(Reuters) โ Canada and Uruguay have differing outlooks about how the Copa America has gone as they clash in the third-place match on Saturday in Charlotte.
In their first-ever Copa America, Canada finished second in Group A and defeated Venezuela in the quarter-finals before falling 2-0 to Argentina in the semis. Both of Canadaโs setbacks in the tournament came against Argentina.
Their strong showing has got Canada, an ice hockey-loving nation, showing a growing interest in its soccer squad.
โWe want to inspire the nation,โ Canada coach Jesse Marsch said. โWe want to develop the sport in the country.
โWe want people to remember this as a moment in time that changed the trajectory of what this sport is in Canada.โ
Uruguayโs bid for a record 16th Copa America crown ended when they fell 1-0 to Colombia in Wednesdayโs semi-final, also held in Charlotte.
Uruguay won all three Group C matches by an aggregate 9-1 score and then beat Brazil on penalties in the quarter-finals. But their dominance ended against Colombia despite them having a man-advantage for the entire second half.
โWe didnโt make the most of the moments during the first half when we could have equalised,โ Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa said. โIn the second half, we should have created more danger.โ
After the match some Uruguay players went into the crowd and fought with Colombian fans.
South American soccer federation and Copa America organisers CONMEBOL have opened an investigation.
When it was suggested to Bielsa that sanctions could be forthcoming for Uruguay, the 68-year-old became agitated.
โThe players reacted like any other human being would,โ Bielsa said. โIf you see that thereโs a process to keep what happened from happening, if you see that if what happened happens anyway, and that thereโs supposedly another process โ an escape hatch, letโs say โ and both things fail, and you see your woman or your mother or a baby being attacked, what would you do?
โYouโd ask whether theyโre going to punish the people who defended themselves? What you should be asking me if you had a minimum amount of sympathy is if the players have received an apology from those who are responsible for caring for every single spectator.โ
Marsch was also critical of how the tournament has been run, citing poor treatment of his team and criticising the officiating.
Referees did not call a foul when Canada captain Alphonso Davies was taken down in the semi-final by Argentinaโs Gonzalo Montiel and sustained a right ankle injury.
โFor me, this tournament has not been professional,โ Marsch said.
โI watched what happened after the (Uruguay-Colombia) match and certainly I donโt know all the details, but certainly we wouldnโt want anyoneโs families or any playerโs families to be put in harmโs way.
โBut I know if Team Canada, if our team would have responded like this, that there would be heavy sanctions because of the treatment that we received in this tournament.
โThe whole time weโve had our players be head-butted, weโve had racial slurs thrown at our players live and through social mediaโฆ Weโve been treated like second-class citizens.โ
Marsch said he does not know if Davies will be available on Saturday.
Uruguay defender Nahitan Nandez will return from a red card suspension tied to his vicious tackle of Brazilโs Rodrygo in the quarter-finals. Another key defender, Ronald Araujo, is out after injuring his leg against Colombia.
(Reporting by Field Level Media; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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