A goalkeeper's son, Minnesota United's Dayne St. Clair found his love for that position himself and his own path to Major League Soccer — and maybe beyond.
His father, Fabian, played keeper growing up in Trinidad and Tobago. Fabian's son, born and raised in suburban Toronto, followed behind with a soccer ball at his feet, or often in his hands.
"Ever since I could walk, I played soccer," St. Clair said. "It definitely was my passion since I was a little kid. My dad, he never pushed me into it. It was something I developed on my own. Just watching soccer with him, the passion in me just grew. He saw it and helped guide me through it."
Left-footed, St. Clair played center back with his feet and goalkeeper with his hands in his youth. He chose the position at which he starred in Ontario secondary-school and development leagues and played when he won the 2018 NCAA title with current Loons teammate Chase Gasper at Maryland.
Selected seventh in the 2019 MLS SuperDraft, Minnesota United's goalkeeper of the future now at age 23 is its keeper of the present. He has become so after starter Tyler Miller needed season-ending hip surgery and coach Adrian Heath turned to St. Clair after the Loons went 0-3 in backup Greg Ranjitsingh's starts.
St. Clair is 2-2-1 with a clean sheet in five starts that allowed him to find what he calls "rhythm." He also is showing the qualities — height (6-3), reach, range, composure and the ability to advance the ball with his feet — that define the best modern-day keepers in MLS and worldwide.
"The kid has done well," Heath said. "His general keeping of the goal has been excellent."
St. Clair was shuttled to the Loons' Forward Madison USL affiliate last season and loaned to San Antonio for five months this season during the pandemic shutdown. He played five games there in July before he was recalled and found what Heath calls most important for young keepers.