Canada is the third co-host and the only one most Americans don't know how to read. They've been to two World Cups in 96 years, scored a single goal in those two appearances combined, and now they're hosting matches in Toronto and Vancouver and walking into a tournament where the bar has quietly been raised on them.
The story of Canadian men's soccer this decade is John Herdman, then Jesse Marsch — the American who took over in 2024 with a mandate to push this group out of CONCACAF respectability and into something that looks like a tournament team. Marsch has the squad he wants. He has Alphonso Davies, the Bayern Munich left-back who is the most famous Canadian soccer player ever and is recovering from a torn ACL. He has Jonathan David, the striker who is having his worst season in five years at Juventus. He has Stephen Eustáquio, who runs the midfield, and a deep pool of dual-nationals — Tajon Buchanan, Ismael Koné, Jacob Shaffelburg — who give this group a shape Canada hasn't had before.
Whether they can win a knockout match is genuinely unknown. Whether Toronto and Vancouver will lose their minds for them anyway is not.