Breaking: Whitecaps set MLS-era attendance record at 50th anniversary game

Whitecaps set MLS-era attendance record at 50th anniversary game

Over 100 former players among the 32,465 people at B.C. Place to watch Vancouver tie with Austin FC

In front of the largest crowd ever in their Major League Soccer era during a momentous anniversary, the Vancouver Whitecaps settled for a moral victory.

“It’s a fantastic performance,” said coach Vanni Sartini after his team played to a 0-0 draw against Austin FC on Saturday at B.C. Place.

With 32,465 fans on hand for the Whitecaps’ 50th anniversary, the club settled for a second straight draw to bring their record to 5-2-3 for the year.

Earlier this week, Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim officially proclaimed May 4 as Whitecaps FC 50th Anniversary Day. The club was also recognized at the legislature by the British Columbia government.

More than 100 alumni from across the Whitecaps’ five-decade history were welcomed to the pitch ahead of kickoff.

While it has only been 13 years since the club was formed as an MLS franchise, its first iteration played in the North American Soccer League (NASL) in 1974.

“I think it was just a team that the city really got behind,” club legend Carl Valentine said of those early days. “We had some class players, some big stars — Alan Ball and Willie Johnston and stuff.

“But we really worked hard and I think that that’s what Vancouver likes.”

Valentine was a member of the team when they won the 1979 Soccer Bowl — at the time, it was Vancouver’s first major sports title in a decade and a half.

The Whitecaps built a solid fanbase during its days in the NASL, consistently making the playoffs.

When the league folded in 1986, some of the team’s administration reformed the team into the Vancouver 86ers, playing in the Canadian Soccer League. The team then took the Whitecaps name again in 2000.

The Whitecaps continued to draw devoted crowds to the 5,288-seat Swangard Stadium as Vancouver fielded clubs in the United Soccer Leagues and United States Soccer Federation Division 2 in the 2000s.

It was eventually reformed again as an MLS expansion franchise in 2011, and made the playoffs the following year. Since then, the club has won three Canadian Championships — in 2015, 2022 and 2023.

Club CEO Axel Schuster says the club’s half-century-long history has meant a lot of responsibility rests on the shoulders of the current team.

“It’s not just about us here. There are a lot of people that are connected to this club because they have a lot of great memories,” he told Dan Burritt, guest host of CBC’s  On The Coast.

“We feel that … we are a little part of a bigger story.”

“Even with those players and with this coaching staff, we had a bad start into the season last year,” he said. “We never questioned that we are on the right track — and we continue to work.”

Valentine says that he hopes the success of the NHL’s Vancouver Canucks leads to an “infectious” feeling of winning among the city’s fans, and he hopes that it energizes the fanbase as the MLS season goes on.

Scoreless draw against Austin

Averaging two goals a game heading into Saturday’s match and with striker Brian White riding a four-game goal-scoring streak, it’s the first time in MLS play this season that the Whitecaps were held off the scoreboard.

The fans roared early on, when captain Ryan Gauld beat Austin goalkeeper Brad Stuver in the 19th minute. But the goal was called back following a video replay after a handball was identified before the shot.

All told, the Whitecaps controlled 62.2 per cent of the possession in the game.

“It was a big night for the club,” said Gauld. “A big milestone, so we knew that the fans would turn up. They pushed us on as we would expect, but unfortunately we just couldn’t send everyone home happy.”

 

As part of an eight-game schedule in May, the Whitecaps will hit the road next week. They’ll begin their defence of the Canadian Championship against Cavalry FC on Tuesday, then return to MLS action next Saturday against LAFC.

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