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2026 FIFA World Cup
29MAR

Canada into deadline with two holes

3 min read
14:01UTC

Co-host Canada reached the 11 June squad lock with Flores's ACL confirmed out and Bombito's tibia fracture disputed by his own coach.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Canada finalised its World Cup 26 with one slot confirmed and one disputed against a hard 11 June deadline.

Co-host Canada reached the 11 June 3pm ET FIFA squad lock with two slots unresolved. Marcelo Flores's ruptured ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) was confirmed, with Jayden Nelson of Austin FC favoured to replace him , . A second slot stayed disputed: broadcaster TSN reported defender Moïse Bombito out with an unhealed tibia fracture, while head coach Jesse Marsch publicly called the decision "day-by-day" 1. Canada Soccer floated Ralph Priso and Zorhan Bassong as options for the second place.

Canada open against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto on Friday 12 June. Flores tore the ligament in the CONCACAF (the North American confederation) Champions Cup final, a vacancy already flagged when Nelson emerged as the leading candidate . The first hole was therefore settled in principle; the second was a live argument between a national broadcaster's reporting and the manager's public position.

FIFA's injury-replacement window closes the day before a team's first match, not at a single tournament-wide cut, so Canada's clock ran to 3pm ET on 11 June. Any player added after that point cannot be registered. That deadline is what gives Marsch's "day-by-day" line its sharp edge: a host nation finalising its 26 two days before kickoff has no competitive minutes left to bed a late call-up into the side.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Before a World Cup begins, each national team must submit a final list of 26 players. Once the tournament starts, FIFA allows a team to swap an injured player for a replacement, but only up until the day before that team's first match. Canada's first match is against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto on 12 June, which means the deadline was 11 June at 3pm ET. Canada arrived at that deadline with two problems. First, winger Marcelo Flores tore his ACL (a major knee ligament) after being named in the squad. Jayden Nelson, a winger who plays for Austin FC in MLS (Major League Soccer, the top North American football league), was expected to take his place. Second, defender Moise Bombito reportedly has an unhealed break in his tibia, but head coach Jesse Marsch said publicly the decision was day by day, contradicting the TSN (the Canadian sports broadcaster) report that Bombito was out. Both situations had to be resolved by the deadline.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

FIFA's squad-replacement rules under the 2026 Regulations allow a team to replace a player confirmed as injured by a physician before the 24-hour pre-match lock. The injury must be documented; the replacement must already be named in the provisional extended squad submitted earlier. For Flores, the ACL is documented and a replacement slot is straightforward because the injury diagnosis is unambiguous.

The Bombito situation illustrates a structural tension in the 24-hour rule: a tibia stress fracture that has not fully healed is medically real but clinically contested in terms of match fitness. A player is 'injured' under FIFA's rules if certified by the team doctor as unable to participate due to physical incapacity.

If Marsch and the Canada Soccer medical team certify Bombito as available, they risk deploying a player on a partially healed fracture. If they certify him as unavailable, they burn their second replacement slot. The public contradiction between the coach and the broadcaster (TSN) reflects that internal deliberation happening in real time against the clock.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If Canada certifies Bombito as available and he re-fractures during a match, Canada Soccer faces a gap between the player's consent to play and FIFPRO's emerging duty-of-care frameworks for athletes with pre-existing tournament-entry injuries.

    Short term · Reported
  • Opportunity

    Jayden Nelson's call-up as Flores's replacement gives the Austin FC winger a World Cup debut at 23, with Canada opening at home in Toronto on 12 June in front of a partisan crowd.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Canada entering the tournament with two late-arriving players and a disputed fitness case for a central defender reduces preparation time, particularly for a team opening against Bosnia and Herzegovina, who qualified from a competitive UEFA group.

    Immediate · Reported
First Reported In

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