Canada delivered a historic 2:0 victory over USA in Concacaf Nations League after Alphonso Davies and Lucas Cavallini scored second-half goals at BMO Field in Toronto. The victory kept Canada in first place in Group A of Concacaf Nations League A and earned Canada 18 points on the FIFA rankings, moving them into sixth place amongst Concacaf nations on the FIFA/Coca-Cola World Rankings.
It was Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team’s first international A victory over USA since 1985 and their first competitive victory in any men’s competition since a 2:0 win at the 2012 Concacaf Men’s Olympic Qualifiers. For teenager Davies, it was his second game winner in back-to-back Concacaf Nations League matches; for Cavallini, it was his record-tying eighth goal of the 2019 international season.
“It was just an electric atmosphere tonight,” said John Herdman, Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team Head Coach. “There has been that belief right from the onset.”
Canada Soccer’s Men’s National Team are unbeaten in competitive football at BMO Field with nine wins and four draws in 13 matches. Including friendly matches, Canada have 11 wins, seven draws and just one loss, with 16 matches unbeaten since 2011.
Davies scored the opener in the 63rd minute after a wonderful pass from the captain captain Scott Arfield. Debutant Liam Fraser started the play after he collected a US clearance and played it forward to Arfield. Cavallini then made it 2-0 in the 91st minute after Jonathan Osorio intercepted a pass and chipped it forward.
Goalkeeper Milan Borjan and the backline posted the clean sheet, Canada’s third consecutive shutout victory in Concacaf Nations League. For Borjan, it was his 21st career clean sheet, just one back of Canada’s all-time record.
Since 2018, Canada have won nine of 11 international “A” matches with John Herdman in charge. Canada’s fourth and final Concacaf Nations League match is scheduled for 15 November against USA at the Exploria Stadium in Orlando, Florida.
Canada’s starting XI featured Milan Borjan in goal, Richie Laryea at right back, Steven Vitória and Derek Cornelius at centre back, Kamal Miller at left back, and Samuel Piette, Mark-Anthony Kaye, Scott Arfield, Jonathan Osorio, Jonathan David and Alphonso Davies from the midfield up through to the attack.
CONCACAF CHAMPIONS
Canada are two-time Concacaf champions, having won the Concacaf Championship in 1985 and the Concacaf Gold Cup in 2000. In winning the 1985 Concacaf Championship, Canada qualified for the 1986 FIFA World Cup Mexico™; in winning the 2000 Concacaf Gold Cup, Canada qualified for the FIFA Confederations Cup Korea/Japan 2001.
Canada Soccer's Men's National Youth Teams, meanwhile, have won two Concacaf titles: both the 1986 and 1996 Concacaf Men's Youth Championships. Canada have qualified for eight editions of the FIFA U-20 World Cup and seven editions of the FIFA U-17 World Cup, including the upcoming edition at Brazil 2019. Canada will open the FIFA U-17 World Cup Brazil 2019 against the host on 26 October followed by additional group matches against Angola on 29 October and New Zealand on 1 November. The FIFA U-17 World Cup Brazil 2019 runs 26 October to 17 November.
CONCACAF NATIONS LEAGUE
At stake in 2019-20 Concacaf Nations League is a spot in the Concacaf Hex for FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™ Qualifiers. Canada will need to win their group and advance to the final four in Concacaf Nations League in order to narrow the mathematical gap behind Concacaf’s top-six nations in the FIFA/Coca-Cola World Rankings. After the June 2020 rankings, 35 Concacaf nations will be divided onto two pathways to Qatar 2022: the top-six nations in the Concacaf Hex (from which three nations will qualify for Qatar 2022) and the other 29 nations in series of group stage and knockout phase matches (from which one nation will face the fourth-place finisher from the Hex after which that winner will represent Concacaf in a FIFA intercontinental playoff for a spot at Qatar 2022).
After back-to-back Concacaf Nations League wins over Cuba in September combined with a USA win over Cuba in October, Canada became the first nation to qualify for the 2021 Concacaf Gold Cup. With either a first- or second-place finish in Group A guaranteed, Canada have also secured their spot in League A of the next edition of Concacaf Nations League while the third-place finisher will be relegated to League B.