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Kone’s horrific injury, red cards, full-time scuffle: How Canada vs Qatar happened

By Enitan Abdultawab

Canada celebrated the first World Cup victory in their history with a commanding 6-0 demolition of Qatar in Vancouver, but the result was only part of the story.

Jonathan David’s hat-trick headlined a memorable night for the tournament co-hosts, who moved closer to finishing top of Group B. Yet the match will also be remembered for a devastating injury to Ismael Kone, two dismissals against Qatar and a heated confrontation after the final whistle.

Kone’s horrific injury

The most distressing moment of the evening came six minutes into the second half when Canada midfielder Ismael Kone suffered what appeared to be a serious leg injury.

Qatar’s Assim Madibo lunged into a challenge from behind, sending Kone crashing to the turf. The midfielder immediately grabbed his left leg as teammates urgently called for medical assistance.

The severity of the injury became clear as medical staff rushed onto the pitch. Kone eventually left the field on a stretcher while receiving oxygen, waving to supporters as the stadium rose to applaud him.

The incident visibly affected the Canadian players, who struggled to focus on football afterwards despite their comfortable lead.

“It was a great game even before he got hurt, but I think after he got hurt, it was tough to focus on the game, even finishing the game,” Jonathan David said.

“We just wanted the game to end so we could all be together.”

Red cards

What had already been a difficult evening for Qatar became even worse as disciplinary problems mounted.

Homam Ahmed became the first player sent off during the contest, leaving the Asian side with 10 men before halftime.

Moments after Kone’s injury, Madibo’s yellow card was upgraded to a straight red following a VAR review, reducing Qatar to nine players.

Canada capitalised ruthlessly on the numerical advantage. Cyle Larin had already opened the scoring before David netted twice in the first half. Nathan Saliba, who replaced the injured Kone, added a fourth with a superb free-kick before celebrating by holding up Kone’s jersey in an emotional tribute.

A Mohamed Manai own goal stretched the lead further before David completed his hat-trick deep into stoppage time.

The treble was historic, making David the first Canadian man to score multiple goals in a World Cup match and the first men’s CONCACAF player to register a World Cup hat-trick since 1930.

Full-time scuffle

The final whistle did little to calm emotions after a bruising and ill-tempered contest.

As players gathered near the halfway line, tensions boiled over and members of both teams became involved in a confrontation that quickly escalated.

FIFA volunteers, coaching staff and team officials rushed in to separate the players as tempers flared following 90 minutes of physical football.

The ugly scenes brought a chaotic end to a night that had already featured a serious injury and two red cards.

While Canada will remember the evening as a landmark moment in the nation’s football history, it was also a match filled with drama, controversy and concern.

“It will take a few days to sink in, but obviously we know that what we’ve done today is historical for the country, our first win in the World Cup, and to do it in that fashion is really amazing,” David added.

Canada now need only a draw against Switzerland in their final group match to secure top spot in Group B, while Qatar’s World Cup campaign has effectively unravelled after one of the most turbulent matches of the tournament so far.

The post Kone’s horrific injury, red cards, full-time scuffle: How Canada vs Qatar happened appeared first on Vanguard News.

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