Canada came away with a 1-1 draw against the Republic of Ireland at Saputo Stadium, and the match felt like a reminder that control alone does not finish games. Jesse Marsch’s team spent long stretches on the front foot, created more chances, and kept the visitors pinned back, only for one costly lapse to erase the advantage and leave the night feeling unfinished.
Canada Set the Tone Early
The opening stretch belonged to the hosts. Canada dictated possession, moved the ball with confidence, and forced Ireland into a deep defensive shape that made attacking look almost impossible for the visitors.
That pressure eventually paid off in the 23rd minute, and fittingly it came from a set piece rather than open play. Stephen Eustáquio delivered a corner into traffic, and the ball ended up deflecting off Irish center back Jake O’Brien and into the net. At that point, Canada had earned the lead it had been building toward.
The broader numbers backed up the eye test. Canada finished with a wide shot margin, controlled most of the ball, and repeatedly pushed Ireland into survival mode instead of allowing them to settle.
The Match Turned on One Reckless Moment
For all of that control, the game changed because of a single miscue. A high boot from Cyle Larin struck Jamie McGrath in the head, and the referee awarded Ireland a penalty that suddenly brought the visitors back into the match.
Troy Parrott stepped up, and Max Crépeau guessed correctly to get a hand to the shot. The stop did not fully save the sequence, though, because Chiedozie Ogbene reacted first to the rebound and finished the job.
That swing captured the central lesson of the evening: a team can dominate territory, possession, and volume, yet still pay for one moment of poor discipline.
What Marsch Wanted From This Test
The scoreline mattered, but the context mattered more. This was Canada’s final warm-up before the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and Marsch treated it as a meaningful rehearsal rather than a result to be judged in isolation.
- The team gained minutes against an opponent that can mimic the physical, compact style Canada may see in tournament play.
- Several players who needed full-match work got it, which was especially valuable this late in the build-up.
- The squad avoided fresh injuries, which was a major relief for a group that has already dealt with fitness issues.
- Canada received another chance to stress-test its attacking ideas before the opener in Toronto.
Marsch also said Alistair Johnston’s halftime removal was precautionary and not the sign of a setback. He viewed the player workload as a success, especially for defenders such as Derek Cornelius and Luc De Fougerolles, who needed a complete 90 minutes.
The Attack Still Needs Cleaner Finishing
Canada’s challenge is not creating pressure; it is turning that pressure into goals from live play. The team has leaned heavily on dead-ball situations, and that pattern showed again in this match.
Larin had opportunities but could not convert them, while Jonathan David spent more time connecting attacks than ending them. David led the team in chances created, but Canada did not get enough decisive quality in the final third to put the match away.
That issue did not leave Marsch discouraged. He said the finishing will come, and his tone suggested confidence that the attacking pieces are there even if the final touch is still developing.
Crépeau and Koné Left the Strongest Impressions
Crépeau entered the night as Canada’s confirmed tournament starter, and he handled the spotlight well in the stadium where his pro career began. His read on the penalty was correct, and he gave his side a real chance to escape with the lead intact.
Still, the most complete individual display came from Ismaël Koné. He played the full match, completed 70 of 76 passes, and repeatedly won possession in the middle of the field. More than the raw numbers, he gave Canada a constant presence between the lines and around loose balls.
Marsch was especially pleased with Koné because the midfielder had disappointed him in the previous outing against Uzbekistan. Against Ireland, Koné looked far more aggressive and far more connected to the tempo of the game.
- He completed nearly all of his passing work.
- He progressed the ball into dangerous areas.
- He won duels with consistency.
- He showed the kind of energy Marsch wants in a central midfielder.
Attention Now Moves to Toronto
Canada’s preparation phase is finished, and the focus now shifts to the tournament itself. The team heads to Toronto to continue building toward its World Cup opener against Bosnia and Herzegovina on June 12 at BMO Stadium.
For Marsch, the friendly schedule served its purpose. He got a useful look at his group, saw encouraging performances from key players, and escaped without major new health concerns. The next stage is less about experimentation and more about execution, because the World Cup will reward precision far more than promise.





