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Christine Sinclair, Sophie Schmidt help turn the tide off the bench against Irish

PERTH, Australia — Captain Christine Sinclair, the world's all-time leading scorer with 190 goals, did not make the starting lineup for Canada's game against Ireland at the FIFA Women's World Cup on Wednesday. But she did make a difference.
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Canada's Christine Sinclair looks on during Group B soccer action against Nigeria at the FIFA Women's World Cup in Melbourne, Australia, Friday, July 21, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Scott Barbour

PERTH, Australia — Captain Christine Sinclair, the world's all-time leading scorer with 190 goals, did not make the starting lineup for Canada's game against Ireland at the FIFA Women's World Cup on Wednesday. But she did make a difference.

Coach Bev Priestman unleashed the 40-year-old from Burnaby, B.C., at halftime at Perth Rectangular Stadium, along with fellow veterans Sophie Schmidt and Shelina Zadorsky. The game was tied 1-1 at the half despite the fact the Irish had dominated the first 45 minutes.

Zadorsky was sent on to replacing an ailing Kadeisha Buchanan at centre back. Sinclair and Schmidt were introduced to kick-start the Olympic champions.

It was cap No. 325 for Sinclair and No. 223 for the 35-year-old Schmidt.

"Listen Sophie Schmidt, Christine Sinclair, I thought their quality when we really needed it, they just allowed us to keep the ball and build," said Priestman. "You know it was a big part of the game plan. My explanation for the (squad) selection was exactly that — 'You can be the reason that we win.'"

And so it was. Sinclair set up Jordyn Huitema minutes into the half, with only a fine save by Irish 'keeper Courtney Brosnan saving the day. Then Schmidt unlocked the Irish defence with a pass to Adriana Leon for the game-winner in the 53rd minute.

Prior to Wednesday, Sinclair had started all 22 of her previous World Cup appearances, logging 1,939 minutes with 10 goals to her credit.

Priestman, speaking at the pre-match news conference, called Sinclair "a Canadian great."

But she acknowledged that the performance of forwards Cloe Lacasse and Evelyne Viens off the bench against Nigeria had given her food for thought.

"They asked some questions, one million per cent" she said.

Viens and midfielder Jessie Fleming, returning from a one-game absence due to a calf injury, came into the starting 11 with Nichelle Prince also dropping to the bench. Fleming captained the side.

Sinclair started the Canadians' tournament-opening scoreless draw with No. 40 Nigeria, seeing her penalty kick stopped early in the second half. 

Sinclair exited in the 71st minute of the Nigeria game. When an Irish reporter suggested Tuesday that some of Canada's older players struggled as the game wore on, Priestman talked up Sinclair.

"What might take some players three touches she can do in one," the coach said. "And I think that quality shines through. So, for me, I'm here to win, as is the team. And Christine Sinclair is a huge part of that."

Prior to Wednesday, Sinclair had started 82 of her last 87 matches for Canada dating back to early 2016. 

In four of the five matches she didn't start during that period, Sinclair came in to open the second half — including a 2-0 win over Japan in February in Frisco, Texas, at the SheBelieves Cup. The tournament saw the Canadian women boycott training as part of their ongoing labour dispute with Canada Soccer.

As one of the Canadian team's player representatives, Sinclair was heavily involved in the negotiations.

In appearing in the Nigeria game, Sinclair became the second-oldest player to feature at the Women’s World Cup at the age of 40 years and 39 days. The oldest player is Brazil’s Formiga, who lined up against France in 2019 aged 41 years 112 days.

Like Sinclair, Nigeria's Onome Ebi and Brazil's Marta are also attending their sixth World Cup. The 40-year-old Ebi did not figure against Canada while the 37-year-old Marta came off the bench in the 75th minute of Brazil's 4-0 win over Panama.

Sinclair, Marta and Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo are the only players to score at five World Cups.

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This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 26, 2023

Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press