Categories: World Cup Pulse

Davies Returns: How Alphonso’s Comeback Shapes Canada’s World Cup Hope

For three weeks, Canadian sports fans have lived in a state of anxious suspense, with the nation’s most talked-about hamstring injury dominating conversations. Today, that wait ends. Alphonso Davies, Canada’s captain and arguably the fastest player to ever wear the red jersey of Les Rouges, is set to make his 2026 World Cup debut as Canada faces South Africa at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. The match kicks off at 3 p.m. ET this afternoon.

The path to this moment was far from simple.

Injury Rollercoaster

Davies’ injury history reads like a medical record no athlete would wish on a rival. His last appearance for Canada occurred in March 2025, when he tore a ligament during a Concacaf Nations League match against the United States. What followed was a relentless series of setbacks: sidelined from February 22 to March 9 with a muscle fiber tear, then from March 11 to April 2 with a right hamstring injury. Even as he began regaining form at Bayern Munich, another injury struck—his left hamstring tore during the Champions League semifinal against Paris Saint-Germain on May 6.

Three separate injury episodes in just four months. For a player whose explosive style relies entirely on speed and dynamic left-flank movement, each setback carried serious risk of compounding the damage. The last time Canada pushed Davies onto the field before he was fully ready, in early 2025, he ruptured his ACL. No one would make that error twice.

Watching From the Bench

The 25-year-old has not played since his latest hamstring issue in the Champions League semifinal, forcing him to watch Canada’s opening two World Cup 2026 matches from the sidelines. He did not play in the 1-1 draw against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto. He sat on the bench—observing but not participating—as his teammates crushed Qatar 6-0 in Vancouver, the city where he made his professional debut at age 15 with the Whitecaps. Then came the Switzerland match, where coach Jesse Marsch executed a clever tactical ploy: Marsch confirmed after the game that he used Davies as a decoy, placing him on the bench while knowing he wouldn’t play, purely to force Switzerland to dedicate preparation time to containing him. “I heard their news conference and they had three questions about Alphonso Davies,” Marsch said. “So they at least had to prepare for that possibility.”

Even injured and in street clothes, Davies altered South Africa’s game plan. That is the level of threat Canada brings.

Impact on This Match

South Africa’s path to the knockout round relied almost entirely on defensive discipline and resilience. They conceded just one goal across three group matches. They are organized, hard-working, and dangerous on the counter. On paper, they are precisely the type of team a fully fit Alphonso Davies was built to unlock.

At his peak, Davies ranks among the top five left-backs globally. His speed behind opposition defensive lines is nearly unmanageable at the international level. His crossing ability, his knack for combining with Jonathan David in the final third, and his capacity to drag defenders out of position create space that Canada’s attackers—David, Tajon Buchanan, and Tani Oluwaseyi—know exactly how to exploit.

With Davies in the lineup, Canada’s left side transforms from functional to frightening.

Beyond the Game

Davies’ return carries a dimension beyond tactics and lineups. Born in a refugee camp in Ghana after his parents fled civil war in Liberia, he grew up in Edmonton and became a symbol of what Canadian soccer—and Canadian society—can produce. For years, he has carried the weight of an entire nation’s World Cup dreams on his shoulders, through injuries, uncertainty, and a group stage spent watching from the bench in his own country.

Today, on the biggest stage his sport offers, he finally gets his moment.

Canada faces South Africa at 3 p.m. ET. Watch on TSN and CTV. Davies is ready.

Jack Sullivan

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Jack Sullivan

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