World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
On May 6, during the second leg of the Champions League semifinal in Munich, Alphonso Davies tore his left hamstring again. According to German magazine Kicker , his recovery window is four to six weeks. With only a few weeks left until the start of the 2026 World Cup group stage, a recovery period of four to six weeks leaves no margin for error.
On May 6, during the second leg of the Champions League semifinal in Munich, Alphonso Davies suffered a torn hamstring in his left leg. German outlet Kicker gave a recovery window of 4 to 6 weeks. With only a few weeks left until the start of the 2026 World Cup group stage, a 4-to-6-week recovery period leaves not a single day to spare.
When Canadian head coach Jesse Marsch was asked before the opening match whether Davies could play, his answer was straightforward. He believes Alphonso will feature in the World Cup but won't be ready for the group stage opener.
Without Davies, Canada earned their first-ever World Cup point at BMO Field in Toronto. The group stage opener ended in a 1-1 draw against Bosnia and Herzegovina. Bosnia's Lukic opened the scoring, while substitute Larin equalized in the second half. Despite dominating possession, they couldn't secure three points, and Larin's equalizer couldn't mask the midfield's lack of control. The team missed someone capable of instantly distributing the ball.
In the second group match, the scoreboard told a different story. Canada claimed their first World Cup victory, with Jonathan David and Larin each scoring. The performance was a showcase of dominance, with overwhelming advantages in shots and possession. Davies sat on the bench in a training vest, never taking it off.
That big win in the second match highlighted an awkward truth: without their captain, they could still dismantle a weaker opponent. But Marsch knows full well that beating a weak team in the group stage means nothing in the knockout rounds. When push comes to shove, what matters is that intangible "aura." He publicly stated that Alphonso changes the team's aura and is the best athlete he has ever coached.
Marsch believes in his aura because Davies has the credentials to back it up. In 2022, he scored Canada's first World Cup goal against Belgium and has earned dozens of caps for the national team. With a home World Cup, the spotlight is directly on him, and anyone in his position would grit their teeth to play.
Over the past year-plus, his medical chart has been thicker than his appearance record. In March 2025, he suffered an ACL tear in his right knee. Bayern CEO Dreesen openly criticized the Canadian Soccer Association, accusing them of negligence and stating that the club reserved the right to take legal action. Under FIFA's injury insurance policy, Bayern could claim a capped amount of compensation. He then rushed his return, only to suffer a hamstring muscle fiber tear in his right leg and a subsequent strain in the same area. In the May Champions League semifinal against Paris, he tore the hamstring in his left leg. Within just over a year, he endured major injuries like an ACL tear and hamstring tears.
Bayern privately urged him not to go to the World Cup, fearing he might injure another leg. But FIFA's strict regulations mandate that clubs release players before tournaments, and even Bayern's legal department couldn't stop it. This is the most frustrating deadlock in modern football: clubs pay real money in salaries and medical bills, while national teams benefit for free, and when something goes wrong, the club still has to cover the costs. Davies is caught in the middle, with his employer warning, "You shouldn't go," and the allure of a home World Cup pulling him the other way.
In an interview on June 3, he opened up, admitting that the repeated injuries have been mentally draining and that he even questioned whether he could make it. But he still insisted that anything is possible, depending on his final recovery before the tournament.
Marsch's calculations are precise. From "not ready for the opener" to "playing as a substitute in the second match" and then "expected to debut," his wording has gradually loosened. After two group-stage games, Canada's points are in a favorable position; a draw in the final match would see them advance. At this point, the Canadian Soccer Association quietly stopped issuing daily injury updates on Davies. To see whether an injury-prone key player will play, don't listen to the coach's press conferences—watch the frequency of the association's updates. Once they stop, it means they're hiding their cards. The defense is also shaky, with injured defenders forced into the squad and young players thrust into the starting lineup. A midfielder also suffered a leg fracture in the second match, ending his tournament. Marsch's options are dwindling, and the likelihood of Davies being pushed into action has only increased.
The 25-year-old captain hasn't played a single official match for the national team in over a year. Armed with a thick medical file, he is preparing to come off the bench in the third group game of the home World Cup. The last time he wore the national team jersey in an official match was in March 2025, when he tore his right ACL.
In that match, his right ACL snapped.