Canada rout nine-man Qatar but Koné injury sours first-ever World Cup win

The Guardian Football ·

Canada rout nine-man Qatar but Koné injury sours first-ever World Cup win

At full strength, Canada can go toe-to-toe with any opponent in the Americas. After steady climbs up the Concacaf charts and a credible run to the 2024 Copa América semi-final, all hope was that a …

At full strength, Canada can go toe-to-toe with any opponent in the Americas. After steady climbs up the Concacaf charts and a credible run to the 2024 Copa América semi-final, all hope was that a talented squad could find their stride at a home World Cup . That belief came to life on Thursday, as Jesse Marsch’s side played a dominant 6-0 win over Qatar before a crowd of 52,497 for the country’s first-ever victory at a men’s World Cup. Jonathan David’s hat-trick led the celebration of the program’s progress over the past decade, marred only by a horror leg injury suffered by midfielder Ismaël Koné in the second half. The Vancouver crowd opened with a rousing rendition of O Canada , forging the proverbial 12th-man atmosphere that Marsch ordered up entering the match. Their team wasted no time in keeping their block of possession in the Qatar half, eager to ratchet up the pressure from the very start. For the first eight minutes, save for one break, Canada kept Qatar pinned back. Only after an Akram Afif scamper and a drawn foul did the visitors find some semblance of balance. It would prove the proverbial calm before a storm settled into BC Place and rocked Julen Lopetegui’s side. In their World Cup opener, a 1-1 draw with Bosnia and Herzegovina , Canada sent in nine corners without posing much of a scoring threat. Drawing three in the opening half-hour on Thursday, one proved indirectly vital toward the breakthrough. …

Original source: The Guardian Football