Canada vs Qatar: why this one grinds toward a low score
This is Canada's big home moment of the group: all four Group B sides sit on a point after matchday one, so a win at BC Place puts Marsch's men in command before Switzerland. The market reads that urgency as a clinical home demolition. The football suggests something far more laboured.
Canada dominate, then don't finish
The pattern is impossible to ignore. Canada drew Bosnia 1-1 despite a stack of chances — Jonathan David shot too close to the keeper, Oluwaseyi missed a sitter, and only Larin's late strike rescued the point.
It's not a one-off. They drew Ireland 1-1, ground out a slow 2-0 over Uzbekistan, and were held scoreless by Tunisia. The territory is there; the killer finishing is not. Even Alistair Johnston flagged the worry, saying Canada can't waste another first half "like we did against Bosnia."
Throw in the fitness question marks. Alphonso Davies hasn't played since early May and looks set for minutes-management rather than a guaranteed start, stripping Canada of their sharpest left-side thrust. Bombito's role is uncertain too, so the team that needs ruthlessness may not be at full tilt.
Qatar are built to bore you
Lopetegui's plan is survival, not spectacle. Against Switzerland they offered almost nothing in open play for ninety minutes and stole a point via a stoppage-time set piece. Before that, a blank 0-0 with El Salvador underlined how little they generate going forward.
His own framing — "compete, not compare" — tells you everything: a compact low block, Afif on the counter, and one set-piece prayer late. That's a side designed to frustrate, not to trade blows.
Why the Under is the cleaner play
Put it together: a favourite who struggles to break teams down, facing an opponent whose entire identity is to defend and slow the game. That script settles at 1-0 or 2-0 far more often than the market's "goals flow freely" assumption allows.
The Qatar +1.5 was tempting on the same logic, but the Under also covers the obvious route of an early Canada goal followed by a closed-out 1-0 — making it the tidier expression of this grind.










