Canada's swashbuckling World Cup adventure ends, legacy just beginning
July 5 : Canada's record-breaking World Cup run came to an end with a 3-0 last-16 defeat by Morocco on Saturday, but the overriding feeling was not disappointment so much as optimism about what this young side has achieved for the sport in Canada.
For a team forced to navigate the tournament without talisman Alphonso Davies, Canada still smashed through barrier after barrier.
Playing coach Jesse Marsch's swashbuckling brand of football — pressing high, attacking relentlessly and refusing to sit back against more fancied opponents — they claimed the nation's first World Cup point, first World Cup victory and first knockout-stage win.
That fearless approach, coupled with a resilience forged despite injuries and adversity, helped them push deeper into the tournament than any Canada men's side before them.
And while their eventual exit denied them a place among the world's final eight, it did little to diminish the impression they left on supporters at home and abroad, having captured the imagination of a nation along the way.
While Canada produced one of the most dominant halves in their history against Morocco with 13 touches in the opposition's box to one for the North Africans, they were left to rue chances missed.
Midfielder Stephen Eustaquio could not help but wonder whether the outcome might have been different had Davies been fit to play.
'WE MISSED OUR BEST PLAYER'
"If there's someone that can face Hakimi, it's Phonzie," he said of Morocco captain Achraf Hakimi, who set up the North Africans' first goal. "We missed our best player."
Their depth was tested throughout the tournament. Davies was limited to a 15-minute cameo off the bench in the round-of-32 victory over South Africa, his only appearance of the competition.
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