2026-05-25

Canada's 26-man World Cup squad will be announced on Thursday, May 29, in a primetime special airing simultaneously on TSN and CTV at 7 p.m. ET. For supporters following the Canada World Cup 2026 schedule, Thursday marks the moment four years of anticipation become a named roster. Head coach Jesse Marsch has until May 31 to file the official list, and with the tournament opener at BMO Field in Toronto set for June 12, the selection conversation has narrowed to one unavoidable question: will Alphonso Davies be on it, and if so, in what condition?
Davies sustained a left hamstring muscle tear during Bayern Munich's Champions League semifinal second leg against Paris Saint-Germain, entering the pitch in the 67th minute and assisting Harry Kane's equaliser before leaving the match. Bayern confirmed he would be "out of action for several weeks." German outlet BILD, cited by Bolavip, reported the injury requires approximately six weeks of standard rehabilitation; sources within the Canadian programme estimate a 4-to-5-week recovery window, which would place Davies close to the opening match but with minimal training time before competitive play begins. Goal.com's squad analysis rates him "doubtful for the group stage," while noting clubs are obliged to release players for the World Cup within three weeks of the filing deadline.
For the road to 2026, this matters because depth at left back is the story beneath the headline: including Davies as a conditional selection is a calculated bet that a partially fit version of Canada's best player remains more valuable than a fully fit replacement. The 48-team format, with its three-team group scenarios, amplifies goal difference in a way the old 32-team bracket never did, and a leaky flank in one group match could determine Canada's bracket geography through the round of 32.
The federation moved quickly with an official statement: "We're behind you, Captain. We are in close contact with Alphonso and remain in touch with Bayern's medical team." Canada Soccer added that it would provide "specialised soft tissue expertise" to support his recovery, signalling that Davies is expected to travel to the Charlotte training camp regardless of his fitness on announcement day. Marsch, speaking at the reveal event announcement, offered a deliberate collective note: "We have a group of players incredibly excited and ready to represent Canada at a home World Cup." The framing covers his options, leaving room to name Davies while the medical picture develops.
Davies is not the only concern. Stephen Eustáquio (LAFC) recently returned from a hematoma and is expected to start as captain; Richie Laryea (Toronto FC) has not played since late April but is expected to be ready for the tournament; Moïse Bombito (Nice) is recovering from an October leg fracture; and Alistair Johnston has not played for Canada since June 2025 due to hamstring problems at Celtic. Pre-tournament friendlies on June 1 against Uzbekistan and June 5 against the Republic of Ireland, both ahead of the June 12 opener, will be the public fitness tests for all of them.
Against that backdrop, the bright spots are genuine. Cyle Larin has scored 9 goals in 21 Championship appearances on loan at Southampton, Tajon Buchanan contributed 7 goals and 1 assist across 32 La Liga matches at Villarreal, and Ismaël Koné has been described as Canada's most in-form player heading into the summer. For the Vancouver fixtures on June 18 and June 24, fans planning the trip can consult the full Vancouver World Cup 2026 guide covering BC Place logistics, transit, and match-day planning. All 104 tournament matches will be broadcast in Canada on TSN and CTV; streaming options for viewers outside major markets are detailed at the how-to-watch page.