Sports

Canada eye first WC knockout round

Switzerland's Ruben Vargas celebrates scoring their second goal with Ricardo Rodriguez. — Reuters
 
Switzerland's Ruben Vargas celebrates scoring their second goal with Ricardo Rodriguez. — Reuters

VANCOUVER: A Canada side rallying around the ⁠loss of injured midfielder Ismael Kone face Switzerland on Wednesday needing a win or draw to ​secure top spot in Group B ​and their first World Cup knockout-round appearance.
Canada will be without the services of Kone when they line up against three-time quarter-finalists Switzerland as the linchpin midfielder suffered a broken leg following a tackle by Qatar's Assim Madibo during the co-host's 6-0 thrashing of Qatar last week that gave them their first World Cup win.
It was a devastating blow ⁠given Kone is considered the heartbeat of Canada's midfield, and without his energy Jesse Marsch's ⁠men could be a less threatening pressing side going into their group-stage finale at Vancouver's BC Place.
'He means everything to this team,' Jonathan David, Canada's all-time leading scorer, said of his injured teammate. 'It was a difficult moment. But ‌we have to stay strong for him, and do ​it for him.'
Replacing the midfielder ⁠will be no easy feat for Marsch, who acknowledged the absence of ​Kone 'weakens us in the tournament', but ‌he will have no choice but to rely on someone from his bench to step up in the high-stakes clash against Switzerland.
'Everybody's a little ​shaken by the whole experience. Ismael is a big part of the heart of our team,' said Marsch. 'He's a bit of an X factor for us, and we'll miss him. But I think we have good players who can step in.'
Nathan Saliba replaced Kone in the game against Qatar and moments after entering the ‌game made it 4-0, celebrating by holding Kone's No. 8 jersey aloft before kissing it ​and making the sign of the cross.
There will also be questions about the fitness of Canada ​captain Alphonso ‌Davies, ⁠who has yet to play in this World Cup as he continues his recovery from a hamstring injury suffered in early May. Davies was available for Canada's win over Qatar but did not ​enter the match.
Canada and Switzerland have four points from two games, ⁠though the World ​Cup co-hosts are top of the Group B standings due to a superior goal difference.
Switzerland, who started the World Cup as Group B favourites, opened with a draw against Qatar followed by a 4-1 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina and now need one point against Canada to secure a ​round-of-32 place in the expanded tournament.
The Swiss have negotiated their way out of the ​group stage in five of their last six World Cup campaigns but have tasted defeat in the round of 16 on each of those occasions. — Reuters