March 11, 2019...York 9 FC's Gasparotto calls for no-nonense diving policy in CPL (from york9fc.canpl.ca)

    
York9 FC’s Gasparotto calls for no-nonsense diving policy in CPL 
March 11, 2019 

Canadian Premier League 
by 
Armen Bedakian, CanPL.ca


YORK REGION – In the tough-tackling world of Scottish football, there’s no sympathy for 
a softer approach.

Those who survive the physical nature of the Scottish Premier League and stand among 
the battle-hardened who call it home must possess a certain disposition.

Strength, speed and quick-wittedness are, of course, staples of the game.

You’ll need all of those, in spades, to thrive in the SPL.

But, as Canadian defender Luca Gasparotto quickly learned, you’ll also need resilience 
to truly stake your claim in a starting lineup.

Such is the reality of life and of football in Scotland, where diving in particular 
is admonished heartedly and heatedly in the stands.

And, if the newly-signed York9 FC defender has his way, that mentally should be carried 
over into the Canadian game, too.

“They have a desire to win,” Gasparotto told CanPL.ca, when asked for his impressions 
about Scottish football, where he has played since 2011.

“For them, it was their life. They’re playing for win bonuses, or had other jobs to try 
and support their families, so the mentality was to go in every day and put in everything 
to get the win. I’d like to see that over here as well. I’m sure everyone wants to win, 
but that’s the biggest thing I want to pass on – that winning mentality.”

Around the time that his new head coach Jimmy Brennan was calling it a day on his career, 
Gasparotto was kick-starting his own with a move to fabled Scottish outfit Rangers coming 
together in 2011. Since then, he went on to play for a number of clubs in the U.K., 
including Falkirk, Greenock Morton, Airdrieonians and Stirling Albion.

He returns to his home in York Region to take part in the inaugural Canadian Premier League 
season, having experienced everything that Scottish football has to offer across multiple 
league levels.

And, with the winning mentally he outlined in mind, he affirmed that diving – the nefarious 
act of simulating a foul or flopping around on the ground in feigned discomfort – ought to 
have no place in the Canadian game.

“Diving is everywhere, and it’s a bad part of the game, one that shouldn’t be a part of it,” 
Gasparotto said, when asked for his thoughts on the topic. “Hopefully it won’t be too much 
of a problem over here.

“In Scotland,” he continued, “you get the coaches, and they’ll obviously defend the players 
to the press, but then they’ll have a quiet word with you on the side and say ‘look, 
you can’t be doing that.’ I think the majority of people know you don’t do that. Doesn’t 
mean that they’re not going to do it, but it’s something I wouldn’t like to see if one 
of my teammates were doing it.”

For Gasparotto, the issue is doubly problematic as his position at centreback often puts 
him face-to-face with tricky forwards who will look for any advantage they can get.

“It’s the little nippy guys (you have to watch out for),” Gasparotto said, with a laugh. 
“You get close to them and they go down. Hopefully we won’t see too much of that and 
it won’t be an issue, but I’m sure if it does happen, the league will stamp down on it.

He added: “It would be fantastic (if Canada was known as a country where diving doesn’t 
happen). It would be ideal. Will it happen? We’ll wait and see. It’s been a part of the 
game for a long time, a bad part, but I’d like to think of Canadians as an honest bunch, 
so we’ll try to get that as our identity.”

Luckily, the Canadian soccer landscape has continued to grow and change in the seven years 
since Gasparotto departed to Scotland, lending itself to the idea that the country’s soccer 
identity is still being formed with each passing year.

While he has made regularly monthly visits in the summer back home in North York since making 
the move, his experiences in the Canadian soccer system have been limited to a few appearances 
at the Canadian youth national team ranks, as well as a call-up to the senior side in 2015.

However, the 23-year-old has already noticed a shift in the Canadian soccer scene since 
leaving for Scotland.

“There’s been a drastic change,” Gasparotto affirmed. “More and more people are getting 
involved, whether they’re playing or becoming interested in the sport, watching games and 
supporting the national team and their local CPL teams as well. With the league we have, 
it’s a huge jump forward into the right direction.

“With this league, it gives an opportunity to players like myself, coming home. There’s a lot 
of high-quality players that have had great professional careers as well. It’s very exciting 
to be a part of and Canada is definitely heading in the right direction for soccer.”

Whether that direction includes a no-nonsense policy on the dirtier aspects of the game 
remains to be seen.

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