ABBOTSFORD, B.C. – The UBC Thunderbirds (2-0-0) stepped on the gas after halftime en route to a 4-1 victory over the University of the Fraser Valley Cascades (0-1-0) Friday night at the Matsqui Recreation Centre.
On a soggy Abbotsford evening, the T-Birds and Cascades battled to a 1-1 stalemate through 45 minutes of play – UBC's
Alyssa Hunt opening the scoring in the 17th minute, and UFV's Brittney Zacharuk equalizing in the 35th.
The Thunderbirds pulled away after the break, though, on tallies from
Michelle Jang,
Rachel Jones and
Liesanne Musico to improve to a perfect 2-0 in Canada West conference play.
The T-Birds opened scoring on a lightning-quick counterattack following a UFV turnover.
Tess McRae played the ball ahead to Hunt, and she curled a top-corner shot over the outstretched arms of Cascades goalkeeper Joven Sandhu.
Gurneet Dhaliwal made the play that led to Zacharuk's equalizer. After her initial shot was stopped by UBC keeper
Emily Moore, Dhaliwal was fouled by a T-Birds defender, setting the table for a penalty kick for Zacharuk. The Cascades captain calmly slotted home a shot into the bottom left corner.
???????Sandhu came up with a great stop to keep it level going into halftime – she turned aside
Danielle Steer from close range, and defender Marianne Spring blocked Steer's follow-up effort.
Steer got her revenge in the 57th minute, making a run down the right side and sending a cross to Jang, who finished from close range to restore the UBC lead.
The Cascades looked to respond in the 70th – Zacharuk made a great run down the left and her cross found Simi Lehal, but her volley went just wide of the near post. Then, in the 74th, Jones gave the T-Birds some breathing room, launching a highlight-reel strike into the top right corner from just outside the box. Musico rounded out the scoring, poking the ball home on a scramble off a free kick in injury time.
"As a team, we want to be a team in possession and keep the ball," T-Birds coach
Jesse Symons said. "I felt in the second half, we started to move it a little quicker. We really challenged the players to increase the tempo a bit and see if we could play a speed that would stress UFV a little bit and get into spaces that would make them drop down a little bit. We were able to accomplish that, fortunately. They're such a physical, strong team that we have to move the ball quick to move around them, because they get defensively structured so well. Fortunately we were able to do that, and we were able to score a couple great goals to open up the game a bit."
Sophomore keeper Sandhu was UFV's player of the game – she had little chance on any of UBC's goals, and she counted several highlight-reel stops among her eight saves. Notably, in the second half she came up with diving saves on UBC's
Rachel Kordysz and
Emma Kallner to keep her team close. Kordysz earned UBC's player of the game nod.
Both teams are back in action on Saturday. The Cascades host the Victoria Vikes while the T-Birds visit the No. 4 Trinity Western Spartans in a clash of U SPORTS top-10 ranked teams at 5:00 p.m. PT at Chase Office Field.