Vancouver Sun

Caps send Parker packing, but is side any better?

Trading Defender Completes Series Of Moves Designed To Make Team Deeper

- ED WILLES Ewilles@postmedia.com Twitter.com/willesonsp­orts

On the surface, the decision to trade Tim Parker seemed relatively straightfo­rward for the Vancouver Whitecaps.

The Caps made their 25-yearold central defender a handsome offer, $1.4 million over three years.

Parker rejected that offer, partly because he thought he was worth more, partly because he wanted to play closer to his home on the eastern seaboard.

Given the Whitecaps’ best player, Kendall Waston, had just signed a two-year extension at roughly $550,000 per, the team couldn’t pay Parker more than Waston. Ergo, they opted to move the young American. Simple, n’est-ce pas?

Then why are there so many layers to this one?

“This wasn’t about one move,” Whitecaps manager Carl Robinson said Friday. “It was about four moves we made that are all connected.

“For us, it’s not about players one through 11. It’s about one through 22. After these moves, we feel we’re a better team.”

And in this, as with all things, we shall see.

In a deal that had been in the making most of the off-season, the Whitecaps flipped Parker to the New York Red Bulls on Friday for midfielder Felipe Martins, $500,000 in allocation money and an internatio­nal roster spot in 2018.

We will get to the deeper meaning of the return shortly but, in the here and now, the decision to move Parker isn’t exactly a public relations coup for the Whitecaps, especially when it was announced two days before their Major League Soccer season opener.

In addition to being one of the team’s most popular players, the St. John’s grad represente­d one of the Whitecaps’ biggest wins in player developmen­t. A first-round pick in 2015 (13th overall), Parker graduated from Whitecaps 2 to the parent club in his rookie year, fought his way on to the roster and, by his second year, became a fixture as Waston’s partner in the middle of the backline.

The Waston-Parker tandem was the strength of the team last year, the one element Robinson could count on to deliver on a game-in, game-out basis. They were consistent. They were durable. They held up under pressure and were instrument­al in delivering the Whitecaps to a playoff berth and the Western Conference semifinals. So how does trading Parker make the Whitecaps a better team in 2018?

Well, according to Robinson, that move was the final piece in a mini-series that began a week ago when Vancouver acquired central defender Jose Aja from Salt Lake for $125,000 in allocation money.

Remember that. It will become important — I think.

Midfielder Tony Tchani was then moved to Chicago for

$150,000 in allocation money (idle question: Is that the MLS equivalent of a second-rounder?) as part of a larger effort to strengthen the midfield. Two days ago, the Caps announced they landed midfielder Jordon Mutch on loan from Crystal Palace. And Friday they dropped the hammer with Parker.

“Everyone knows I love Timmy,” Waston said. “We had a great chemistry but we know this is a business.”

Team president Bob Lenarduzzi said “We didn’t want to lose (Parker) but what we got in return makes up for it.”

When asked if paying Parker any more than he’d been offered would upset the internal salary cap, Lenarduzzi said “Yes” without elaboratin­g.

He didn’t have to. Robinson, who played a lead role in the defender’s developmen­t, had a heart-to-heart with the young player at training camp and quickly realized Parker had made up his mind. Robinson also realized he had a marketable asset and, with a couple of teams vying for Parker he believes the Whitecaps made out just fine.

Again, the moves have to be looked at in their totality. Felipe and Mutch join a midfield rotation that includes another newcomer in Mexican veteran Efrain Juarez, Yordy Reyna, Nicolas Mesquida and Aly Ghazal. The larger developmen­t is up top where Kei Kamara, a proven MLS goal scorer acquired this offseason, and Anthony Blondell, a 23-year-old signing from Venezuela, represent an upgrade over Fredy Montero.

As for the defence, Waston is the man on the backline and figures to make anyone who plays with him — Aja, Aaron Maund, Doneil Henry — better.

That, at least, is the theory and all theories look like winners before the season starts.

“We’ve got two centre forwards to replace Fredy,” Robinson said. “I feel we’ve upgraded our midfield substantia­lly. We’re two deep at every position. From top to bottom, we’re stronger.”

Good. So if the Whitecaps don’t win, we’ll know who to blame.

“Robbo is going to have difficult decisions to make,” Waston said. “That is good. The bad thing is when you don’t have any choices. Now, everything is more interestin­g.”

More interestin­g, yes. It would also help if it’s better.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? The Vancouver Whitecaps traded 25-year-old defender Tim Parker, right, Friday to the New York Red Bulls.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES The Vancouver Whitecaps traded 25-year-old defender Tim Parker, right, Friday to the New York Red Bulls.
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