Before kick-off: define the sample first
| Outcome | matches | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Canada wins | 0 | — |
| Draws | 0 | — |
| Bosnia & Herzegovina wins | 0 | — |
FactUsing the explicit scope of completed 2026 World Cup matches before kick-off, the teams had met 0 times: 0 Canada wins, 0 draws and 0 Bosnia & Herzegovina wins. This is not presented as an all-time record.
FactThe comparison direction on this page is fixed: Canada is the recorded home side, Bosnia & Herzegovina the away side, and 1–1 is stored in that order. A later meeting would remain a separate event record.
Personnel: how the starting XI changed
FactCanada established its tournament starting baseline; Bosnia & Herzegovina also established its opening baseline. Continuity is calculated from confirmed starters only.
FactCanada's opening baseline includes Maxime Crépeau, Alistair Johnston, Luc De Fougerolles; Bosnia & Herzegovina's opening baseline includes Nikola Vasilj, Amar Dedić, Nikola Katić. The names connect the continuity count to specific personnel.
The result: 1–1 and the decisive sequence
FactThe final score was Canada 1–1 Bosnia & Herzegovina. The verified scoring sequence was 21′ Jovo Lukić、78′ Cyle Larin. Score, sequence and line-up changes are facts; the mechanism inferred from them is labelled as analysis.
FactThe verification index for Canada versus Bosnia & Herzegovina fixes four fields: the 1–1 final score, the 2026 FIFA World Cup · Group B stage, the BMO Field location and 2 scoring events. Together they identify this match without borrowing context from another fixture.
FactNode 1: Jovo Lukić scored for Bosnia & Herzegovina in minute 21, setting the ledger at 0–1; Node 2: Cyle Larin scored for Canada in minute 78, setting the ledger at 1–1
FactCanada's location key for this match is BMO Field, shared by Bosnia & Herzegovina; Canada's 1 goals and Bosnia & Herzegovina's 1 goals belong only to this venue and kick-off record.
Why this result made sense
AnalysisCanada versus Bosnia & Herzegovina, 1–1: The score stayed level. Aggregated player data shows a shot gap of 5 and a pass-completion gap of 10.1 percentage points; the outcome reflects offsetting conversion rather than uninterrupted control by one side.