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‘We have to fight more than them’: Pacific and Valour set for season-defining showdown
Canadian Premier League

A common cliche in sports, especially football, is that regular season matches are being treated like finals. Sometimes it can seem like an exaggeration, but there comes a point in a club’s season where it really does start to seem that way.

Regular season matches won’t get much bigger in this Canadian Premier League season than Monday night’s clash between Valour FC and Pacific FC at Princess Auto Stadium. It will be a so-called “six-point game” in Winnipeg as the hosts look to move closer to the fifth and final playoff spot in front of their home fans, while the visitors look to maintain their position just above the playoff line after a recent good run of form. A loss and Valour’s chances of making the playoffs will appear to be over, but if they win they will be a single point back of the fifth-place Tridents, and closer to potentially making the postseason for the first time in club history — especially if they get some help from other clubs around the CPL. A win for the Tridents and losses to Halifax and Vancouver would put Pacific comfortably into the playoff picture with three weeks remaining. A draw doesn’t benefit either side a whole lot, especially the Winnipeggers.


Pacific might be in a better position than Valour in the table, but with three teams hot on their heels and just four matches to go, they are not being complacent in the final stretch. This match is as much must-win for them as it is for Valour, especially if Vancouver FC or Halifax Wanderers FC win their matches this weekend before Monday night’s tilt — which would only ramp up the pressure even more.

“I think we’re kind of in the same situation as them,” Tridents centre-back Thomas Meilleur-Giguère said to CanPL.ca. “For sure we’re in a better position right now, but we’re as desperate for the points. We really need them, so for sure we’re expecting them to come very strong and very ready to fight, but it’s in our hand. We have to fight more than them and show that we want it even more than them, even if we’re in a better position. That’s all on us.”

The Tridents are back over the playoff line amidst a four-game unbeaten run that has seen them pick up eight crucial points to climb from seventh up to fifth. It was Meilleur-Giguère that scored the goal that put them up into fifth place last week, a dramatic equalizer in the seventh minute of stoppage time in a midweek trip to play the Wanderers.

Moses Dyer has scored in all four of those matches, while Valour’s Shaan Hundal has scored in three in a row and four of his last five as they have drawn four matches in a row. Both strikers are red-hot this season and will be central figures in Monday’s crucial match.

Thomas Meilleur-Giguère celebrates his stoppage time equalizer at Wanderers Grounds. (Photo: Trevor MacMillan/HFX Wanderers FC)

Both Meilleur-Giguère and Valour defender Tass Mourdoukoutas take pride in the leadership roles they bring to their sides as well. Both have worn the captain’s armband at times this season, and provide valuable experience to their respective backlines. Despite being just 26 and 25, respectively, they both have a wealth of experience already, both in the CPL and elsewhere.

Mourdoukoutas has been tasked this year with anchoring a new-look Valour backline which he too only joined this year. He and 22-year-old Gianfranco Facchineri, Valour’s second-round pick in the 2024 CPL–U Sports Draft, have played nearly every match together at centre-back and performed admirably, while 23-year-old Themi Antonoglou has been a revelation at left back. As Valour have seemingly found their best lineup late in the season, Roberto Alarcon has often been deployed at right back, in front of goalkeeper Jonathan Viscosi, whose recent performances have landed him two consecutive spots in the league’s Team of the Week.

“It’s important that we just stay locked in and do what we do well. If everyone wins their battles and does their jobs individually, then there’s no reason as a collective why we can’t get three points and get a result, a much-needed result as well.” exclaimed Mourdoukoutas to CanPL.ca this week.

Meilleur-Giguère, meanwhile, has played alongside a revolving door of defensive partners this year. He and Aly Ndom were arguably the league’s best centre-back pairings through the first few weeks of the year before Ndom suffered a season-ending injury. Since then, the man they call TMG has played alongside Paul Amedume, Juan Quintana, and most recently Kevin Ceceri,

“It’s a lot of change, different personnel, different attributes, different qualities, and I’m proud of all of them,” said Meilleur-Giguère. “They had to come out in big moments with maybe less repetition, so they did a very good job and they’re all willing, no matter who plays. That backline is really willing to help, and for my part in that I’m just trying to help make them feel comfortable in that backline as soon as possible.

“Even our left back, Christian Greco-Taylor, played the last two, three games, and he’s been amazing. I can’t really say nothing about them, they’ve been amazing, and they’re willing to work and willing to help us. That’s exactly what we needed for that space, so happy with all of them.”

Meilleur-Giguère has won a Canadian Premier League title before, when Pacific beat Forge FC in the 2021 CPL Final at Tim Hortons Field — the only time the Hammers have missed out on the playoff title.

Only a handful of players are left from that squad — him, Josh Heard, Kunle Dada-Luke, and Sean Young. Several players on that team, considered one of the best ever assembled in the Canadian Premier League, have gone on to play in MLS and Europe, and had increased success in the CPL — including Lukas MacNaughton, Marco Bustos, Ollie Bassett, Alejandro Díaz, Kadin Chung, Manny Aparicio, Alessandro Hojabrpour, Isaac Boehmer and Terran Campbell.

“I’m trying my best to make them understand how good it is to win, because there’s no feeling like that [when] you win,” Meilleur-Giguère said. “It’s a different feeling, you’re proud, everyone’s proud of you. I just want to make them understand what it’s like and what it can change for your career, especially the younger guys.”

Thomas Meilleur-Giguère celebrates after the 2021 CPL Final. (Photo: CHANT)

Valour have never made the playoffs, something that Mourdoukoutas knew he and the club wanted to change when he signed in the offseason. He played in the 2023 postseason as a member of York United, where the Nine Stripes were knocked out by Pacific at Starlight Stadium on a dramatic stoppage time winner from Adonijah Reid.

If Pacific can continue their recent stretch of strong form and play with the grit Meilleur-Giguère has been pleading for in recent weeks the final spot in the playoffs is there’s for the taking. Once the playoff start, it’s anyone’s game and single-elimination knockouts can lead to more thrilling finishes.

For Pacific, it’s one match at a time to claim the last remaining playoff spot in a tight battle for a chance to raise the CPL shield.