Daryl Fordyce can’t see his own finish line yet, but he knows it is approaching. After all, as the old saying goes in professional sports, ‘Father Time is undefeated.’ That said, while the veteran forward confirms that he hopes to transition to coaching one day, he does also believe he has some game left to give to Valour FC in 2021 after re-signing with the CPL club. "Have you seen ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail,’?" Fordyce asked in a chat CanPL.ca. "I’m the guy that gets his arms and legs chopped off and keeps fighting. "I’m the Black Knight. That’s my mentality." Fordyce, 34, pulled up lame just before last year’s Island Games tournament in PEI and wasn’t 100 per cent when the event began. One of the two co-captains from last year along with Dylan Carreiro – who has since moved on – he still managed to make five appearances in seven matches, totalling 165 minutes and scoring once, calmly converting a rebound off his penalty attempt in a 2-1 win against his old club, FC Edmonton. His skillset and experience did have him in demand by other teams over the last few months.

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"I had a little bit of other interest here and there," Fordyce admitted. "But I spoke with my wife and said, ‘Valour brought us back to Canada. 2020 was a write-off and so I want to repay some of that back to the club and the people that brought me here.’ "I always wanted to come back to Valour because I didn’t get to express myself at the tournament as a player. This is where I want to be. Me and my family are settled here in Winnipeg. We’ve been here all winter with no plans to leave. Valour FC clearly wants the next step to unfold here in Winnipeg, and then for Fordyce to remain beyond that. He earned his UEFA A coaching diploma last year and he already has the ear of the club’s coaching staff, who are also helping him ready for that switch after his playing days. "We’ve had some discussions about that," he said. "Rob (Gale) and Damo (Rocke) talked about starting to transition me into the coaching side of the game, which is normal at my age. "Whatever the role is I told Rob and Damo they’ve got me 100 per cent. I’ll give it 100 per cent on the field and if there’s some coaching involved I’ll give that 100 per cent as well. "A big factor in wanted to come back is how we had so many guys who wanted to return. That was one of the things I wanted to help try and bring to the team – a family atmosphere where we’re like brothers. We stick up for each other when we’re in the battle, but when we’re in the dressing room or not competing we’re giving each other stick, as brothers do. We can fight and argue with each other, but we know we’ve got each other’s back. "That’s the atmosphere we did get at the Island Games," he added. "You could see it… we shared the same hotel with all the other teams and you could see some teams were not together." Still, let’s be clear: while the transition to coaching is clearly in his future, a burning desire to keep playing remains aflame in Fordyce’s belly. "I’m 34 now and I’m not going to lie and say my body feels the same as it did when I was 24, because it doesn’t," he said. "But can I still be of value to the team and help win games? For me, I think it’s yes. "I might not be the fittest guy on the pitch any more, but can I help the fittest guy be better than he is? I believe so. Transitioning into coaching is part of my plans, but I still love playing the game." TIG-book-onsale-editorialad-1024x284

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