logo
Iloski scores four, expansion side San Diego FC trounce Vancouver Whitecaps 5-3

Iloski scores four, expansion side San Diego FC trounce Vancouver Whitecaps 5-3

VANCOUVER - Jesper Sorensen has given the Vancouver Whitecaps room to make mistakes.
Now he needs the team to learn from them.
After a stunning start to the Major League Soccer season, the 'Caps (10-3-5) are mired in their first losing skid of the campaign after dropping a 5-3 decision to expansion side San Diego FC on Wednesday.
It was the squad's second loss in a row, coming after a 2-1 defeat to Columbus Crew back on June 14.
'It's normal that you meet adversity through a season,' Sorensen, who took over as head coach in January, said after Wednesday's loss. 'We have to bounce back and remind ourselves why we are in the position we are in. And then stay above. That's what it's about — it's not about falling, it's about how you get up on your feet.'
With the loss, the Whitecaps slipped to the No. 2 spot in the league's Western Conference standings, one point behind San Diego.
'We are so fortunate that we have been having a very good season so far. So we have some freedom to play with,' Sorensen said. 'And that should release the energy for the players and not put upon pressure.
'We are not anywhere we have to protect anything. We have to chase everything. So that's what we will be doing.'
San Diego controlled 51.3 per cent possession on Wednesday and held an 8-5 edge in on-target shots across the game.
It was a rare off-night for Vancouver's usually staunch defence, which came in having conceded a league-low 152 shots across the first half of the season.
The Whitecaps fell behind midway through the first half and couldn't battle back into the game.
Goalkeeper Yohei Takaoka stopped a blast from San Diego's Milan Iloski's in the 35th minute, but the rebound popped back out to the American striker and he fired it in before the netminder could get back in position.
Two minutes later, the visitors struck again.
Alejandro Alvarado appeared to shove Vancouver defender Ranko Veselinovic to the turf, then dished off to Iloski, who sprinted into the penalty area and put another ball past Takaoka for his second goal of the night.
Officials conducted a video review of the play before determining the goal would stand.
The 'Caps gained some momentum late in the half off a corner from Pedro Vite. The midfielder swung a ball in and it bounced around until Edier Ocampo collected it outside the six-yard box and fired a left-footed shot in for his first MLS goal.
San Diego wasted no time in retaliating.
Danish midfielder Anders Dreyer crossed a ball in to Iloski in the 44th minute and Iloski sent a header screaming in to give San Diego a 3-1 lead.
'I think that we were reacting very, very poorly on goals in this game,' Sorensen said. 'They scored one, boom, they scored again. We scored, boom, they scored. It's a proactive team. They don't care, they go jump on those occasions.'
Trouble continued early in the second half.
Dreyer passed off to Iloski, who steamed toward the net and fired another shot in, making it 4-1 with his fourth goal of the night.
The 25-year-old made his first-ever MLS start on Wednesday, and had five goals on the season heading into the game.
The Whitecaps cut into the deficit in the 66th minute.
After coming off the bench for Ralph Priso at halftime, Mathias Laborda collected a ball from Vite and chipped a sharp-angle shot up and over San Diego 'keeper CJ Dos Santos.
The goal followed a halftime talk from Sorensen, Laborda said.
'We've been doing really good. This game, the first half wasn't the best,' said the right back. 'So he tried to push us to be more intense, more quality with the ball.'
San Diego's Tomas Angel, who came on for the injured Alvarado in the 79th minute, slipped a shot past Takaoka in the 90th minute to make it 5-2.
Whitecaps academy product Antoine Coupland sealed the scored at 5-3 in the sixth minute of stoppage time. The 21-year-old Canadian came on for Andres Cubas in the 87th minute, making his MLS debut.
There are lessons to be learned from the loss, Laborda said.
'Just to be focused. Don't be crazy just for a bad game or two games,' he said. 'We miss a little bit some players (due to international duty and injuries), too. But it is what it is.'
Earlier on Wednesday, it was announced that four Whitecaps players have been picked for the MLS all-star game.
Takaoka, defender Tristan Blackmon, midfielder Sebastian Berhalter and striker Brian White will all make their all-star game debuts against LIGA MX all stars in Austin, Texas, on July 23.
The Whitecaps return to play Sunday when they visit Los Angeles FC. San Diego will face FC Dallas in Texas on Saturday.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 25, 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kishane Thompson runs historic 100m time; Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce makes 9th world team
Kishane Thompson runs historic 100m time; Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce makes 9th world team

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

Kishane Thompson runs historic 100m time; Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce makes 9th world team

Kishane Thompson ran the world's fastest 100m in a decade, becoming the sixth-fastest man in history, while Tina Clayton won her first senior Jamaican title and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce made her ninth and final World Championship team. Thompson, edged by Noah Lyles for 2024 Olympic 100m gold by five thousandths of a second (9.784 to 9.789), ran 9.75 seconds at the Jamaican Championships in Kingston on Friday night. He had a .8 meter/second tailwind. It's the world's fastest time since 2015 when American Justin Gatlin ran 9.74, 9.75 and 9.75 in a two-month span. Thompson improved his personal best by two hundredths to become the sixth-fastest man in history behind Usain Bolt (world record 9.58), Yohan Blake (9.69), Tyson Gay (9.69), Asafa Powell (9.72) and Gatlin (9.74). Thompson, 23, is the third-youngest man to run 9.75 or faster after his fellow Jamaicans Bolt and Blake. 'I'm that confident; I don't think if I even broke the world record it would surprise me, honestly,' Thompson said, adding that he could have executed his race better. 'I'm just going to put that out there.' Thompson goes into the World Championships in Tokyo in September looking to snap the U.S. streak at four consecutive men's 100m titles since Bolt won his third and final title in 2015. Noah Lyles, the reigning Olympic and world champion, last raced April 19 and has since dealt with a minor ankle injury. Lyles earned a bye into worlds as a reigning world champion, so he does not have to be at full fitness until September. Also Friday. Clayton ran personal bests in Friday's semifinals (10.93) and final (10.81) for her first senior Jamaican title. No Jamaican woman has ever run that fast before turning 21 years old. 'I didn't expect this time,' said Clayton, the world U20 champion in 2021 and 2022. 'Based on how I was going in training, I knew that I would PB, but not that fast.' The fastest women in the world this year are American Melissa Jefferson-Wooden (10.73), the Olympic bronze medalist, and Julien Alfred (10.75) of Saint Lucia, the Olympic gold medalist. Clayton was followed in Friday's final by world 200m champion Shericka Jackson (10.88) and then Fraser-Pryce (10.91) in what she said was her last race in Jamaica before retiring later this year. Fraser-Pryce, a 38-year-old with a record seven combined Olympic and world 100m titles, is due to compete at a ninth world championships. Jamaica will have at least three 100m spots at worlds, plus she's automatically in the 4x100m relay pool. 'I'm grateful for that fighting spirit,' Fraser-Pryce said, noting that her first worlds were also in Japan — as a preliminary round relay runner in 2007. Fraser-Pryce will move one shy of the record 10 worlds appearances for a sprinter shared by American Allyson Felix and Kim Collins of Saint Kitts and Nevis. She can become the oldest woman to win a World Championships medal in any sprint event, including relays, and the oldest female or male sprinter to win an individual world medal. The current oldest female sprint medalist is Chandra Sturrup of the Bahamas, who won 4x100m silver in 2009 at age 37. Jamaica's Merlene Ottey was a younger 37 when she won 200m bronze in 1997. Fraser-Pryce's 10 career World Championships gold medals are third in history behind Felix (14) and Usain Bolt (11). Her 16 career World Championships medals of any color are second to Felix (20). Fraser-Pryce originally planned to retire after the 2024 Olympic season. But then at the Paris Games, she withdrew before the 100m semifinals. A reason for her withdrawal was not announced. In January 2025, Fraser-Pryce said she would come back for one more season. In a social media post in April, she said she had unfinished business. The U.S. team for the World Championships will largely be determined at the USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships from July 31-Aug. 3 in Eugene, Oregon. Olympic 100m silver medalist Sha'Carri Richardson earned a bye onto the U.S. team as a reigning world champion from 2023. Nick Zaccardi,

Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis
Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis

LONDON (AP) — To be clear, Coco Gauff didn't bring up the word 'star' during a recent interview with The Associated Press; the reporter did. So as Gauff began to answer a question about balancing her life as a professional athlete with her off-court interests, she caught herself repeating that term. 'I definitely didn't know how it would look like,' she began with a smile, 'before I got to be, I guess, a star — feels weird to call myself that — but I definitely did want to expand outside of tennis. Always. Since I was young.' She still is young, by just about any measure, and she is a really good tennis player — Gauff owns the Grand Slam titles and No. 2 ranking to prove it as she heads into Wimbledon, which begins Monday — but the 21-year-old American is also more than that. Someone unafraid to express her opinions about societal issues. Someone who connects with fans via social media. Someone who is the highest-paid female athlete in any sport, topping $30 million last year, according to with less than a third of that from prize money and most via deals with companies such as UPS, New Balance, Rolex and Barilla. Someone who recently launched her own management firm. And someone who wants to succeed in the business world long after she no longer swings a racket on tour. 'It's definitely something that I want to start to step up for post-career. Kind of start building that process, which is why I wanted to do it early. Because I didn't want to feel like I was playing catch-up at the end of my career,' said Gauff, who will face Dayana Yastremska in the first round at the All England Club on Tuesday. 'On the business side of things, it doesn't come as natural as tennis feels. I'm still learning, and I have a lot to learn about," Gauff said. "I've debated different things and what paths I wanted to take when it came to just stimulating my brain outside of the court, because I always knew that once I finished high school that I needed to put my brain into something else.' In a campaign announced this week by UPS, which first partnered with Gauff in 2023 before she won that year's U.S. Open, she connects with business coach Emma Grede — known for working with Kim Kardashian on Skims, and with Khloe Kardashian on Good American — to offer mentoring to three small-business owners. 'Coco plays a key role in helping us connect with those younger Gen-Z business owners — emerging or younger entrepreneurs,' Betsy Wilson, VP of digital marketing and brand activation at UPS, said in a phone interview. 'Obviously, she's very relevant in social media and in culture, and working with Coco helps us really connect with that younger group.' While Grede helped the entrepreneurs, Gauff also got the opportunity to pick up tips. 'It's really cool to learn from someone like her,' Gauff said. 'Whenever I feel like I'm ready to make that leap, I can definitely reach out to her for advice and things like that. ... This will help me right now and definitely in the long term.'

Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis
Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Wimbledon 2025: Coco Gauff is just 21 but already thinking about what to do after tennis

LONDON (AP) — To be clear, Coco Gauff didn't bring up the word 'star' during a recent interview with The Associated Press; the reporter did. So as Gauff began to answer a question about balancing her life as a professional athlete with her off-court interests, she caught herself repeating that term. 'I definitely didn't know how it would look like,' she began with a smile, 'before I got to be, I guess, a star — feels weird to call myself that — but I definitely did want to expand outside of tennis. Always. Since I was young.' She still is young, by just about any measure, and she is a really good tennis player — Gauff owns the Grand Slam titles and No. 2 ranking to prove it as she heads into Wimbledon , which begins Monday — but the 21-year-old American is also more than that. Someone unafraid to express her opinions about societal issues . Someone who connects with fans via social media . Someone who is the highest-paid female athlete in any sport, topping $30 million last year, according to , with less than a third of that from prize money and most via deals with companies such as UPS, New Balance, Rolex and Barilla. Someone who recently launched her own management firm . And someone who wants to succeed in the business world long after she no longer swings a racket on tour. 'It's definitely something that I want to start to step up for post-career. Kind of start building that process, which is why I wanted to do it early. Because I didn't want to feel like I was playing catch-up at the end of my career,' said Gauff, who will face Dayana Yastremska in the first round at the All England Club on Tuesday. 'On the business side of things, it doesn't come as natural as tennis feels. I'm still learning, and I have a lot to learn about,' Gauff said. 'I've debated different things and what paths I wanted to take when it came to just stimulating my brain outside of the court, because I always knew that once I finished high school that I needed to put my brain into something else.' In a campaign announced this week by UPS, which first partnered with Gauff in 2023 before she won that year's U.S. Open , she connects with business coach Emma Grede — known for working with Kim Kardashian on Skims, and with Khloe Kardashian on Good American — to offer mentoring to three small-business owners. 'Coco plays a key role in helping us connect with those younger Gen-Z business owners — emerging or younger entrepreneurs,' Betsy Wilson, VP of digital marketing and brand activation at UPS, said in a phone interview. 'Obviously, she's very relevant in social media and in culture, and working with Coco helps us really connect with that younger group.' While Grede helped the entrepreneurs, Gauff also got the opportunity to pick up tips. 'It's really cool to learn from someone like her,' Gauff said. 'Whenever I feel like I'm ready to make that leap, I can definitely reach out to her for advice and things like that. ... This will help me right now and definitely in the long term.' ___ Howard Fendrich has been the AP's tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories here: . More AP tennis:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store