Derde helft WK 2026: Canada ondanks nederlaag door naar de volgende ronde

The final group stage match between Switzerland and Canada, held at Vancouver’s host stadium, carried high stakes: both sides had accumulated four points from their opening two fixtures, and a draw would have been enough for both to advance to the knockout round of the World Cup.

Many Canadian supporters hoped their side would push for a full three points after securing their first ever World Cup victory earlier in the tournament. For most pre-match observers, however, a low-tempo, cagey draw seemed the most likely outcome – and the first half of the match played out exactly according to that script. The opening 45 minutes delivered almost no attacking action of note, with both sides reluctant to commit players forward and leave themselves exposed at the back. The only clear-cut chance fell to Swiss striker Breel Embolo, who was caught by surprise by the unmarked scoring opportunity and failed to convert from close range.

Beyond the lack of goals, the first half was marked by frequent fouls and repeated theatrical falls designed to draw yellow cards from the referee. When the halftime whistle blew, the scoreboard still read 0-0, with neither side having made a breakthrough.

That all changed immediately after the break, when Canada grabbed the opening goal against all expectations. Rubén Vargas fired a low shot into the far corner off a precise layup from Johan Manzambi, putting the co-hosts ahead 1-0. Just 11 minutes later, the tide turned again: it was Manzambi who turned goal scorer, tapping home a cross from Embolo to put Switzerland in front 2-1.

The two-goal swing finally woke the Canadian side up, which launched a sustained wave of attacking pressure that pinned Switzerland back in its defensive half for the rest of the match. Rushing to find an equalizer in front of its home crowd, however, Canada grew careless in its final passes and finishing. With 15 minutes remaining, substitute Promise David pulled one back for Canada. Getting on the end of a cross from Nathan Saliba, David nudged the ball past Swiss goalkeeper Gregor Kobel to cut the deficit to 2-1.

In the closing minutes, Canada had multiple golden opportunities to salvage a draw and claim the top spot in the group. In the final seconds of stoppage time, striker Alphonso Johnston got a free header on goal that would have leveled the score, but his attempt lacked the power to beat Kobel. When the final whistle blew, Switzerland held on to the 2-1 win, finishing the group stage top of the table and booking its place in the knockout round. Canada’s late comeback fell just short, leaving the co-hosts to wait to confirm its own knockout stage qualification.