Alphonso Davies becomes the first player to score for Canada in any world cup tournamentAlphonso Davies is already the finest male player in Canadian national team history.
Alphonso Davies does not want Canada’s only World Cup memory to be his historic goal.
Whatever happens to the 22-year-old Edmonton native in the future, he will be remembered for breaking Canada’s goal drought at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
And, regardless of what happens to the 22-year-old Edmonton native in the future, he will be remembered for breaking Canada’s goal drought at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
Davies, on the other hand, does not want his only World Cup highlight to be an opening goal in Sunday’s 4-1 loss to Croatia.
Even though Canada has been eliminated from the 32-team tournament, there is still work to be done in its final game against Morocco on Thursday (10 a.m. ET) here at the Al Thumama Stadium.
“This team came here to make history, and that’s what we’re attempting to do,” Davies said on Tuesday. “We came out great in the first game, played brilliantly, but we didn’t win.”
“The second game, I’m happy to be able to put my name in the history books and show our good side, show the quality, and definitely in this third game, we want something out of it. We’re going to go out there and keep playing the way we’ve been playing and show that we belong on this stage.”
Canada did not come here just to score a goal and leave, so the team was devastated when it was eliminated from the tournament with a game to play.
According to Davies, he was in no mood to put his accomplishment ahead of the team’s disappointment following the loss, which is why he didn’t stop and talk to the international journalists gathered in the media mix zone after his obligatory host-broadcaster interviews.
Two days later, Davies was more comfortable reflecting on the journey, which took him from a refugee camp in Ghana to Canada and eventually to the World Cup. He was happy to share the moment with his parents here in Qatar, who sacrificed so much so their family could have a brighter future.
“After the first game, they told me how proud they were of me,” Davies said. “And when I scored the goal, my mom teared up a little bit, seeing her son coming from a refugee camp to Canada and then go and on the world’s biggest stage — they were proud of me.
“My parents are people of few words, they don’t really say too much, but they really showed me they were proud.”