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Canada has waited decades to celebrate the Canadian men’s national team’s first win at a World Cup.
The CanMNT have only qualified for three World Cups (1986, 2022, ’26) and earned their first-ever point by drawing with Bosnia-Herzegovina on June 12. It became clear early in their match against Qatar in Vancouver that Thursday would be the long-awaited day to erupt over a CanMNT World Cup win.
Canada held a dominant 3-0 lead when midfielder Ismaël Koné suffered a gruesome leg injury in the 57th minute. After much consternation and justified outrage by Canadian side, Qatar’s Assim Madibo, who was distraught by the harm he’d caused, was shown a red card.
Koné was stretchered off to applause, and by the looks of his leg, we will sadly not see him again on the pitch in this World Cup. Sports can be so cruel.
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – JUNE 18: Ismael Kone #8 of Canada waves to crowd as he is stretched off after being fouled by Assim Madibo #23 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. (Photo by Fran Santiago/Getty Images)
Seven match minutes later, Canada’s Nathan Saliba, who had come into the match to replace Koné , knocked in the team’s fourth goal of the match and emotionally held up Koné’s No. 8 jersey afterward.
The CanMNT won 6-0 when all said and done, and their home fans did erupt in cheers that had been suppressed for decades. But the otherwise momentous evening was tinged with heartbreak for Koné.
Koné, 24, was born in Ivory Coast but moved to Canada as a young boy and grew up in Montreal. He developed in the CF Montreal academy and made his first-team debut for the MLS club in February 2022. He currently plays his club football for Sassuolo in Serie A. This was his second World Cup appearance for the CanMNT, debuting in Qatar in 2022.
The Canadians will carry heavy hearts into their match with Switzerland on June 24 to wrap up group stage play, but they’ll assuredly be galvanized and dedicate the remainder of their 2026 World Cup run — already the best in the team’s history — to Koné.
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The CanMNT have only qualified for three World Cups (1986, 2022, ’26) and earned their first-ever point by drawing with Bosnia-Herzegovina on June 12. It became clear early in their match against Qatar in Vancouver that Thursday would be the long-awaited day to erupt over a CanMNT World Cup win.
Canada held a dominant 3-0 lead when midfielder Ismaël Koné suffered a gruesome leg injury in the 57th minute. After much consternation and justified outrage by Canadian side, Qatar’s Assim Madibo, who was distraught by the harm he’d caused, was shown a red card.
Koné was stretchered off to applause, and by the looks of his leg, we will sadly not see him again on the pitch in this World Cup. Sports can be so cruel.
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VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – JUNE 18: Ismael Kone #8 of Canada waves to crowd as he is stretched off after being fouled by Assim Madibo #23 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. (Photo by Fran Santiago/Getty Images)
Seven match minutes later, Canada’s Nathan Saliba, who had come into the match to replace Koné , knocked in the team’s fourth goal of the match and emotionally held up Koné’s No. 8 jersey afterward.
Nathan Saliba pays tribute to teammate Ismaël Koné after scoring a free kick.
Koné was carted off earlier in the game due to an injury.pic.twitter.com/CmOCrjAEvX
— Major League Soccer (@MLS) June 18, 2026
The CanMNT won 6-0 when all said and done, and their home fans did erupt in cheers that had been suppressed for decades. But the otherwise momentous evening was tinged with heartbreak for Koné.
Jonathan David was visibly emotional after teammate Ismaël Koné exited the match due to an apparent injury pic.twitter.com/yOWLmP3INQ
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 18, 2026
Koné, 24, was born in Ivory Coast but moved to Canada as a young boy and grew up in Montreal. He developed in the CF Montreal academy and made his first-team debut for the MLS club in February 2022. He currently plays his club football for Sassuolo in Serie A. This was his second World Cup appearance for the CanMNT, debuting in Qatar in 2022.
The Canadians will carry heavy hearts into their match with Switzerland on June 24 to wrap up group stage play, but they’ll assuredly be galvanized and dedicate the remainder of their 2026 World Cup run — already the best in the team’s history — to Koné.
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