
Canada wins Canadian Shield Tournament despite penalty shootout loss to Ivory Coast
Canada's Cyle Larin, left, is knocked off the ball by Cote d'Ivoire's Franck Yannick Kessie during first half Canadian Shield Tournament action, in Toronto, on Tuesday June 10, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
TORONTO — It was a draw, a loss and a win — all in one. But when the dust settled, Canada emerged victorious at the inaugural Canadian Shield Tournament.
Despite losing to African champion Ivory Coast 5-4 in a penalty shootout after a scoreless draw in regulation time Tuesday, the 30th-ranked Canadian men finished with four points, one ahead of No. 86 New Zealand and No. 25 Ukraine, and two ahead of No. 41 Ivory Coast.
That meant champion T-shirts, the PA system at BMO Field blaring Queen's 'We are The Champions,' pyrotechnics (which went off a little late) and a trophy to hoist.
Mission accomplished for Canada coach Jesse Marsch.
'I know from where we were 10 days ago to where we are right now, we're a much more prepared team for what next summer will require,' Marsch said, referencing the World Cup. 'And that's been the goal of creating these friendlies, to try and get the best opponents possible, the level of opponent that we think we're going to see next summer.
'And Ivory Coast challenged us in a lot of ways. We bent at moments but we didn't break. So that part was great.'
Victory was assured for Canada just by getting to the shootout, given it would finish the night with at least four points — with two points for a shootout win and one for a shootout loss — while no one else had more than three. A regulation win was worth three points at the tournament.
Jonathan David, Mathieu Choiniere, Derek Cornelius and Ismael Kone scored for Canada in the shootout. Badra Ali Sangaré stopped Tani Oluwaseyi and Luc de Fougerolles.
Clement Akpa, Jereme Boga, Emmanuel Latte Lath, Franck Kessie and Mohamed Diomande scored for Ivory Coast in the shootout, beating Dayne St. Clair. Mory Gbane missed the target.
Ukraine defeated New Zealand 2-1 in the early game Tuesday, leaving both teams at 1-1-0 with three points. That result meant Ivory Coast had to win by two goals to take the trophy.
The Canadians defeated Ukraine 4-2 in the tournament opener Saturday while Ivory Coast lost 1-0 to New Zealand.
Ivory Coast is currently ranked fifth in Africa by FIFA — behind No. 12 Morocco, No. 19 Senegal, No. 32 Egypt and No. 36 Algeria. But the Elephants are the reigning Africa Cup of Nations champions and have been ranked as high as No. 12 in the world.
Ivory Coast looked dangerous, comfortably moving the ball around as drums resonated in its supporters' section at BMO Field. The Ivorian 'keeper had little to do in the first half other than watch his team from afar.
Both teams managed just one shot on target before the break with Canada never really finding its rhythm. The second half was choppy and chippy with plenty of stops and starts before an announced crowd of 18,489.
As promised, Marsch fielded almost an entirely different lineup with only centre back Cornelius retaining his spot from the Ukraine starting 11. Veteran forward Cyle Larin served as captain for the first time.
Daniel Jebbison, a 21-year-old forward with England's Bournemouth, won his third cap in his first start. Vancouver Whitecaps winger Jayden Nelson also made his first start, earning his seventh cap.
It was a more experienced group of starters, with a combined cap count of 369 going into the game compared to 241 for the starting 11 against Ukraine. Larin, Jonathan Osorio and Richie Laryea accounted for 226 of Tuesday's total.
Osorio's 85th cap moved him into third place on the Canadian men's all-time list behind Julian de Guzman (89) and Atiba Hutchinson (105). Canadian midfielder Stephen Eustaquio was honoured before the game for earning his 50th cap against Ukraine.
David and Tajon Buchanan, who accounted for three goals against Ukraine, came off the bench in the 76th minute as Canada looked for a goal.
Canadian defender Sam Adekugbe had to be helped off the field in the 83rd minute, favouring his leg after going down. Marsch said the Whitecaps defender would have a scan done on his calf.
Canada had never faced Ivory Coast before. The last time it faced an African side was at the World Cup in Qatar in December 2022 when it lost 2-1 to Morocco in its final group-stage game.
The Ivory Coast squad draws on players from clubs in Belgium, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland and Turkey.
Canada heads to the CONCACAF Gold Cup next, opening against No. 95 Honduras on June 17 in Vancouver before completing Group B play in Houston against No. 90 Curaçao and No. 81 El Salvador on June 21 and 24, respectively.
Marsch had the players runs sprints after Tuesday's match, ahead of a day off, with the team scheduled to gather in Vancouver on Thursday.
Canada went into Tuesday's match with a 7-4-5 record under Marsch, with one of those ties turning into a penalty shootout loss to Uruguay and another into a shootout win over Venezuela. His previous three games in Canada — against Ukraine, Suriname and Panama — were all victories.
Ivory Coast returns to World Cup qualifying play in September. It currently leads Group F in African qualifying with a 5-0-1 record, one point ahead of No. 79 Gabon in the six-country group that also includes No. 140 Burundi, No. 111 Kenya, No. 126 Gambia and the 203rd-ranked Seychelles.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 10, 2025.
Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Oilers make 2 lineup changes, shuffle lines for Game 4 of Stanley Cup Final
Edmonton Oilers center Jeff Skinner celebrates after scoring against the Dallas Stars during the first period of Game 5 of the Western Conference finals in the NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoffs, Thursday, May 29, 2025, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Gareth Patterson) Edmonton Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch made a few changes in Thursday morning's skate ahead of Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final. Forward Jeff Skinner and defenceman Troy Stecher came in for forward Viktor Arvidsson and defenceman John Klingberg, respectively, Oilers reporters in south Florida said. Skinner was on the third line with Adam Henrique and Trent Frederic, while Stecher was on the second line with Darnell Nurse. EDM lines - Thursday Morning Skate: RNH - McDavid - Brown Kane - Draisaitl - Kapanen Skinner - Henrique - Frederic Podkolzin - Janmark - Perry • Arvidsson, Ryan, Jones Ekholm - Walman Nurse - Stecher Kulak - Bouchard • Klingberg, Emberson, Dineen#Oilers — Tony Brar 🚀 (@TonyBrarOTV) June 12, 2025 Forward Connor Brown was moved to the top line with Connor McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, while Corey Perry was moved down to the fourth line with Mattias Janmark and Vasily Podkolzin. Stuart Skinner is starting in goal for the Oilers. There were questions about whether Calvin Pickard would take his spot Thursday night after he replaced Skinner in net toward the end of Game 3, but Skinner remains the Oilers starter. Stuart Skinner is the confirmed starter for Game 4. #Oilers — Tony Brar 🚀 (@TonyBrarOTV) June 12, 2025 The Panthers lead the Stanley Cup Final two games to one. Game 4 is scheduled for just after 6 p.m. in Sunrise, Fla.


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Who is the Toronto Blue Jays MVP so far this season?
Article content WATCH BELOW: On the latest episode of Long Ball, Postmedia's Rob Wong chats with Toronto Sun Blue Jays writer Rob Longley about who the Blue Jays MVP is through their first 68 games and if Eric Lauer has locked down a spot in the starting rotation with his strong play of late.


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Pacers' Canadians Bennedict Mathurin, Andrew Nembhard the difference in stunning Game 3
A stunning comeback in Game 1, an expected retaliatory beatdown from a juggernaut in Game 2 and, on Wednesday night, an impressive Pacers win in the biggest game in Indianapolis since 2000. Article content What a fun NBA Finals it has been — with plenty still to come. Article content For the first time ever, a Canadian has led these huge games in scoring each time. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander doing it twice was expected. But Bennedict Mathurin? Well, not so much. Article content The Montrealer was massive in Game 3, scoring 27 points in 22 minutes, missing only three of his 12 shot attempts. Article content Mathurin had totalled 19 over the first two games, but always is a threat to go on a scoring binge, even if doing it to this extent under the brightest of lights seemed like a bit of a stretch. Article content While Indiana's stars Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam led the way, Mathurin and Aurora, Ont.'s Andrew Nembhard also were crucial contributors in the 116-107 win. Article content SGA might be the headliner and teammate Lu Dort probably is the best defender in the series, but Indy's Canucks have put their stamp on the series already as well. Article content Article content Mathurin, the highest draft pick on the Pacers at sixth overall, didn't even get on the floor in the opening quarter Wednesday, Indiana's worst quarter of the game. But he was the main factor in a 40-point, 61% shooting second for the hosts, hitting 5-of-6 shots for 14 points — twice as many as any other player. Article content Even against some of the NBA's best defenders (like Dort, Alex Caruso, Jalen Williams and Cason Wallace) Mathurin's aggressiveness was too much for the mighty Thunder. Mathurin got four layups in the second quarter alone, along with three free throws, and kept the Thunder off balance by also pulling up for a mid-range two-pointer and hitting a three-pointer. Article content Article content And he was there again to turn the tide in the fourth after a quiet third. In the final frame, Mathurin again went off , this time for 10 points. Article content Article content He got back in attack mode, driving into the paint and gave the Pacers the jolt needed to again stun the Thunder. Article content It was the fourth time Mathurin has scored at least 20 in these playoffs. Article content Nembhard was quiet statistically, but had a big impact in the game and only Haliburton played more minutes for the Pacers. Article content Team Canada is lucky to have two-way players like Nembhard, Dort, Dillon Brooks and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, who relentlessly come at you defensively, while also being able to heat up at the other end.