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Canada have taken more shots on target than any other team left in the draw, twenty-eight in four matches, yet they have scored only twice across their last two games. That gap between chances created and chances finished is the real story heading into Houston, not Morocco’s unbeaten run. Stephen Eustaquio’s stoppage-time volley got Jesse Marsch’s side out of the group stage for the first time in program history, but volume alone will not be enough against a defence that has conceded just four goals all tournament.
Canada drew 1-1 with Bosnia and Herzegovina, thrashed a nine-man Qatar side 6-0 behind Jonathan David’s hat-trick for their first-ever World Cup win, then lost the group decider 2-1 to Switzerland despite a competitive shot count. In the round of 32, Stephen Eustaquio’s 90th-minute volley beat South Africa 1-0 and carried Canada past the group stage for the first time in their history.
| Match | Result | Shots On Target | Goals |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1-1 draw | 4 | 1 |
| Qatar | 6-0 win | 10 | 6 |
| Switzerland | 1-2 loss | 7 | 1 |
| South Africa (R32) | 1-0 win | 7 | 1 |
| Total | 28 (tournament high) | 9 |
Nine goals across four matches looks healthy on the surface, but the distribution tells a different story entirely, one built almost entirely around a single afternoon in which the opposition played most of the game a man short.
Six of Canada’s nine goals came in one match, against a Qatar side reduced to nine men in a contest that produced 4.46 expected goals. Strip that result out and Canada have scored three times from eighteen shots on target across their other three matches.
The last two games sharpen the concern: fourteen shots on target, two goals. Against Switzerland, Canada out-shot their opponents 13-6, led on target 7-4, and edged the expected goals battle 1.34 to 1.06, and still lost. Against South Africa, whose entire attacking output measured just 0.13 expected goals, seven shots on target still required a stoppage-time strike from distance to settle it.
Jonathan David remains the squad’s top scorer with three goals, but all three arrived in the same afternoon against Qatar. Cyle Larin scored against both Bosnia and Qatar before going quiet in the Switzerland defeat, a game in which Alistair Johnston steered a free header straight at Gregor Kobel, Promise David had two headed efforts saved, and Derek Cornelius failed to convert a spilled ball.
Projected lineups have Tani Oluwaseyi partnering David up front, while Alphonso Davies, yet to play a minute at this tournament, is finally in line to feature and could offer a different kind of movement through the middle. Somebody in that group needs to turn volume into goals on Saturday, because Morocco will not offer this many looks twice.
Morocco are unbeaten through four matches, conceding just four goals, two of them against an already-eliminated Haiti side. They held Brazil to a draw, shut out Scotland, and then suffocated the Netherlands, restricting them to six shots and two on target while holding 61 percent possession, before Issa Diop’s 91st-minute equaliser forced a shootout Morocco won 3-2.
Behind that structure stands Yassine Bounou, who saved three penalties against Spain at the last World Cup. A side converting chances at Canada’s current rate cannot expect this defence to hand over anywhere close to five clear openings, let alone finish more than one or two of them.
Morocco have won both previous meetings between these two nations: 4-0 in a 2016 friendly and 2-1 at the 2022 World Cup, when Hakim Ziyech punished a Milan Borjan error inside four minutes, and Youssef En-Nesyri doubled the lead before Canada’s only reply arrived through a Nayef Aguerd own goal in a match Canada were competitive in for long spells without ever truly threatening.
Atiba Hutchinson’s header that day bounced on the line and stayed out. Four years on, the margins look identical, and only Canada’s finishing can change how this one ends. That is the Canada vs Morocco World Cup 2026 script in one line: plenty of chances, not enough goals, and a finishing problem that history says gets punished.
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How many goals has Canada scored at the World Cup 2026?
Nine goals in four matches. That includes one against Bosnia, six against Qatar, one against Switzerland, and one against South Africa in the round of 32.
Has Canada ever beaten Morocco in football?
No, Canada have never beaten Morocco in a competitive or friendly fixture. The teams have met twice, with Morocco winning 4-0 in a 2016 friendly and 2-1 at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
When do Canada play Morocco in the round of 16?
Saturday, July 4, 2026, at 1 p.m. ET at NRG Stadium in Houston. A place in the quarter-finals is on the line for both sides.
Who is Canada’s top scorer at the World Cup 2026?
Jonathan David leads the squad with three goals. All three came in a single hat-trick performance against Qatar in the group stage, and he has not scored in either match since.
What is Morocco’s record at the 2026 World Cup so far?
Morocco are unbeaten through four matches. They drew with Brazil, beat Scotland and Haiti, and won a penalty shootout against the Netherlands after a 1-1 draw.
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