On Saturday, the Canadian team, which is one of the sponsors of the world championship, completed its performances at the tournament. In the 1/8 final match, which took place at Houston, the Canadians saw a huge defeat over Morocco with a score of 0:3. Azzedine Unahi scored a double, and Sufyan Rahimi added another goal.
Prote, with the best result on the scoreboard, the head coach of the Canadian national team, Jesse Marsh, said that his team dominated on the field. Canada effectively looked hard at the first half of the team, creating a number of unsafe moments thanks to the efforts of Jonathan David and Tanya Oluwaseya.
However, the failure to realize the best chances resulted in a missed goal against Unahi on the 50th century, after which the game followed the scenario of the African team. After the final whistle, March did not stream emotions, protecting his graves.
“What a privilege it is for our patients to support a team like this, which puts up a brave face and doesn’t sit on the defensive and shows that it can be a great asset.”. Of course, we have to stumble more often in such situations, find ways to success and be on this basis. No matter how different Morocco was, I wish it were us, not them.
I'm already peeing at our boys. “I’m sicker now, but, my God, I couldn’t write with them even more,” said the mentor from the edge of the floor.
Later at the press conference, Marsh added that in the first half, his children were doing incredibly well, and Morocco was dying a little, but it wasn’t going to get better. In my opinion, if the Canadians were lucky enough to be killed first, the result would have been completely different.
The head coach of the Moroccan national team, Mohamed Ouahbi, questioned the optimistic statements of his colleague.
" Ale chi bouli stench stealing?
It's important to say. You need to be brave enough to say this when you lose 0:3. We were stealing for them from another time,” - laconicly Vidpov Uakhbi.
Varto means that despite the pain, this tournament has become historic for the Canadian team. Reaching the 1/8 finals is the shortest result in the history of the national team at the world championships (during the first performances in 1986 and 2022, the Canadians invariably prevailed in the group stage).