Sat July 30, 2016 League 1 Ontario Women's L1O Cup--Vaughan Azzurri vs Woodbridge Strikers (from League 1 Ontario website)

Bukovec The Hero In Vaughan L1 Cup Triumph Over Woodbridge
08/02/2016, 9:00am EDT
By League1 Ontario staff

Vaughan Azzurri emerged as the 2016 Women's L1 Cup champions after defeating 
local rivals Woodbridge Strikers 2-1 (4-2 pk) in penalty kicks. 

"I thought we created a lot today," said Vaughan head coach, Carmine Isacco. 

"There were some individual errors, and we needed more quality overall in the 
midfield for sure, but our changes in the back worked and it was about 
managing the game properly." 

Former Canada Women's National player Alyscha Mottershead (21') put the Strikers 
on the board early in the match after a period of prolonged Woodbridge domination, 
but the Azzurri pulled themselves together and found a finish through the foot 
of Danya Fenech (39') after a clever reverse ball from Nour Ghoneim just 
before the half. 

"We outplayed them and probably had about 70 per cent possession," said Woodbridge 
head coach, Joe Parolini. "This league is about the young players and we had 
six '99s in the lineup and five on the field."

"I thought we did phenomenal, and I thought our patterns were showing what this 
league is all about - to give the young ones a chance, to highlight them."

Best chances of the second half came from set pieces and solo runs, with 
Woodbridge's Taylor Thallheimer and Mikayla Dayes getting into the Vaughan box 
after driving from deep positions. 

Vaughan looked to play through central forward Ghoneim through much of the 
match, but could not find the necessary combinations to build through 
to many goalscoring opportunities. 

The industry of midfielders Sarah Wong, Ashley Nater and Claudia Piazza was 
met head on by Woodbridge's centre of April Symes, Alyscha Mottershead and 
Jalana Ellis as the game drew on, and best chances began to emerge from 
flank play.

Vaughan's Wong created more and more chances as she located diagonal runs 
from Fenech and Sydney Hoareaux, eventually finding fullbacks 
Courtney Douglas and Peyton Lozzi streaking forward. 

Neither side could get the important breakthrough however, as both sets 
of defenders had excellent matches. Particularly outstanding was Vaughan's 
Olivia Lukasewich, who stifled Woodbridge star striker Christabel Oduro, 
and Woodbridge's Malieke Dayes and Diamond Simpson, whose close marking 
of Ghoneim negated Vaughan's favoured forward outlet. 

The stage was set for another penalty tie-breaker, the second for both 
sides after dispatching London and North Mississauga in semi-final penalties. 

Vaughan were able to call upon their penalty kick hero, Stephanie Bukovec, 
who again saved two shots and finished off the game by scoring the final 
penalty for Vaughan. Her match winning performance earned Bukovec 
the MVP award.

"We weren't playing for the penalties, we were actually going for the win,
but with Stephanie in net our chances were pretty good," said Isacco. 

"She is solid, just solid."

"A good leader, had to be good off her line, had to be confident, she did 
the simple things really well. Everything was just solid. She made a big 
save when we needed it, and obviously she was fantastic in the penalties."

Despite the inevitable disappointment of losing the final, 
Woodbridge's Parolini was proud of his team's performance in the match, 
and throughout the Cup competition.

He emphasized a greater developmental victory for his players in the 
big match experience. 

"We don't focus on the winning, we focus on the development, 
and we play our patterns, we play our style, keep possession, and 
we put the 99s in - it's not like we held them back - because we have 
to give them experience," he said. 

"For us this league is not about winning, this league is about 
showcasing the Mikayla Dayes, the Sophia Borea's, the keeper Julianna, 
and Milly at the back," he added. 

"Milly doesn't turn 17 until September 29 and she is up against one 
of the best strikers in the league and has done well. We're not scared. 
We play and we develop and if the results come, then great, 
but if they don't - that is the way it is in a league of development." 

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