Canada made history in Toronto on Friday — even if it didn't feel like a celebration at first. The co-hosts drew 1-1 with Bosnia and Herzegovina in their World Cup 2026 opener, earning the first point in Canadian men's World Cup history after losing all six of their previous matches across the 1986 and 2022 tournaments.
How the Match Unfolded
The first World Cup match ever played in Toronto started with a punch to the gut for the home crowd. Jovo Lukić rose at a corner and headed Bosnia and Herzegovina in front in the first half, silencing a stadium that had waited decades for this moment.
Canada pushed and pushed, creating a string of close calls without finding the breakthrough. The pressure finally told in the 78th minute, when Cyle Larin let fly with a strike inside the box that took a friendly deflection on its way in. The roar that followed was forty years in the making.
Neither side could find a winner, and Canada settled for a point — one that carried far more weight than a typical opening-day draw.
A Historic Point
It's hard to overstate the milestone. Canada went 0-for-3 at Mexico 1986 without scoring a goal, then lost all three matches at Qatar 2022 despite flashes of promise. Friday's draw is the first time the Canadian men have ever taken anything from a World Cup match, and they did it as tournament co-hosts in front of a home crowd.
In Group B, the draw leaves both Canada and Bosnia and Herzegovina on one point, with everything still to play for in the second round of fixtures.
The Host-Nation Storyline Continues Tonight
All three co-hosts opened within 36 hours of each other: Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 on Thursday, Canada drew on Friday afternoon, and the United States kicks off its tournament tonight against Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. Check back for our recap of the USMNT opener.
Why It Matters for Dallas–Fort Worth
The World Cup arrives in North Texas this Sunday, June 14, when the Netherlands face Japan in the first of nine matches at AT&T Stadium in Arlington. If the scenes in Toronto are any indication of host-city atmosphere, Arlington is in for something special. Visit our matches page for the full Arlington schedule and our guides for parking, transportation, and places to stay.
Key Facts
- Final score: Canada 1, Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 - Goalscorers: Jovo Lukić (Bosnia and Herzegovina, first half); Cyle Larin (Canada, 78') - Venue: Toronto — the city's first-ever World Cup match - Date: Friday, June 12, 2026 - Milestone: Canada's first point in men's World Cup history (previously 0W-0D-6L)



