Canadian Premier League Awards

The Canadian Premier League Awards is a ceremony held annually at the end of each Canadian Premier League season. There are a total of seven individual awards given to players or coaches based on their performance in the regular season. For the majority of the awards, nominees are selected by the league and voted on by members of the media. The winner of each award receives an Inuit soapstone sculpture designed by artists from Cape Dorset, Nunavut.[1]

Logo of the CPL Awards

The CPL Awards were first held in 2019 and included five honours (Golden Boot, Golden Glove, Coach of the Year, U21 Canadian Player of the Year, and Player of the Year).[2] The awards initially took into account performance across the whole CPL season, including playoffs and finals.[1]

In 2022, two new awards were added (Defender of the Year and Players' Player of the Year) and all awards became based solely on performance in the regular season.[3] The timing of the ceremony was also shifted to be held a few days before the CPL final and in the city that is hosting the final. In 2024, a Finals MVP trophy was added.[4]

Awards

edit

Golden Boot

edit

The Golden Boot is awarded to the player who scores the most goals in the regular season. In the even of a tie, the award is shared between all players level on goals.

Season Winner Goals Games Rate
2019   Tristan Borges (Forge FC) 13[a] 27 0.48
2020   Akeem Garcia (HFX Wanderers FC) 6 11 0.55
2021   João Morelli (HFX Wanderers FC) 14 21 0.67
2022   Alejandro Díaz (Pacific FC) 13 18 0.72
2023   Ollie Bassett (Atlético Ottawa) 11 27 0.41
  Myer Bevan (Cavalry FC) 11 26 0.42
2024   Tobias Warschewski (Cavalry FC) 12 24 0.50
  1. ^ Includes 1 goal scored in the CPL Finals

Golden Glove

edit

The Golden Glove is the award for the goalkeeper of the year.

Season Winner Finalists
2019   Marco Carducci (Cavalry FC)   Nathan Ingham (York9 FC)
  Connor James (FC Edmonton)
2020   Triston Henry (Forge FC)   Christian Oxner (HFX Wanderers FC)
  Callum Irving (Pacific FC)
2021   Jonathan Sirois (Valour FC)   Marco Carducci (Cavalry FC)
  Triston Henry (Forge FC)
2022   Marco Carducci (Cavalry FC)   Nathan Ingham (Atlético Ottawa)
  Callum Irving (Pacific FC)
2023   Triston Henry (Forge FC)   Marco Carducci (Cavalry FC)
  Rayane Yesli (Valour FC)
2024   Emil Gazdov (Pacific FC)   Callum Irving (Vancouver FC)
  Thomas Vincensini (York United)

Coach of the Year

edit

In 2022, this award was voted on by head coaches and one assistant coach from each club.[3]

Season Winner Finalists
2019   Tommy Wheeldon Jr. (Cavalry FC)   Jim Brennan (York9 FC)
  Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)
2020   Stephen Hart (HFX Wanderers FC)   Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)
  Mista (Atlético Ottawa)
2021   Pa-Modou Kah (Pacific FC)   Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)
  Tommy Wheeldon Jr. (Cavalry FC)
2022   Carlos González (Atlético Ottawa)   Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)
  James Merriman (Pacific FC)
2023   Tommy Wheeldon Jr. (Cavalry FC)   Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)
  Patrice Gheisar (HFX Wanderers FC)
2024   Bobby Smyrniotis (Forge FC)   Benjamín Mora (York United)
  Tommy Wheeldon Jr. (Cavalry FC)

Player of the Year

edit

This is awarded to the league's most valuable player, as voted by the media. Since 2022, the CPL has announced five nominees rather than three.

Season Winner Finalists
2019   Tristan Borges (Forge FC)   Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)
  Dominique Malonga (Cavalry FC)
2020   Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)   Marco Bustos (Pacific FC)
  Akeem Garcia (HFX Wanderers FC)
2021   João Morelli (HFX Wanderers FC)   Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)
  Terran Campbell (Pacific FC)
2022   Ollie Bassett (Atlético Ottawa)   Alexander Achinioti-Jonsson (Forge FC)
  Manny Aparicio (Pacific FC)
  Sean Rea (Valour FC)
  Ballou Tabla (Atlético Ottawa)
2023   Daan Klomp (Cavalry FC)   Manny Aparicio (Pacific FC)
  Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)
  Lorenzo Callegari (HFX Wanderers FC)
  Ali Musse (Cavalry FC)
2024   Tristan Borges (Forge FC)   Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)
  Alessandro Hojabrpour (Forge FC)
  Tobias Warschewski (Cavalry FC)
  Brian Wright (York United)

Best Under 21 Canadian Player of the Year

edit

The CPL requires clubs to roster a minimum of three Canadian players under the age of 21 and to play them for a minimum of 2,000 minutes in a season.[5] All under-21 Canadian players are eligible for this award.

Season Winner Finalists
2019   Tristan Borges (Forge FC)   Diyaeddine Abzi (York9 FC)
  Terran Campbell (Pacific FC)
2020   Mohamed Farsi (Cavalry FC)   Chrisnovic N'sa (HFX Wanderers FC)
  Julian Dunn (Valour FC)
2021   Alessandro Hojabrpour (Pacific FC)   Max Ferrari (York United FC)
  Victor Loturi (Cavalry FC)
2022   Sean Rea (Valour FC)   Osaze De Rosario (York United FC)
  Woobens Pacius (Forge FC)
2023   Matteo De Brienne (Valour FC)   James Cameron (Vancouver FC)
  Kwasi Poku (Forge FC)
2024   Kwasi Poku (Forge FC)   Noah Abatneh (York United)
  Emil Gazdov (Pacific FC)

Defender of the Year

edit
Season Winner Finalists
2022   Alexander Achinioti-Jönsson (Forge FC)   Amer Đidić (Pacific FC)
  Dominick Zator (York United)
2023   Daan Klomp (Cavalry FC)   Manjrekar James (Forge FC)
  Daniel Nimick (HFX Wanderers FC)
2024   Daan Klomp (Cavalry FC)   Alexander Achinioti-Jönsson (Forge FC)
  Themi Antonoglou (Valour FC)

Player's Player of the Year

edit

Introduced in 2022, this is the only award is voted on by the players. All players that played in a game are eligible to vote and be voted for. Players cast three votes in a 5–3–1 scoring system and cannot vote for a teammate.[6] The top-10 players receiving votes are named as finalists prior to the awards ceremony.[7]

Season Winner Runner-up Third place
2022   Ollie Bassett (Atlético Ottawa)   Ballou Tabla (Atlético Ottawa)   Alejandro Díaz (Pacific FC)
2023   Ali Musse (Cavalry FC)   Kyle Bekker (Forge FC)   Daan Klomp (Cavalry FC)
2024   Brian Wright (York United)   Tristan Borges (Forge FC)   Béni Badibanga (Forge FC)

CPL Final MVP

edit
Final Winner
2024   Tobias Warschewski (Cavalry FC)

Ceremonies

edit

Beginning in 2022, the CPL Awards have been held in the city hosting the CPL Finals.

Season Date Location Ref
2019 November 26, 2019 Toronto, Ontario [8]
2020 November 26, 2020 Held virtually [9]
2021 December 14, 2021 Toronto, Ontario [10]
2022 October 28, 2022 Ottawa, Ontario [11]
2023 October 26, 2023 Hamilton, Ontario [12]
2024 November 7, 2024 Calgary, Alberta [4]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Thompson, Marty (November 1, 2019). "Canadian Premier League officially unveils 2019 individual awards". Canadian Premier League. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  2. ^ "2019 Canadian Premier League Awards Fact Sheet". Canadian Premier League. November 27, 2019. Retrieved January 22, 2020.,
  3. ^ a b "CPL announces new awards, 2022 voting procedures". Canadian Premier League. September 28, 2022. Retrieved October 9, 2022. The Golden Boot award is awarded to the player who scores the most goals during the CPL regular season
  4. ^ a b Jacques, John (November 8, 2024). "2024 CPL Awards Round Up: Parity In Powerhouses". Northern Tribune. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
  5. ^ Jacques, John (April 4, 2022). "Canadian Premier League Increasing Youth Minute Requirement". Northern Tribune. Retrieved November 6, 2023.
  6. ^ "Cavalry FC's Ali Musse voted 2023 CPL Players' Player of the Year". Canadian Premier League. October 26, 2023. Retrieved November 5, 2023.
  7. ^ "Ten Canadian Premier League standouts shortlisted for Players' Player of the Year". Canadian Premier League. October 23, 2023. Retrieved November 5, 2023.
  8. ^ "Canadian Premier League announces 2019 Award winners". Canadian Premier League. November 26, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2023.
  9. ^ "Canadian Premier League announces 2020 Award winners". Canadian Premier League. November 26, 2020. Retrieved November 17, 2023.
  10. ^ "Canadian Premier League announces 2021 Award winners". Canadian Premier League. December 14, 2021.
  11. ^ Jacques, John (October 29, 2022). "2022 CPL Awards Roundup". Northern Tribune. Retrieved November 17, 2023.
  12. ^ Jacques, John (October 27, 2023). "2023 CPL Awards Round Up: Cavalry Dominates The Show". Northern Tribune. Retrieved November 17, 2023.
edit