Canada thrash 9-man Qatar for first-ever World Cup win

Jacob Shaffelburg #14 of Canada celebrates the team's fifth goal scored own goal by Mohamed Manai #26 of Qatar during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group B match between Canada and Qatar at BC Place Vancouver on June 18, 2026 in Vancouver, British Columbia. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 19 June 2026
Follow

Canada thrash 9-man Qatar for first-ever World Cup win

  • 6-0 victory in Vancouver catapults host nation to the top of Group B on 4 points, ahead of Switzerland on goal difference

DUBAI: It took them two matches on home soil to get the result, but for the thousands of home fans packed into the BC Place stadium in Vancouver, Canada’s first-ever win at the World Cup was well worth the wait.

A comprehensive 6-0 win over 9-man Qatar catapulted the host nation to the top of Group B on 4 points, ahead of Switzerland on goal difference. With just one point, Qatar are bottom of the group, trailing Bosnia and Herzegovina, who earlier lost 4-1 to the Swiss, on goal difference.

Qatar and Canada went into their second match of the tournament having each claimed their first-ever point at the finals with draws in their opening games. Both also knew a win would guarantee progress to the Round of of 32.

Qatar might have stunned the hosts with a goal in the opening seconds of the match but Edmilson Junior failed to connect properly with Homam Ahmed’s probing cross from the left. It would be the last moment of relative positivity Qatar would experience all night.

Having settled down following that early scare, Canada, with a noisy 52,000-strong crowd urging them on, began to exert a semblance of control on the match. After 15 minutes they had enjoyed 69 percent of the possession. Two minutes later, they took the lead.

Alistair Johnston’s cross from the right was met firmly by Jonathan David, whose shot was saved by Mahmoud Abunada in the Qatar goal but Cyle Larin pounced on the rebound to give the home team the lead. It was a good omen, as Canada had never lost a match in which the No. 9 scored.

Things got worse for Qatar on 29 minutes when a deflected shot by Tajon Buchanan found its way to David, who finished with a fine volley to Abunada’s left. This marked another first: Canada had never scored more than one goal in a World Cup game before.

The match was all but over as a contest two minutes later when Ahmed’s foul on Buchanan was at first deemed to warrant a penalty, but then downgraded to an infringement outside the box. Nevertheless, Ahmed was shown red and Qatar faced playing an hour with 10 men.

Any hopes of a first Arab win at the 2026 World Cup were well and truly buried deep into first-half stoppage time, when Canada claimed their third of the night, with Johnston once again playing a pivotal role from the right. His hanging cross was met with a firm header from Larin and Abunada pulled off a brilliant save, only for the ball to break to David, who bundled it home for his second of the match.

For Qatar coach Julen Lopetegui, the second half was an exercise in damage limitation, though it was Canada who suffered the first major setback after the break.

A foul on 51 minutes by Assim Madibo resulted in a serious injury to Ismael Kone, prompting the Canadian substitutes to surround their stricken teammate as tempers boiled over on both sides. When order was restored, Madibo had received Qatar’s second red of the evening.

Kone’s replacement, Nathan Saliba, made it 4-0 in the 64th minute with the first goal from a direct free kick at the 2026 finals. Canada had now scored more goals in one match than in the entirety of their previous tournament history. Their fifth came on 75 minutes from an own goal by Mohammed Al-Manal, though the goal was initially credited to substitute Jacob Shaffelburg, whose shot was deflected into the net.

In the second minute of stoppage time, David completed his hat-trick from close range to give Canada a dream 6-goal victory in front of their fans. For Qatar, the nightmare was complete.

In the final Group B matches, Canada will take on Switzerland in Vancouver while Qatar face Bosnia and Herzegovina in Seattle on Wednesday, June 24.