Toronto FC takes on New England, looking to move ahead after coaching change
Chris Armas has left the building, not by choice. Still, Toronto FC’s former head coach was front and centre in absentia Tuesday.
Armas was axed the day after Saturday’s humiliating 7-1 loss at D.C. United, which represented TFC’s heaviest-ever margin of defeat. Toronto (1-8-2) has lost six straight, is winless in seven and languishes in the 27-team league basement.
“As players, as a team, as a club, you deal with the consequences with the aftermath of a (losing) period like this and of a game like that,” captain Michael Bradley said Tuesday. “And obviously the hardest part is Chris pays the worst price — somebody who has done nothing but spill his heart and soul into the team and the club since the day that he got here.
“He’s no longer with us and that’s not easy to take. As players, as captain, you feel like you let him down, there’s no two ways about it. We’re all extremely disappointed and frustrated and angry for that. And so in moments like this there’s no choice but to try to pull together and find our way out of a really difficult situation. We’re the ones who got ourselves into it and we’re the ones who are going to have to get ourselves out of it.