
Alphonso Davies will miss Canada’s World Cup opener against Bosnia and Herzegovina, leaving Jesse Marsch without his captain for a historic home-stage test.
Canada heads into Friday’s match with a genuine chance to secure the first World Cup win in the team’s history, a milestone that makes this opener more than just the start of a new campaign.
But there’s a sharper edge to the occasion now. Canada will have to chase that breakthrough without the player who raises the team’s ceiling more than anyone else.

Alphonso Davies injury update puts Canada on alert
As USA TODAY reported, Davies is still recovering from a hamstring issue and won’t be available to face Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The injury occurred during Bayern Munich’s spring run and has lingered into his time with the national team. That timing is significant because hamstring recoveries aren’t just about being pain-free. For a player like Davies, it’s about proving he can sprint, decelerate, turn, and repeat high-intensity movements without risking another setback.
Marsch hasn’t suggested this is a tournament-ending issue. In fact, his update sounded more positive than worrying after Davies underwent an MRI.
“He’s healing incredibly well, almost completely,” Marsch said. “We’re getting ready to ramp things up.”
That’s the key distinction. Davies isn’t available for June 12, but Canada isn’t treating him like a player whose tournament is over.
Jesse Marsch leaves door open for Alphonso Davies return
The most important part of Marsch’s message is that Canada is managing the captain, not replacing him permanently.
“We’re really hopeful over the next days and week that we can accelerate things and he can contribute soon,” Marsch said.
That points toward the later group games as the more realistic target. Canada faces Qatar on June 18 and Switzerland on June 24, giving Davies more recovery time if his body keeps responding well.
It also explains why Canada is being careful. Hamstring injuries can look close to healed before a player is actually safe at full match speed. For an explosive full-back and winger, the final stage is often the most delicate.
Stephen Eustáquio will captain Canada in Davies’ absence, and his response was simple rather than dramatic.
“I’m wishing him a speedy recovery,” Eustáquio said.
Canada still has enough structure, athleticism, and home energy to beat Bosnia and Herzegovina. But without Davies, the margin gets thinner. Marsch’s team can survive one game without him. The bigger question is whether Canada gets its captain back before the group starts to tighten.
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