. You’ve heard me say it a million times, a point on the road is never a bad result. Sure, we wanted the three and when you’re so close, everyone is incredibly disappointed. I thought we were excellent second half. Got about, started to play. Even in the first half where I thought we were nearly good, when we were at it and got in good spots, we created some good opportunities. I’m disappointed for the players because on the back of putting so much in on Wednesday evening against a team that makes you work so hard. We’ve had our highest physical data since I’ve been here on Wednesday in LA. For the same group to put in the same effort and commitment in that they’ve done tonight, speaks volumes and although I said it feels like a defeat, it wasn’t. We keep the run going and we’ve set ourselves up nicely for next week.”

On if he got a chance to look at the video of the call after the game…

“I thought [Cristian Dajome] threw himself into Ethan [Finlay] and the ref fell for it. I didn’t think it was a penalty, seeing it live and seeing it after. But as I said Jerry, we can talk about it all night, it’s a bad decision but he was poor all evening. We shouldn’t be surprised. It could have been the other way. He could have done it the other way. And by the way, we all have bad nights. I have bad nights, players do and referees have bad nights, tonight he didn’t have a particularly good evening, so we shouldn’t be surprised.”

On Robin Lod scoring another late goal for the lead…

“He keeps going. He gets in good spots. The bottom line is, he’s a very good player. I’ve said this before, he started a little bit slowly but I know what the rest of the people in the league think. Every time we go and see the coaches after the game, we have a chat, have a drink, invariable Robin [Lod]’s name always comes up. Another quality finish. He’s a proper player and I’m glad we’ve got him. It doesn’t surprise me at all, no, because good players bring it when they need to.”

On Adrien Hunou’s 45 minutes and his almost header…

“It was okay. At the particular time when he came on, halftime, I wanted us to get the ball down, I wanted us to play more and I thought he linked in. I’d like him to be a bit more positive, a bit more greedy in and around the box. It’s early days for Adrien [Hunou], he’s got better days ahead of him, for sure.”

On giving Adrien Hunou more time to adjust to the league, like Robin Lod needed…

“We do. As I’ve spoke to you guys before, if you look at Adrien [Hunou]’s last sort of six months in France, he barely played so he’s not going to come in and hit the ground running and be right on fire. Robin [Lod] came off the beach when he arrived and when you consider the amount of aggravation I took for Robin Lod, internally as well as externally; we have to give players time. They’re moving to a new country, they’ve got to set up. It’s never easy. I know people think it is, but it’s not. [Adrien] won’t be the first and he certainly won’t be the last who comes in and probably would like to be playing a little bit better than he is, for sure.”

On the status of Michael Boxall and Chase Gasper…

“We’re hopeful for both of them for next week.”

On the first goal the team conceded…

“We gave it away cheaply, didn’t we? And the way that we play, the way that a lot of teams play now, people are starting to take expansive positions up and higher and wider and if you turn it over cheaply, you concede. The one thing about [Vancouver], they have pace up front. If it’s a foot race and you’re in a bad spot, invariable they’re going to beat you to it. If we hadn’t turned the ball over cheaply, we wouldn’t have had to have dealt with it. But at the end of the day it’s a poor goal from us because we had possession of the ball and it wasn’t a particularly difficult pass that Romain [Metanire] had to keep possession.”  

On going home with two points from the road trip…

“Yea. Going to LAFC, on the road. Third game after playing Portland and Seattle, which were high-energy games. Coming here, I knew this was going to be tough because of the workload the guys had done in the week. [Vancouver] haven’t lost in six so they’re on a little bit of a turnaround themselves. I thought second half, we were very, very good. Disappointed we haven’t got the three points because last kick of the game, wasn’t it? But in general, I thought the second half performance was good.”

On why Lukasz Szpala didn’t go to the VAR monitor for another look…

“I don’t know. As I said, Andy, I wasn’t surprised. As I said to you earlier and I know I’m repeating myself, referees are like players, they have bad nights. He had one tonight, certainly.”

On DJ Taylor’s shift tonight…

“He was excellent. He’s good. He’s proved he can play at this level. Chase [Gasper] has been playing really, really well. We thought about should we bring in the experience of Jukka [Raitla] in, change things around, but no. [DJ] has earned to keep his place. The one thing that we know is that we’ve got somebody who can play at fullback in this league and contributes. So that’s always nice.”

Midfielder Ethan Finlay

On the penalty that got called on him at the end of the game…

“I’ll give you two points of view. In real time, ball ricochets off my chest, puts [Cristian Dajome] in the space. I know that he’s to my right but I try to take a straight line, cut in towards the ball, knowing that he’s there. I didn’t know if he had the inside shoulder on me necessarily but I was going to keep my line, essentially. I felt like I did that throughout that moment and I felt like it was more of a lunge by him into me. Obviously, any time you’re running shoulder to shoulder with someone in the box, you’re trying to do it gingerly, if you will. You know that in those moments, refs are looking to make calls but I don’t know what else a player can do in that situation. Now that I’ve seen it back, I think anywhere else on the field if you ask 99 people out there, 100 people out there, 99 are going to tell you that’s a foul on him probably. I don’t know how you can just throw a leg out in front of a player, from a side angle, and consider that you have the position. I don’t know what else to do. In the moment I have to be a lazy player and not rush back and try to make a play on a ball, which I think is a 50-50. He didn’t touch the ball there. The ball came straight off my chest, he never had possession of that ball. I don’t know. There’s four referees on the field, there’s the VAR where there’s at least one or two. That has to be explained and unfortunately, they can explain it but it won’t give us the points back and that’s why I’m gutted and that’s why this team is gutted. That was 92 minutes of busting our ass and it was stolen from us tonight.”

On his surprise that Lukasz Szpala didn’t go to the VAR monitor for another look…

“Surprised would be an understatement. We have a job to do on the field as players, the responsibility of a ref is to be very sure of it. For a guy who, I think, has maybe five games to his name as a referee, I don’t care if he thinks he was almost 100 percent, he needs to go look at that. It’s too big of a moment for him to not go look at it and make sure that what he saw live is the same thing that he saw. And if he still sees the same thing, so be it. But to not look at it, and that has to go on the VAR. if the VAR doesn’t call him to do it, then that should go on him. There needs to be transparency. This is an easy thing that we had in the bubble where there’s transparency in these rooms. I don’t understand why we can’t do it. It would be great for fan entertainment. Players and coaching staff would enjoy transparency. [Media] will like it. Who is objecting to it? Is it the refs? Okay, we’ll solve that problem but these are moments where we’re not going to know what happened between these five or six people but I think everyone should want to know and we should. We should be asking these questions. Too big of moments. We’ll look back at three months time right now and these two points could be the difference between hosting a playoff game or not. That’s the reality. And we’ll have to face that going forward.”

On the fight from the team and Robin Lod scoring another late goal for the team…

“It’s tremendous. His composure in these moments…he’s a calm guy off the field and then you see him on the field. He’s so cool and calm in the moment. That play was indicative of good pressure. We win a second ball, Wil [Trapp] gets the ball and plays a great ball to Robin [Lod] and he does the rest. Robin has been instrumental and he’s played in multiple different positions. He’s played on the right, he’s played on the left, he’s played up top. Really happy for him. Tonight was a tough night for everyone, whether it was a lot of minutes on guys’ legs, and no environment. This felt flat out there. We had to create the environment and there was lulls in the game for us but for the most part I thought guys worked their asses off. They challenged, it was a windy night. Kind of battled the weirdness that comes with playing here in Salt Lake. For it to end [2-2] it feels extremely unfair to us.”

On if the LAFC game felt like a win and this match felt like a loss…

“At the end of the day, they’re both ties. The way the LA game ended, we thought that was a pretty fair result on the night. Tonight is a big disappointment because, I think, we think we can beat [Vancouver]. We’re more than capable of getting three points on the road. It is what it is. Now we go back home where we’ve made it a point to be very strong and to make a fortress of it. That’s what we look forward to, having these next two here at home and we’ll look for six points in those games.”

On his first goal of the season…

“It’s about damn time, to be honest with you. I’ve had plenty of chances and to finally put one away and the way that I did it, was a big relief off my shoulders. Hopefully going forward I can play a little more free and can continue to create scoring opportunities and be a bit more composed in those moments. I’ve scored plenty in my career but when you go through these periods, they feel like they’re almost impossible to get back in the back of the net. It absolutely felt great. [Emanuel Reynoso] played me a great ball earlier in the game, in a similar position. [I had] a bit of a heavy touch and I didn’t think he saw me. I was ready for it on this one. Another great pass from him. I have to continue to try and make those plays, whether the ball is going to be coming to me or not. It opens up space for the guys underneath. Definitely felt great and disappointed not to get the win the tonight but personally, that was a weight off my shoulders.”

On to be on the receiving end of a magical Emanuel Reynoso pass…

“Like I said, you have to be ready for them because sometimes you don’t he sees you and he does. It feels great. Those guys have had a lot of minutes on their legs and to continue to play at the high level that they are is instrumental. Adrien [Hunou] came in and gave us a nice spark there late in the game. We have a very talented group of players, [Reynoso] obviously is one of them but we have a very talented group. That’s what you need to make a run in the end and I think we’re starting to play some really good soccer.”

On if Adrien Hunou needs more time to adjust to the league, like Robin Lod needed…

“You continue to try and encourage a player like that who has a proven track record. We know that [Adrien Hunou] can score goals, we brought him here to score goals. We try to do everything we can to relieve the pressure that he might be personally feeling. That’s continuing to encourage him, giving him opportunities when he gets in front of net, try to find him in those spaces. Tonight is a good example of you don’t always have to score a goal, necessarily, to make an impact and I thought he made an impact off the bench. To me, it’s about going in there and talking to the guy and say ‘hey, that’s a great start. You continue to do that, teammates are going to find you, they’re going to want success for you.’ It will absolutely come and we spoke a little bit about this yesterday, the strength of this group has always been we’ve had multiple guys that cans core anywhere between seven to 12 or 13 goals in a season. It’s not different. If Adrien has ten goals by the end of the season, I won’t be shocked y any means. It would be ten in, what have we got left here? 19 games, if I counted correctly. 18 games. He’s more than capable. He’s got a proven track record. I have full confidence and I know the group has full confidence in Adrien going forward.”