While football culture has long been a passion of mine, it has been largely viewed from afar and has a somewhat distant and exotic feeling associated with it.
Sure, I wake up early every weekend to watch Spurs matches, often go to pubs to meet fellow local supporters, purchase kits and scarves from the official team store, play FIFA, listen to a half dozen podcasts and engage in many online communities to discuss the latest stories. However, perhaps the greatest expression of fandom, that of partaking in match day rituals and attending matches in person, has been largely elusive.
I have had the good fortune to travel throughout Europe to watch football, and lived in Toronto for a half dozen years and attended Toronto FC matches regularly. Since moving to Victoria nearly four years ago, those experiences seemed fleeting, of a bygone period of my life, and only to be relived as a tourist or transient.
On Sunday, 28 April, the intoxicating allure of attending a football match, of experiencing and participating in the supporter culture and of being fully invested in the team on the pitch finally came to Victoria.
Pacific FC played their first match in the new Canadian Premier League in front of 5,500 supporters at the newly fitted Westhills Stadium in Langford, and it was a full on experience that one would have expected elsewhere. On a day where much of the rest of the country was digging itself out of a snowstorm, or trying to deal with ongoing floodwaters, Pacific FC played their inaugural match on a sun drenched pitch against Hfx Wanderers, a team based 4,375 km away.

Upon descending on the stadium, supporters from the Lakeside Buoys and local Brazilian supporter group, TOP, assembled in the makeshift parking lot and made a boisterous procession to the stadium, armed with drums, bagpipes, colourful flags and an army of supporters with song sheets. The swelling masses outside the stadium took notice, that this was the atmosphere to expect once inside the ground.
The stadium itself, which has been used by Rugby Canada in recent years, appeared rather unfinished, and featured a hodgepodge of different sections, all in different states of completion and purple paint cover. The main stand (the south end) featured completed purple plastic seats, emblazoned with white “PFC” text. The book ends of those stands remained incomplete, but consisted of a wooden frame and benches, and even in this state, gave the stadium a distinct West coast, forest vibe. The supporters’ end, in the stadium’s east end, also featured an incomplete wooden bleacher, while the opposite west end (dubbed the Family Zone) also featured a makeshift stand. The north area consisted of a beer garden, a VIP terrace and a congregation of food trucks. For those sitting in any of the standings, the stadium’s physical surrounds were stunning, featuring serene mountain, hill and lake views. This felt like football in British Columbia’s natural habitat. To viewers on television, surely the appearance of the stadium gave hints of a lower league ground in England. Yet, what the stadium lacked in terms of completion, it lent itself some charm, some unique character and helped enhance the atmosphere that was building inside of it.
Prior to the match, the supporters demonstrated their colourful tifos, and set off purple flares (despite the club stating before the match that these devices would not be permitted). CPL Commissioner David Clanachan was on hand at the proceedings, and did not appear to mind, and in fact seemed quite pleased by what was transpiring.
The carnival atmosphere of the pregame continued to build, and Pacific FC seemed to feed off the energy of their new home. Sitting in the main stands, the fervour in which winger Ben Fisk and fullback Kadin Chung pressed was remarkable. They hounded their opponents with vim and vigour and prevented Hfx from building up. Pacific FC dominated the early possesion.
The supporters end of the stadium continued to heave, and achieved full climax in the 23rd minute when a Noah Verhoeven corner kick met the head of Pacific FC defender Hendrik Starostzik and flew into the HFX Wanderers goal. The entire team huddled around the German defender, celebrated with an extra gusto, and gave outsiders an immediate sense of what this goal had meant. Pacific FC had its first goal in club history, and the team was off to a flying start.

Hendrik Starostzik fires up the crowd after Pacific FC’s first goal
Hfx Wanderers thought they scored a minute later off a corner themselves, however the offside flag ruled it out.
The next flash point took place in the 73rd minute when Pacific FC centreback Lukas MacNaughton took a second yellow card, on a heavy challenge on a streaking Halifax forward. MacNaughton was sent off, and for the rest of the match, Pacific were forced to defend carefully. There was one free kick in the 76th minute fired off the crossbar, and flubbed over the goal by Wanderers’ forward Gutierrez. The rest of the afternoon belonged to Mark Village who made two key stops, and kept the first clean sheet in league history.
In the end, Pacific walked away with a 1-0 victory, captured the first victory in CPL history and went straight to the top of the league table. The team on the pitch appeared so moved by the noise that was generated, that they went to each stand applauding the fans before rollicking with the supporter section to close off the afternoon.
For those in attendance, it was a truly memorable sporting experience, and gave us a taste of what football culture is, and made us dream of what is possible for the team, the game and for all of us going forward.
Jaideep Kanungo




