A whole lot has changed for Tosaint Ricketts in the past four years.
He started off 2012 as a member of Politehnica TimiÈoara in Romania and a fringe starter for the Canadian national team, for whom heâd debuted the previous year.
By October of 2012, his Romanian club had been dissolved and, through a combination of injury and suspension to other players, heâd been thrust him into a starting role for Canada in a do-or-die World Cup qualifier in San Pedro Sula, Honduras.
That game, as no fan can forget, ended extraordinarily badly for Canada.
In the intervening years, the stability of Rickettsâ club career has been inversely proportional to that of his national-team career. Even as heâs bounced between clubs in Norway, Turkey and Israel, the 29-year-old has become an automatic fixture for Canada under head coach Benito Floro.
But as the rematch in San Pedro Sula approaches on Friday (5 pm ET, TSN), it appears the Edmonton-born attacker has finally found some equilibrium, after signing with Toronto FC this summer.
âI feel great,â Ricketts told MLSsoccer.com by phone. âItâs been a while since Iâve been truly comfortable with a club teamâjust all-around lifestyle, the way Iâm being treated by the club and feeling like I have a place to call home.
âThatâs the feeling I get from TFC in these early stages. That has helped me adapt fairly quickly and Iâm just happy, Iâm enjoying football again.â
Itâs showing on the field, as Rickettsâ two goals thus far for Toronto have both been confident finishes in one-on-one situations. Itâs a far cry from four years ago in San Pedro Sula, when Ricketts missed an early opportunity to put Canada up 1-0.
âIt was obviously a bad experience for all of us, and one you try to forget,â said Ricketts. âBut there was a lot we learned from that experience.
âFor me personally, I know exactly what to expect there. I know the weather. I know the fans; theyâre going to be hostile. I know how Honduras is going to come out and basically put us under pressure, and this time around weâre just more mature. I donât think thereâs much thatâs going to surprise us this time.â
In addition to drawing from the experience of that game four years ago, Ricketts believes that the plan laid out by Floro will lead to a much different outcome than the teamâs last visit to Honduras.
â[Everyone] knows exactly what weâre going to do tactically and what we need to do to get the result,â Ricketts said. âEveryoneâs going to be on the same page this time around.â
Buying into that tactical plan has been crucial for Ricketts, who earned his 50th national-team cap earlier this summer. And Rickettsâ work ethic and versatility have earned him the trust of the teamâs well-traveled manager.
âTo have Tos [with the team] is very important and very positive,â Floro told MLSsoccer.com last week. âTos is a special player because at the same time, heâs a special person.â
Ricketts says having the support of the Canada manager, even when his club career was in tumult, has been massive in his development as a player â and itâs clear that itâs a mutual affinity.
âI respect him a lot,â Ricketts said of Floro. âHeâs showed me a side of the game that Iâd never really seen before. Heâs a special guy.â
After enduring various ups and downs in the past half-decade, Ricketts appears to be in the right place at the right time to hopefully help Canada reach the Hexagonal round for the first time in nearly 20 years.
âIt would mean the world to me,â he said. âItâs been a long road and we had to fight through a lot of adversity to get to this point. Now weâre in a situation where we can rewrite the history.â




