BY OUR MAN AT THE BC PLACE
CO-HOSTS Canada rewrote the history books in Vancouver, clinical star striker Jonathan David firing a magnificent hat-trick to spearhead an emphatic six-nil demolition of a chaotic, nine-man Qatar.
It was the tournament co-hosts’ first-ever victory at a men’s World Cup finals, matching a feat not seen since Geoff Hurst in 1966 by netting a treble on home soil, though the joyous celebration before a roaring crowd of 52,497 was severely soured by a sickening, tournament-ending leg injury to midfielder Ismaël Koné.
Jesse Marsch’s rampant Canucks laid down an early marker after being criticised for a lack of cutting edge in their tournament opener.
The breakthrough arrived in just the sixteenth minute when dynamic forward Cyle Larin pounced on a loose rebound, slotting home to ignite the Vancouver faithful.
Thirteen minutes later, Juventus talisman Jonathan David took absolute center stage, pulverizing an unstoppable volley past a helpless Mahmoud Abunada in the Qatari goal to make it two.
The match quickly turned into a disciplinary nightmare for Julen Lopetegui’s side. In the thirty-third minute, Qatari defender Homam Ahmed was shown a straight red card following a VAR review for a cynical, last-man takedown of the electric Tajon Buchanan.
Ssensing blood against ten men, Canada struck again deep into first-half stoppage time, David snapping up his second of the evening with a predatory stab from close range to send the hosts into the interval with a comfortable three-goal cushion.
Things went from bad to disastrous for the visitors just seven minutes into the second half. Qatari midfielder Assim Madibo flew into a reckless, bone-crunching challenge on Ismaël Koné, leaving the Canadian midfield star collapsed on the turf with a horrific tibia and fibula fracture.
Incensed Canadian players confronted the visitors as a somber mood gripped the stadium; referee Cristian Garay consulted the pitchside monitor and rightfully upgraded Madibo’s initial yellow to Qatar’s second straight red card of the match.
With Qatar reduced to nine men, the game descended into a glorified training exercise. Nathan-Dylan Saliba, the man subbed on to replace the stricken Koné, found a poetic piece of consolation in the sixty-fourth minute, bending a sublime free-kick into the bottom corner before emotionally hoisting Koné’s shirt to the heavens.
Ten minutes later, the scoreline read five as the unfortunate Mohamed Al-Manai inadvertently turned an Alistair Johnston cross into his own net.
The historic rout was capped off in the ninety-first minute of play. Saliba drove inward and unleashed a powerful distance effort that deflected into the path of David.
composure that has Europe’s elite clubs circling, the star striker controlled the ball instantly, turned on a sixpence, and slotted home to complete a memorable hat-trick and seal the six-goal thrashing. With four points from two games,
Canada stand on the absolute precipice of the knockout rounds, while Qatar are left to pick up the pieces of a truly catastrophic night.

