
Canada’s landmark night at the World Cup came with a sharp edge after they beat Qatar 6-0 at BC Place.
The result should have stood alone. Instead, it was shaped by the serious injury to Ismael Kone, who broke his leg after a challenge from Assim Madibo.
That challenge led to more tension between the benches, with Qatar reduced to nine men before Jesse Marsch and Julen Lopetegui exchanged words after full-time.
What Jesse Marsch said after Canada and Qatar clash

Marsch was asked about the incident after the match and gave a blunt answer. He said: “I’m not spending one second discussing it, it’s not worth any of our time to discuss.”
Lopetegui kept his own response short. He said: “It’s between him and me.” That made Marsch’s restraint more notable, because the Canada boss could easily have kept the row alive.
Instead, Marsch moved the focus back to the player who mattered most. Madibo had apologised to Kone in the Canada dressing room, and Marsch made clear he did not believe the tackle was intended to cause such damage.
Marsch was right not to let Qatar row define Canada win
Marsch still criticised the Qatar bench reaction to the red card, but his broader message was controlled. He did not turn a frightening injury into a personal feud.
That mattered because this was still a historic Canadian football night. Qatar were reduced to nine men, Jonathan David scored a hat-trick, and Canada recorded their first World Cup win.
The row with Lopetegui was not the story, and Marsch was right to say so. Kone’s welfare, Canada’s composure, and the scale of the result deserved the attention instead.
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