Categories: FIFA World Cup

He’s Back: What Alphonso Davies’ Return Means for Canada Today

For three weeks, the most talked-about hamstring in Canadian sports history has kept the country in a state of anxious suspense. Today, the wait is finally over. Alphonso Davies — Canada’s captain, its most decorated player, and arguably the fastest man to ever lace up for Les Rouges — is set to make his World Cup 2026 debut when Canada faces South Africa at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California this afternoon at 3 p.m. ET.

The journey to get here has been anything but simple.

A Season of Setbacks

The injury timeline reads like a medical file no one would wish on their worst enemy. Davies last played for Canada in March 2025, when he suffered a ligament injury during Nations League play against the United States. What followed was a cascade: he was sidelined from February 22 to March 9 with a muscle fibre tear, then from March 11 to April 2 with a right hamstring injury. Just as he was finding his footing again at club level, he injured his left hamstring during Bayern Munich’s Champions League semifinal second leg against Paris Saint-Germain on May 6.

Three separate injury stints in the span of four months. For a player of Davies’ explosive style — built entirely around pace and dynamic movement down the left flank — each setback carried real risk of making things worse. The last time Canada arguably rushed Davies onto the field when he might not have been fully ready, in early 2025, he blew his ACL. No one was going to make that mistake twice.

Three Games Watching From the Sidelines

The 25-year-old has not played since suffering the hamstring issue in the second leg of Bayern Munich’s Champions League semifinal, forcing him to watch Canada’s opening two games at World Cup 2026 from the sidelines. He did not dress for the 1-1 draw against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto. He sat on the bench — watching, not playing — as his teammates dismantled Qatar 6-0 in Vancouver, the city where he made his professional debut as a 15-year-old with the Whitecaps. And then came the Switzerland match, where coach Jesse Marsch pulled off one of the craftier maneuvers of this World Cup: Marsch confirmed after the game that he was using Davies as a decoy, placing him on the bench while knowing full well he would not play, purely to force Switzerland to dedicate preparation time to containing him. “I listened to their news conference and they had three questions about Alphonso Davies,” Marsch said, “so they at least had to prepare for that.”

Even injured and in street clothes, Davies was altering the opposition’s game plan. That is the level of player Canada is dealing with.

What He Brings to This Match

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

At his best, Davies is one of the five best left-backs on the planet. His pace in behind opposition defensive lines is genuinely unmanageable at the international level. His crossing, his ability to combine with Jonathan David in the final third, and his capacity to simply drag defenders out of position creates space that Canada’s attackers — David, Tajon Buchanan, Tani Oluwaseyi — know exactly how to exploit.

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

What it Means Beyond Soccer

There is a dimension to Davies’ return that goes beyond tactics and lineups. Born in a refugee camp in Ghana after his parents fled civil war in Liberia, Davies grew up in Edmonton and became a symbol of what Canadian soccer — and Canadian society — can produce. He has carried the weight of an entire nation’s World Cup dreams on his shoulders for years, through injuries, through uncertainty, through 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.

Jackson Miller

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Jackson Miller

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