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Soccer-Canada’s Kone feeling the love in supporting role after horror injury

By Thomson Reuters Jul 3, 2026 | 11:23 AM

HOUSTON, July 3 (Reuters) – Canada midfielder Ismael Kone felt like he had let the country down as he lay stricken on the pitch with a broken leg, but has remained around the ​squad to offer his support ahead of their World Cup last-16 ‌game against Morocco in Houston on Saturday.

Kone had emergency surgery following a challenge by Qatar’s Assim Madibo, who received a five-match ban, in their second group match, but was quickly reunited with teammates and continues to be part of their World Cup journey.

“I’m ‌just ​thinking … not now,” he said in a letter ⁠to The Players’ Tribune. “I wasn’t ⁠worried about myself. No one has to worry about me. I’ll do my rehab, then I’ll come back better than I ever was. That much I knew before they put me on the stretcher.

“But the ​thing I couldn’t stop thinking about, it’s how disappointed I was not to get to help our team on the field anymore, while ⁠we’re on this mission together. Where Canada ⁠football has been coming and coming and coming and now ​it’s here.

“That’s when this happens? Up 3-0, BC Place rocking, we’re 40 minutes ​to our first ever World Cup win. And now I’m ‌hearing the entire stadium go quiet, 50,000 fans.

“I just felt like I was letting the whole country down.“

Kone has been shocked at the level of support he has received since the injury.

“The amount of messages I’m receiving just ⁠from people all across Canada, who are behind this team, so they’re behind me, and wanting to make sure I’m OK.

“Or the things I’m hearing now ⁠in person, when fans ‌are seeing me on crutches at the games. Obviously ⁠I knew there’d be support, but the level has ​kind ‌of shocked me a bit,” he said.

Kone also revealed ​what he ⁠said to his doctors before surgery.

“Hey guys this is all I have. I’ve worked my whole life to be a footballer, and I need to get back out there for this team. So let’s have an amazing surgery. Operate like I’m your brother or son,” he told them.

(Reporting by Nick Said, editing ​by Ed Osmond)