Saturday, March 08, 2008

Water polo team dunks Romania in huge upset

Victory in Ordea gives Canada first outright berth in Olympics

March 08, 2008
Randy Starkman SPORTS REPORTER (Toronto Star)

Nathaniel Miller wore his bite marks proudly in Romania last night, a souvenir of Canada's "Miracle on Water."
The Canadian water polo team had no business beating Romania in their home pool with an Olympic berth on the line. The Romanians were huge favourites, trouncing Canada by 10 goals a week ago in Hungary. The undersized Canadian crew knew the crowd would be against them and likely the referees, too. And, besides, upsets rarely occur in water polo.
But one did this time.
The headline on waterpolo-world.com said it all: Canada causes earthquake in Ordea.
The tremors were still being felt after a 9-8 victory for Canada that qualified the country in men's water polo outright for the first time in Olympic history – they got there before by invitation, boycott or being the host.
The receptionist at the team's hotel in Romania at first said no one from the Canadian team could come to the phone because they were celebrating, but Miller kindly obliged. It turns out head coach Dragan Jovanovic had set a two-beer maximum, anyway, because they have two games left.
It was a vicious game that left Miller and a few of his teammates with bite marks, all from the same 6-foot-4 offender who may or may not have been a descendant of that great Romanian, Vlad Dracula.
"I'll take it," said Miller, a Montrealer who at 28 is the team's elder statesman. "While he was worrying about biting me, I was worrying about putting the ball in the net."
Jovanovic, a star goalie for the former Yugoslavia, started laying the groundwork for the victory when he took over as head coach in 2004. He demanded a much greater commitment from the players than ever before, one that saw many veterans step aside.
"Right from the start, he changed the mentality," said Miller.
A toughness that belied their youth was evident yesterday. At an average of about 23 years old, the Canadians have one of the youngest teams, with only four pros on their roster. When they got into penalty trouble, they had 18- and 19-year-olds battling against 32-year-old Romanian pros.
They stuck to the defence-first system preached by Jovanovic, blocking over a dozen balls with a smothering defence. The inordinate number of blocks seemed to take a toll on the Romanian psyche.
In the final seconds, one of the Romanians grabbed the ball and was poised for a seemingly dangerous shot, but squeezed too tightly and it fell harmlessly into the hands of a Canadian defender.
Miller watched the last seconds tick off from the penalty box.
"That was the greatest moment of my life," Miller said. "We trusted in each other and trusted in our coach and pulled off a huge upset. Going into this, I don't think anyone in the sport thought we had a chance to win."

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This is a stunning upset! Way to go Canada!

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