18 Jun
Thu
•3:00pm
BC Place Stadium • Vancouver
12 Jun
Fri
•12:00pm
BMO Field • Toronto
18 Jun
Thu
•3:00pm
BC Place Stadium • Vancouver
24 Jun
Wed
•12:00pm
BC Place Stadium • Vancouver
13 Jun
Sat
•12:00pm
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
18 Jun
Thu
•3:00pm
BC Place Stadium • Vancouver
24 Jun
Wed
•12:00pm
Lumen Field • Seattle
Canada heads into this Canada–Qatar showdown with a clear identity: high-intensity football, aggressive pressing and direct attacking play – the DNA that took them back to a World Cup in 2022 and allowed them to compete, even though they went out in the group stage. Qatar leans heavily on technical quality: long spells of possession, patient build-up and clever combinations between the lines, a style that has delivered two recent Asian Cup titles. In their only previous meeting, a 2022 friendly, Canada won 2–0. In a World Cup group where only two teams go through, every 50–50 ball at BC Place could end up deciding who qualifies.
Canada heads to its third World Cup with key players firmly established in Europe: Alphonso Davies explodes down the flank and drives inside, Jonathan David arrives as a deadly No. 9, and Cyle Larin adds goals and intelligent hold-up play. Qatar, who made their World Cup debut in 2022, arrive more mature after their Asian success, driven by the creativity of Akram Afif and the killer instinct of Almoez Ali. Two rising projects collide in Vancouver: one out to dominate on home soil, the other determined to prove it can compete well beyond Asia.
BC Place, with around 54,000 seats and a retractable roof, traps the noise and turns every chance into a roar. The lower sideline sections feel like the best stands in Europe’s top stadiums – perfect for watching tactics and movement unfold. Behind-the-goal and corner areas bring you closer to the most passionate fans with solid views of the pitch, while the upper tier delivers a clean, panoramic view of the action. For World Cup games in Vancouver, current listings start at around €350–450 for upper tier and behind-the-goal seats, mid-tier areas sit roughly between €500–650, and prime lower sideline seats can reach €750–900, with all prices varying depending on demand, opponent and exact location.