Group B · World Cup 2026

Switzerland
2-1

LIVE

Canada

Wednesday 24 June at 20:00 UK time · BC Place, Vancouver

Switzerland vs Canada Live: World Cup 2026

Live Updates

  • 87'Liam Millar
  • 85'Christian Fassnacht on for Johan Manzambi
  • 85'Cédric Itten on for Breel Embolo
  • 83'Jacob Shaffelburg on for Richie Laryea
  • 80'Dan Ndoye on for Rubén Vargas
  • 76'Promise David
  • 75'Promise David on for Tajon Buchanan
  • 74'Michel Aebischer on for Djibril Sow
  • 74'Silvan Widmer on for Luca Jaquez
  • 58'Stephen Eustaquio on for Mathieu Choinière
  • 58'Liam Millar on for Ali Ahmed
  • 58'Tani Oluwaseyi on for Cyle Larin
  • 57'Johan Manzambi
  • 46'Rubén Vargas
  • 32'Granit Xhaka
  • 32'Cyle Larin
  • 87'L. Millar
  • 85'C. Itten on for B. Embolo
  • 85'C. Fassnacht on for J. Manzambi
  • 83'J. Shaffelburg on for R. Laryea
  • 80'D. Ndoye on for R. Vargas
  • 76'P. David
  • 75'P. David on for T. Buchanan
  • 74'M. Aebischer on for D. Sow
  • 74'S. Widmer on for L. Jaquez
  • 58'T. Oluwaseyi on for C. Larin
  • 58'L. Millar on for A. Ahmed
  • 58'S. Eustaquio on for M. Choiniere
  • 57'J. Manzambi
  • 46'R. Vargas
  • 32'G. Xhaka
  • 32'C. Larin

Events update about once a minute. The full match report and player ratings publish shortly after full time.

Confirmed Lineups

Switzerland line up in their familiar 4-2-3-1 under Murat Yakin, with Granit Xhaka and Remo Freuler anchoring the double pivot. The more interesting call is Johan Manzambi in the number ten slot ahead of Dan Ndoye and Fabian Rieder, both of whom drop to the bench. Breel Embolo leads the line, with Rubén Vargas and Djibril Sow wide.

Canada's Jesse Marsch has opted for a flat 4-4-2, a shape that asks Jonathan David and Cyle Larin to press high and stretch Switzerland's back four. Alphonso Davies is among the substitutes rather than starting at left back, with Richie Laryea getting the nod instead. Injured pair Ismaël Koné and Alonzo Jones are both absent, which tightens Marsch's midfield options and likely explains the simplified structure.

The key matchup is Xhaka against Canada's central midfield pair of Mathieu Choinière and Nathan-Dylan Saliba. Xhaka dictates tempo and carries the ball from deep; if Canada can press him early and restrict his time on the ball, they disrupt Switzerland's entire build-up. If he finds space, Switzerland will control possession and the game with it.

Switzerland

(4-2-3-1)

Coach: Murat Yakin

1Gregor KobelG
25Luca JaquezD
4Nico ElvediD
5Manuel AkanjiD
13Ricardo RodríguezD
8Remo FreulerM
10Granit XhakaM
9Johan ManzambiM
15Djibril SowM
17Rubén VargasM
7Breel EmboloF

Subs: Marvin Keller, Yvon Mvogo, Eray Cömert, Aurèle Amenda, Silvan Widmer, Denis Zakaria, Dan Ndoye, Michel Aebischer, Christian Fassnacht, Ardon Jashari, Fabian Rieder, Noah Okafor, Zeki Amdouni, Cédric Itten

Canada

(4-4-2)

Coach: Jesse Marsch

16Maxime CrépeauG
2Alistair JohnstonD
4Luc De FougerollesD
13Derek CorneliusD
22Richie LaryeaD
17Tajon BuchananM
6Mathieu ChoinièreM
25Nathan-Dylan SalibaM
20Ali AhmedM
10Jonathan DavidF
9Cyle LarinF

Subs: Dayne St. Clair, Owen Goodman, Joel Waterman, Niko Sigur, Moise Bombito, Alphonso Davies, Stephen Eustaquio, Liam Millar, Jonathan Osorio, Jacob Shaffelburg, Tani Oluwaseyi, Promise David, Jayden Nelson

How We Previewed It

Switzerland and Canada arrive at BC Place on Wednesday evening separated by nothing except goal difference, locked together on four points apiece at the top of Group B. Whoever takes first place walks into the last sixteen with momentum and a theoretically kinder path; whoever drops points risks a nervous wait to see whether Bosnia and Herzegovina or Qatar can complicate the arithmetic. A win for either side settles the matter cleanly. A draw does the same job, but with rather less fanfare.

Canada have been the group's most convincing side so far. Seven goals scored in two games, only one conceded, and a goal difference that puts them ahead of Switzerland on that measure alone. They are playing in front of a home crowd that has turned Vancouver into something close to a fortress, and the weight of that backing will be tangible at kick-off.

Switzerland, though, are not here to make up numbers. Five goals from two games of their own, a settled structure, and the tournament experience of a side that has navigated knockout football at multiple World Cups. They drew their opener and then found another gear, and there is no obvious reason to expect them to shrink from a match that effectively decides a group.

Notably, these two nations have never previously met in a competitive fixture. There is no head-to-head record to lean on, no psychological baggage from old results to factor in. It is, in that sense, a genuinely clean slate, which suits a match of this significance rather well.

Both squads report no fresh absences, which means each manager picks from a full complement and carries no injury excuse into the post-match conversation.

The data leans toward a tight finish. The prediction model gives Canada 45 per cent for victory and Switzerland 10 per cent, with the draw at 45 per cent, pointing firmly toward a low-margin contest rather than a runaway result. The advice derived from those numbers favours a draw or a Canada win combined with at least two goals in the match. Canada's attacking numbers from the group stage make the over a reasonable thread to follow. Whether they convert that attacking promise against the most organised side they have faced in this tournament is the question BC Place will answer.

By the Football IQ Sports Desk. Reports are generated from verified match data and corrected as final statistics settle.