Insights into the Global Game
Founded in 2020 (with a website refresh in 2026),
PSP Media is an independent Canadian sports publication
covering football through reporting, analysis and longform writing.
Ghana’s Black Stars still travel with the shadow of 2006 and 2010 behind them, but the currency of past achievement is losing value. Between injury setbacks, managerial flux, and unresolved tactical identity, this is a team heading into the World Cup under pressure from both history and expectation.
For years, Canada have been introduced to the world through Alphonso Davies. Through speed. Through possibility. Through the intoxicating feeling that one extraordinary footballer could drag a football nation somewhere entirely new.
Now comes the harder stage of growth.
Can Canada still look like Canada without him?
Marsch appears convinced they can. Much of his tenure has been spent building a team less dependent on individual brilliance and more reliant on collective conviction. The aggressive pressing, the relentless running and the willingness to attack games rather than endure them are all designed to survive the absence of any one player — even Davies.
Sweden were supposed to disappear quietly.
Instead, somewhere between Graham Potter’s appointment last autumn, a pair of gritty playoff performances against Ukraine and Poland, and a revealing friendly against Greece, something shifted. The noise around Europe’s established contenders drowned them out, but Sweden have begun assembling the kind of dangerous attacking identity tournament football occasionally rewards.
No one is suggesting a rerun of 1994. Not yet. But dismissing Sweden now would be a mistake.
The contrast between Kane and Dembélé reveals something larger than a comparison between two players.
It highlights how modern football distributes attention.
One player enters the World Cup cycle carrying the expectation of accumulation: more goals, more records, more proof.
The other enters with one of football's ultimate validations already secured.
One appears to need everything.
The other appears to have earned room for imperfection.
Rayan Elloumi, an 18-year-old Canadian-Tunisian winger, made his international debut in Canada with Tunisia. Blessed with pace and a fearless mentality, he navigated eligibility decisions, development pathways, and opportunity costs to embody Sabri Lamouchi’s bold vision for a new generation of players.