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Canada's players react at the end of the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

‘A lot to be proud of’: Canada ousted from World Cup with 3-0 loss to Morocco

Jul 4, 2026 | 1:08 PM

HOUSTON — A mix of disappointment and pride lingered in the moments after Canada was ousted from the FIFA World Cup on Saturday.

The team made history again and again throughout the tournament before falling to Morocco 3-0 in the round of 16.

“We have a lot to be proud of, first and foremost,” said veteran defender Richie Laryea. “But I think right now the feeling is obviously disappointment, because we left a lot on the table there.”

The result ends a historic run in which the national squad nabbed its first point and first win in the men’s tournament and earned a spot in the knockout round for the first time.

Right back Alistair Johnston said he hopes it’s a run that made people across the country proud.

“I just hope … that they saw a Canadian team that was not afraid of anyone, that played how I think we always want all of our Canadian teams to play — it doesn’t matter the sport,” he said.

“We all wore our heart on our sleeve, we left it all out there, we went toe to toe with any challenge that was thrown at us, and we played with that Canadian honesty and just resilience that I think really kind of resonates with the people back home.”

The Moroccans will meet the winner of a round-of-16 tilt between Paraguay and France in a quarterfinal matchup in Boston on July 9.

Morocco was the higher-ranked nation, entering the tournament at No. 7 in FIFA’s official standings while Canada sat at No. 30.

Canada controlled the game early and registered four chances in the first half, but couldn’t get a shot past Yassine Bounou, Morocco’s Montreal-born keeper.

“Especially going up against a great team like Morocco, I feel in the first half we could have put that game in a really good place for us for the whole 90 minutes,” Laryea said. “But that’s football.”

The first opportunity came just five minutes in when vice-captain Stephen Eustaquio sent a corner swinging in toward the Morocco goal, only to see Bounou, known as Bono, punch the ball away.

The keeper came up big again five minutes later, stopping a strike from Tani Oluwaseyi just above the six-yard box.

“We knew when you’re playing against a team of this quality that it’s not going to be easy, and even if you play your best, you’re going to need a little bit of luck,” Johnston said. “And unfortunately the ball just didn’t go in the back of the net for us.”

Morocco’s lone chance of the first half came in the 27th minute when midfielder Soufiane Rahimi launched a shot from distance and Canada’s Maxime Crépeau dove to stop the rolling shot.

The Atlas Lions held 56 per cent possession across the first half, but it was Les Rouges who had the chances. Canada outshot Morocco 4-1 and held a 2-1 edge in on-target shots.

Morocco came into the second half with renewed hunger and took the lead in the 50th minute after Luc de Fougerolles was booked for a bad tackle.

Achraf Hakimi lined up for the free kick at the side of the penalty area and sent the ball to Azzedine Ounahi, stationed at the top. The midfielder got a right-footed shot off, sailing the ball through traffic and into the net to give Morocco a 1-0 advantage.

The goal changed the way both sides played, said Canada’s head coach Jesse Marsch.

“Then they can sit back a little bit more, we have to find ways to push a little bit, and then it winds up being two, and then a third at the end,” he said. “But the way we pushed, the way we were in the match, the quality we showed, the overall impact in the match, we were better. We were better than the No. 7 team in the world.”

Canada had a prime opportunity to equalize in the 77th minute with a free kick from just above the area, but Jonathan David sent his shot well over Morocco’s net.

A giveaway in Moroccan territory turned deadly for the Canadians in the 82nd minute.

Striker Brahim Diaz carried the ball up the field, then sliced it inside the area to Ounahi, who wasted no time blasting a shot off to give the Atlas Lions a 2-0 lead.

Rahimi came within inches of making it 3-0 three minutes later, but his unimpeded shot went off the crossbar.

He instead rolled a low shot in past Crépeau in the eighth minute of stoppage time to seal the score.

“We have a physical team, we have a fast and athletic team, and we’re always going to try to impose our will on opponents,” Marsch said. “And I thought Morocco had a real tough time dealing with our pressing schemes, dealing with our physicality, and then dealing with our football that we played until the first goal.

“And then the goal changed the game a little bit. We had to push a little bit more, the game then opened up, and then we were a little bit more susceptible on the counter a few times.”

Marsch made several second-half substitutions in an apparent bid to juice the offence, including bringing Cyle Larin in for Oluwaseyi in the 63rd minute, and replacing Ali Ahmed with Promise David in the 79th.

He did not bring on Canada captain Alphonso Davies, who saw action in just one game across the tournament, coming on in the 74th minute of the country’s victory over South Africa.

Davies picked up a hamstring injury playing in a Champions League semifinal for Bayern Munich in early May.

The ailment flared up in training earlier this week, Marsch said, and Davies decided before the game that he wasn’t healthy enough to play.

“He wanted to play so bad, he went and tried to get going himself at halftime,” the coach said. “He said it just wasn’t right, so we didn’t want to risk it. And I think it was the right decision.”

After the game, Marsch told his players he was proud of them and challenged them to look toward the future.

The way they played on Saturday is how they can play against any team, he said.

“The challenge is, can we hold that standard for 90 minutes?” he said. “Can we make sure that we continue to build the depth of what we’re doing with the team? Can we build that into our youth national teams? Can we build a real Canadian DNA into the kind of football we want to play, into the kind of infrastructure we want to have, into the kind of academies, and the way we teach the game?

“But in terms of the commitment of the group and making the country proud and making the program proud, they couldn’t have done more.”

Canada showed throughout the tournament — and with its performance on Saturday — that it is climbing toward the top of global soccer’s elite, said Eustaquio.

“The fact that we were able to be one of the 16 best teams of this World Cup, I think, is amazing for the country,” he said. “It’s amazing for this team, but we have to start from there. We have to start from there, realizing that the gap isn’t that big, that we have to fight.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 4, 2026.

Gemma Karstens-Smith, The Canadian Press