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Davies isn’t fit enough to start on June 12, and Canada’s Group B opponents are already adjusting their plans around him anyway. That’s the measure of his influence. A hamstring strain suffered in Bayern Munich’s Champions League semi-final against PSG in early May 2026 has complicated his tournament preparation, but Jesse Marsch has confirmed he’s targeting availability by the second or third group match. Canada can progress without him. With him, even from the bench, every opponent’s defensive shape changes before kick-off.
The data from Davies’ two most recent major tournaments makes the argument without needing elaboration. At the 2024 Copa América, Canada reached the semi-finals with Davies fit and central to the team’s left-flank attack, scoring 6 goals across 4 matches and creating chances at a high rate. At the 2025 Gold Cup, with Davies absent after his ACL tear in March 2025, Canada exited in the quarter-finals against Guatemala with limited attacking output. Two tournaments, one variable, two completely different results.
His club numbers in 2025–26 before the latest setback reinforce the picture: 1 goal and 5 assists in just 841 minutes across 13 Bundesliga appearances and 4 Champions League games, with a recorded Bundesliga top speed of 35.11 km/h , among the highest in European football. That pace is what makes him different from any other left-sided option Canada possesses.
| Opponent | Davies Availability | Date | Copa América 2024 (with Davies) | Gold Cup 2025 (without Davies) |
| Bosnia & Herz. | Doubtful (hamstring) | Jun 12, Toronto | Semis reached | QF exit |
| Qatar | Possible (bench/sub) | Jun 18, Vancouver | 6 goals in 4 games | Limited goals |
| Switzerland | Probable (part-starter) | Jun 24, Vancouver | High chances created | Lower output |
Each Group B opponent carries a specific vulnerability to high-speed wide attackers. Bosnia’s 4-2-3-1 structure leaves them exposed on transitions. Footlab Data notes their high full-back line is dangerous territory for a quick counter. Qatar struggles to sustain defensive intensity across 90 minutes, with width against pace a known weak point; Akram Afif drives their attack, but their defensive organisation thins late in tight matches. Switzerland is the group’s most complete side, but RotoWire’s tactical analysis flags their defensive shape as stretchable by genuine counter-attacking pace, exactly what Davies and Tajon Buchanan together represent.
Marsch has been direct: “I don’t think he’ll be ready quite on June 12,” with Davies’ rehab restarting on May 31. The plan is graduated minutes, Davies as a 60th-minute weapon in the Qatar match, building toward a probable part-start against Switzerland on June 24. That’s not a compromise. Against tired legs in a tight second half, Davies at full sprint is a different problem than Davies from minute one.
Richie Laryea starts the opener. He’s been Davies’ primary cover throughout the past year’s absences and is Canada’s proven fallback on the left, though his own thigh injury is being monitored ahead of the June 1 friendly against Uzbekistan. Alistair Johnston of Celtic is the secondary option if Laryea isn’t fully fit.
Even when Davies doesn’t play a minute, his presence in the squad changes what opponents prepare for. Defensive coaches must game-plan for him regardless of his fitness status, allocating resources, adjusting their full-back’s positioning, and narrowing the space they’d otherwise leave wide. That preparation distorts their shape against the players who do start.
Bosnia, Qatar, and Switzerland all know what Davies did to opponents at the 2024 Copa América. None of them can afford to assume he won’t appear.
Canada’s squad has genuine depth beyond Davies. Jonathan David contributed 8 goals and 5 assists at Juventus in 2025–26. Stephen Eustáquio anchors midfield as vice-captain. Moïse Bombito is confirmed fit at centre-back. Switzerland is favoured to top Group B, but Canada is widely projected as the second-place finisher, and in the expanded 48-team format, a strong third-place finish also advances. The path to the knockouts exists without Davies contributing a single minute.
With him fit and starting against Switzerland on June 24, the Alphonso Davies FIFA World Cup 2026 Canada equation shifts from “realistic progression” to “genuinely dangerous knockout opponent”, and that difference is worth every minute of the recovery Marsch is managing so carefully right now.
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Will Alphonso Davies play at the 2026 World Cup?
Davies is included in Canada’s official 26-man squad and is expected to be available from the second or third group match. He won’t start the June 12 opener against Bosnia, but Marsch is targeting the Qatar fixture on June 18 for his return.
What injury does Alphonso Davies have ahead of the World Cup?
Davies suffered a right hamstring strain during Bayern Munich’s Champions League semi-final against PSG in early May 2026. His recovery timeline was estimated at four to five weeks, with rehab restarting on May 31.
Who replaces Davies at left-back for Canada?
Richie Laryea of Toronto FC is Canada’s most likely starter in the opener and has been Davies’ primary cover throughout the past year. Alistair Johnston of Celtic is the secondary option if Laryea’s thigh injury limits his availability.
Can Canada reach the knockouts without Davies?
Canada can progress; Jonathan David, Eustáquio, and Buchanan give them quality regardless of Davies’ minutes. Their quarter-final exit at the 2025 Gold Cup without him, against a semi-final run at Copa América 2024 with him, shows the measurable difference his presence makes.
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