
Canada the team to beat at Gold Cup
Opinion
Get out your calendar, flip to July and circle Sunday the 6th. Early that evening, barring an upset, the Canadian men's soccer team will play its first Gold Cup Final since 2000, the last time they won the biennial competition.
In the quarter century since, Mexico and the United States have dominated the Gold Cup, emblematic of soccer supremacy in North and Central America and the Caribbean. They've lifted the trophy six times each and gone head-to-head in five Finals. But their duopoly seems to be over, or at least on pause for the foreseeable future.
That's a good thing, generally speaking. For a tournament already held too often, its predictability has generated mostly performative enthusiasm.
Chris Young / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Canada's Jonathan David (right) plays a ball through to Tajon Buchanan (left) during the team's match against Ukraine at the inaugural Canadian Shield. The tournament gave Canada head coach Jesse Marsch ample opportunity to explore his squad depth before the Gold Cup.
Thankfully, that's no longer the case.
The complete collapse of the United States has left Mexico, the reigning Gold Cup and Nations League champions, as the region's sole superpower. The space once occupied by the Americans is now a vacuum, and the Canadian men are the contenders most likely to fill it.
Group stage
No one knows that better than manager Jesse Marsch, who told TSN last week that anything less than winning the 2025 Gold Cup would be a disappointment. Still, his team will have to navigate the group stage to get to that July 6 Final.
Canada's campaign will begin Tuesday in Vancouver, where they'll host Honduras (9:30 p.m., all matches on TSN and OneSoccer). Given midfielder Stephen Eustáquio's participation in the Club World Cup with Porto, Marsch will have to draw on the squad depth that was showcased in recent friendlies against Ukraine and Ivory Coast. Nathan Saliba is an option to play from the start, as are Ismaël Koné and Mathieu Choinière.
The schedule will then see Canada face Curaçao (June 21, 6:00 p.m.) and El Salvador (June 24, 9:00 p.m.) in Houston.
Always an interesting proposition, Curaçao are managed by former Feyenoord, PSV Eindhoven and Netherlands boss Dick Advocaat and include Juventus prospect Livano Comenencia, ex-Aston Villa right-back Leandro Bacuna and Cercle Brugge goalkeeper Eloy Room. They could well finish second in Group B.
Canada should top the standings comfortably, and there will be ample opportunity for strikers Jonathan David and Promise David (no relation) to fill the nets, while recovered winger Tajon Buchanan can use the three games to round into shape ahead of the knockouts.
In contention
First place in Group B would send the Canadian men to Minneapolis (something that may interest Winnipeggers) for a quarterfinal against the runners-up from Group C, most likely Panama or Jamaica. Panama beat the United States in their Nations League semifinal back in March and are also challenging to replace the Americans in the region's traditional pecking order. The more probable scenario has Canada facing Jamaica. The Reggae Boyz are unbeaten this calendar year, although they were humbled in a 1-1 draw with Saint Vincent and the Grenadines earlier this spring.
Pass that test and it's on to Santa Clara, where Canada could take on any of Costa Rica, the United States and Saudi Arabia. Quite ridiculously, the Saudis were invited to the Gold Cup by CONCACAF, presumably in return for new sponsorship deals with the kingdom's national oil company, airline and Public Investment Fund (PIF). The nonsense of their inclusion is only exacerbated by the fact that a good part of the Saudi squad has had to withdraw — the consequence of Al-Hilal's participation in the Club World Cup. In other words, it could well be Canada v. Costa Rica at Levi's Stadium.
Which brings us to Sunday, July 6, in Houston and a prospective Gold Cup Final against Mexico. Canada last faced El Tri at the semifinal stage of the Nations League, losing 2-0 despite outplaying their opponents for large stretches of the game. The three-man Mexican defensce of Edson Álvarez, Israel Reyes and Johan Vásquez stifled the Canadian attack, and the in-form Raúl Jiménez toyed with a back-line that at times looked naive. Marsch's players will need to have learned from that loss, although a fit and flying Buchanan will add an element they haven't had in nearly a year.
Who to watch
Former Real Madrid, Lyon and Sevilla forward Mariano Díaz will lead the line for Dominican Republic. Los Quisqueyanos aren't expected to rip up trees at the Gold Cup, but a few goals from the 31-year-old could tilt the goal-difference tie-breaker in Group A.
Late-blooming forward Patrick Agyemang scored the lone goal for the United States in the Nations League third-place game against Canada. He's scored six goals for Charlotte FC of MLS this season and could well lead the line for the Americans at the Gold Cup.
Jiménez, Álvarez and AC Milan's Santi Gimenez might be Mexico's best-known Europe-based players, but creative winger Alexis Vega was integral to Liga MX club Toluca's title-winning season and provides El Tri with a weapon their opponents might not be expecting.
Panama are very good at wearing teams down, and key to that approach is Adalberto Carrasquilla. The Pumas midfielder can break up attacks, create them and do almost everything else. He was named Best Player at the last Gold Cup.
Talking points
Winnipeg Jets Game Days
On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop.
— Could the United States be back on the managerial market next month? Current boss Mauricio Pochettino has overseen four successive defeats — most recently Tuesday's 4-0 drubbing by Switzerland — and failure to emerge from Group D would pile on the pressure ahead of a World Cup the U.S. will largely host.
— Mexico and Dominican Republic will open the 2025 Gold Cup at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles County (Saturday, 9:15 p.m.). Given that the city proper has become ground zero in the United States' experiment with fascism, this Latin America-Caribbean contest suddenly has big political overtones. Could ICE even make a pre-match swoop?
— Credit where it's due. Canada Soccer gets a lot of criticism — 99 per cent of it self-inflicted — but ahead of the Gold Cup they organized the Canadian Shield friendly tournament involving Ukraine, Ivory Coast and New Zealand. It was a superb use of the international break and gave Marsch ample opportunity to explore his squad depth. If Canada do, in fact, progress to the July 6 Final, well-structured preparation will have a lot to do with it.
jerradpeters@gmail.com
@jerradpeters.bsky.social
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Pierce drawing from his time with the Bombers
VANCOUVER — The West Coast looks good on Buck Pierce. Sure, the B.C. Lions' head coach is a little busier these days than the last time pro football brought him here as a player, but he's often reminded why this was the perfect place to land his first gig as a bench boss. 'It's good. It's kind of full circle, right? I grew up on the West Coast, so being back out here, I consistently have family and friends coming up to games. So, there's some familiar parts about it,' Pierce, who was raised in Crescent City, Calif., said Friday in a chat with the Free Press. DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES B.C. Lions' Buck Pierce was handed his first loss as head coach of the club last week by his former team. 'There's some familiarity, absolutely, but being in Winnipeg for the time that I was there, I also got accustomed to that. Life moves a little faster out here,' he added while chuckling. 'It's a little busier. But there's obviously things that I've missed about living here, but there's things that I miss about Winnipeg, too.' The 43-year-old spent the first 10 years of his coaching career with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, two as a running backs coach and three working with quarterbacks, before taking offensive co-ordinator duties for four seasons. Hired by Bombers head coach Mike O'Shea at the beginning of his tenure in 2014, Pierce didn't waste many opportunities to learn from one of the all-time winningest coaches. That time together has already served him well, as Pierce often finds himself drawing back on his time with O'Shea. 'I mean, I learned a ton — football related, unfootball related. I really enjoyed our relationship, obviously, as co-workers, but just as two guys who wanted the same thing, and very like-minded. I ask myself all the time, 'What would we have done in that situation?'… and I have no issues ever picking up the phone and asking either.' The off-season was different than what he was used to, being onboarded then getting right into building a roster around his franchise quarterback Nathan Rourke. Pierce was quick to correct himself, saying he doesn't have an off-season now. His phone is always on because he needs to be reachable. He's also spent less time watching TV, something he was able to do as an offensive co-ordinator. Though the added responsibilities have life moving at Mach 50, Pierce said those are the most enjoyable parts of the job. 'You understand the role to an extent, but you don't know until you actually do it. It's more of the off-the-field stuff. It's being more involved with communications throughout the organization, on every level. And then the field stuff is the field stuff. It's about football and getting to know the guys, and all those types of things,' he said. 'Somebody asked me about what was one of my favourite things about it: it's just about being around the players and seeing how they react, and what they need. So being able to help it in that role of being a provider for them and making sure that their needs are being met, and if they're not, what can I do to help?' That was also his favourite part about being an offensive co-ordinator, but now that duty is extrapolated as the leader of an entire team. 'Being able to communicate with the entire roster, and getting to know guys, maybe a little bit more personally than what you would in different roles. But, as far as being a co-ordinator, to a head coach, I think you have more communication with the whole team, and I think that's excellent and that's what I enjoy.' That sentiment quickly resonated with his players. It didn't take long for Pierce to win over the locker room and get team members to buy into his message. 'He kind of just wears it on his sleeve. It's kind of who he is,' said quarterback Jeremiah Masoli, who will start for the Lions when they face the Bombers at BC Place on Saturday (6 p.m. CT). Masoli called Pierce 'an open book' who has instilled a 'no-nonsense' mentality around the club. It's made it easy to rally behind him. 'We talk about grit at this place and just having that heart, and he kind of walks around and exudes it just with his personality,' he added. 'It just kind of permeates through the locker room, and we all got to follow suit.' How Pierce has changed from his time as an offensive co-ordinator is a question perhaps only centre Michael Couture can answer. The nine-year vet spent seven of those working with Pierce in Winnipeg — two of which he was calling plays for — before heading west in 2023. 'For me? No,' said Couture. 'I'm getting the same guy, the same guy that I remember. He was one of the first people I got to talk to when I got into the building in Winnipeg, my rookie year in 2016, and to me, he's been the same guy ever since then. It's been familiar, which is nice.' Couture was asked by several teammates about their new head coach when he was hired in December. The centre did his best to talk him up, but it appears Pierce has done a fine job of selling himself. 'His attention to the details as a coach,' Couture said was his best quality as a head coach. 'I think that's something I've heard throughout the locker room that has been a big point so far this year, and I think guys respond really well to his message day in and day out. It's very consistent, and it's something that a lot of guys can relate to, being that he's been in our position before. So that's huge coming from the head guy.' Pierce has already won and lost as a head coach, as the Lions carry a 1-1 record into Week 3. His first tick in the loss column came against his former longtime club in disappointing fashion — a 34-20 decision in Winnipeg — but not all was bad on the trip. It was an emotional return to a familiar place for Pierce, who was honoured with a tribute video and a standing ovation from the sellout crowd inside Princess Auto Stadium. A defeat is never enjoyable, but that moment certainly took a bit of the sting out of the final result. 'I would not be telling the truth if I said there wasn't emotion going back into the building and being on the other side. We're humans, and they did a great tribute there during the game. I have such fond memories of the people there. It's the people there that I've been through it with and got relationships with,' Pierce said. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. 'So, yeah, it was good to be back.' He paused briefly and revealed a telling grin. 'But we're excited to see them again, too.' X: @jfreysam Joshua Frey-SamReporter Josh Frey-Sam reports on sports and business at the Free Press. Josh got his start at the paper in 2022, just weeks after graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College. He reports primarily on amateur teams and athletes in sports. Read more about Josh. Every piece of reporting Josh produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Calgary Stampeders off to a hot start host winless Ottawa Redlacks in CFL
CALGARY – Doing it for Reggie was a Calgary Stampeders theme head of Saturday's CFL game against the Ottawa Redblacks. Veteran receiver Reggie Begelton, in his eighth season as a Stampeder, had surgery this week following a leg injury that will keep a key cog in Calgary's offence out of the lineup for some time. 'Big piece, can't replace him, but you know he's been here, he's been talking to us all week, watching film with us, helping us, so you know we're looking to do it for Reggie this week because we know he wants to be out there with us,' said receiver Erik Brooks, who was promoted to starter because of Begelton's absence. Both Calgary (2-0) and Ottawa (0-2) enter Saturday's clash at McMahon Stadium with significant lineup changes. Ottawa's quarterbacking carousel stopped on Dustin Crum after Dru Brown (hip) was injured in the season-opener against Saskatchewan and Matt Schiltz was intercepted three times by Montreal in Week 2. Brown took a few reps in practice this week, but it was Crum doing first-team duty. The 26-year-old Crum has a 3-11 record in CFL starts. 'We know all three quarterbacks. Obviously Dru's not going to suit up,' Stampeders head coach and general manager Dave Dickenson said. 'Different styles. I'm sure (they) call a different game for all three guys. 'But we're just going to play our game, we're going to see what the weather's like, how we feel the best way to stop them is.' Continuous rain forecasted for southern Alberta could make for a soggy afternoon at McMahon. Quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. says that prospect isn't unsettling for him having played for the University of Oregon Ducks. 'The rain's not a huge deal,' Dickenson said. 'You can call your game. Maybe a little harder to catch the ball and throw the ball. We've all played in some nasty weather, especially playing and living in Canada. 'It's ball security basically. Special teams has a huge impact in a bad-weather game. Balls on the ground, the kicks that are hitting the ground and bouncing backwards. Special teams is always important, but in windy, bad-weather games, I think the importance is even more.' Adams has yet to throw for a touchdown in two games, but he's navigated Calgary to nearly 400 yards of net offence per game and ranks second to Hamilton's Bo Levi Mitchell in passing yards (585). 'The first two games I feel like the defence has really held us in there and then we come back like later on in the game,' Adams said. 'That shows our resiliency. We would like to get going a little bit more and stay more consistent, but I just like the fight that we have and just staying together.' Begelton, a three-time 1,000-yard receiver, was placed on the six-game injured list after he went down on the Stampeders' second play from scrimmage in last week's 29-19 over the Toronto Argonauts. He underwent surgery Thursday. When Adams goes to the air, he's expected to lean on Canadian Jalen Philpot, who compiled a career-high 117 receiving yards against the Argos, and Dominique Rhymes, who had four receptions for 98 yards. A wet game can turn into a running game, and Adams has a solid option in Dedrick Mills with 122 rushing yards and a league-leading four touchdowns in two games. The Stampeders will also be minus offensive lineman Bryce Bell (shoulder), long snapper Aaron Crawford (knee) and linebacker Marquel Lee (bicep), who was scheduled for Friday surgery. Micah Teitz has shifted to middle linebacker and Jacob Roberts into starting weak side in Lee's absence. Calgary's defence ranks third in the league in yards allowed (355.5), points allowed (22.5) and opponent rushing yards (57.0). Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. According to CFL statisticians, strong-side linebacker Derrick Moncrief allowed only three of eight passes in his direction to be completed in Toronto, and those passes amounted to a total of seven yards with no first downs. New Stampeder cornerback Adrian Greene had two interceptions, including one for a touchdown against the Argos. Ottawa is thin at weak-side linebacker with Lucas Cormier (ankle) and Davion Taylor (ankle) both out. The Redblacks need to get their run game going as 70 yards over two games ranks last in the league. They also need to stop shooting themselves in the foot with a league-leading 231 yards in penalties. Shiltz was 22-for-32 in passing for 205 yards, one touchdown and three interceptions in last week's 39-18 loss to Montreal. Crum has scored a pair of short-yardage touchdowns this season. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
IIHF including women in tournament bonus money ‘significant', says Canada's Kingsbury
CALGARY – The International Ice Hockey Federation's decision to share tournament bonus money with women after years of men in the driver's seat is both symbolic and practical, says the general manager of Canada's women's team. 'It's very significant,' said Hockey Canada women's general manager Gina Kingsbury. 'For years, these types of topics have been brought up to the IIHF and they've always been shut down. 'More money invested in the women's game is really important.' The IIHF stated in a website report during its annual congress that 'development support,' worth nearly $9 million Swiss francs (C$15 million) in 2025, will be distributed to member federations based on their countries' performances across the men's and women's world championships, the men's under-20 championship and the men's and women's under-18 championships. 'Furthermore, the support will be weighted according to IIHF World Ranking,' the IIHF stated. The IIHF's development money was previously given to federations based only on men's world championship results. 'This has been a talking point on the women's side of the game for a long time,' said Canadian defender Renata Fast. The IIHF says the money will be split with 40 per cent going to the men's championship, 40 per cent to the women's championship, 10 per cent to the world junior men's tournament, and five per cent each to the men's and women's under-18 championships. That equates to roughly four million Swiss francs (C$6.7 million) going to federations based on the international results of their women's teams. 'It just signals that the IIHF is realizing that they need to modernize some of the things that have just been in place for years and years and years, and recognizing the growth of the women's game and the importance of acknowledging that and valuing it,' Fast said. 'The prize money to me symbolizes that.' The IIHF had previously argued that development money wasn't shared with women because the men's world championship turns a significant profit, while the women's tournament does not. 'Our organization wants to encourage its members to develop women's hockey and junior programs,' the IIHF said in an emailed statement. Even though Kingsbury sits on the IIHF's women's committee and Fast on the IIHF athletes' council, the report of bonus-money redistribution was buried in a congress report and came as a surprise to them. 'It just shows that there's a shift in thinking, maybe,' said Kingsbury. 'If we grow the women's game and if we kind of entice countries that may not have as strong of numbers on the women's side, or as strong a team … they'll be more motivated to invest in the women's side.' The IIHF may want to motivate countries to devote equal resources to men's and women's hockey, but it's ultimately each federation's decision how to use its developmental money. 'What also would be interesting is maybe if there's a federation where the women's program is stronger than the men's program in terms of a ranking standpoint, and how now their women's team can actually bring them in some prize money in an instance where their men's programs never did, that would be huge,' Fast said. Canadian women have never finished outside the medals at either the world championship or under-18 championship. Canada took silver and the under-18 team gold in 2025. Canada's men claimed under-18 gold, but were eliminated in the quarterfinals in both the men's and under-20 championship. 'If the women's program is stronger than the men's, there will be an increase in the support,' IIHF Director General Matti Nurminen said during the congress. 'If the men's and women's programs are as strong, there will be no real impact.' Hockey Canada and USA Hockey — perennial 1-2 finishers — already have the largest women's hockey budgets in part because their female registration far outstrips other countries at a combined 200,000 players. Nevertheless, Kingsbury says she would welcome any funding the women's teams are able to generate through international success. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'Any increase in funds, trust me, we've got lots of projects and ideas that could grow our game and could help the women's program,' she stated. 'There's always more we can do.' After lopsided women's hockey scores at the 2010 Olympic Games — and then-IOC president Jacques Rogge warning 'we cannot continue without improvement' — the IIHF committed 2 million Swiss francs to international women's hockey development. More equitable shares in the IIHF's bonus structure 15 years later is seismic, said Kingsbury. 'Our women's committee, for many years, I remember even before I was on it, the big topic was always the trophy for the women's worlds is smaller than men's and we don't get prize money,' Kingsbury said. 'Both those things have changed.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.