John Herdman wants to remain as Canadian men's coach through 2026
'You'll not find anyone as passionate as I am about this program'
John Herdman wants to remain as Canada's coach through the 2026 World Cup in North America after leading the nation to its return to soccer's top tournament.
"Eleven years of work in this country and I've been pioneering for a long period of time, and you'll not find anyone as passionate as I am about this program or about these players or about this staff," Herdman said Wednesday. "You'll not find one as passionate who wants to take the country to that next level. And you'll not meet anyone that's experienced this moment with this team — and the learning that I'll take from this to take into the next one."
Herdman, a 47-year-old from Britain, coached New Zealand's women's team from 2006-11 and Canada's women from 2011-18, winning Olympic bronze medals in 2012 and 2016.
He took over the Canadian men in 2018 and led them to first place in qualifying in North and Central America and the Caribbean.
Herdman was especially proud of the way Canada played against Belgium.
"Thierry Henry told me this team played them off the park," Herdman said of the former French star, now an assistant to Belgium coach Roberto Martinez. "I'll take that, because if that's our foundation, we got a great four years ahead, and I can't wait to get after it."
Canada will co-host the 2026 World Cup with the United States and Mexico, staging games in Toronto and Vancouver, British Columbia. Canadian soccer officials hope this year's World Cup and the build-up to the next spark increased youth interest in the sport.
"It's those kids and those schools that will keep believing that Canada is a football country," Herdman said, "because they've seen that Belgium game, they've seen Davies score against Croatia and they know we are — I nearly said it, yeah, we're a football country. We're there. And you can't deny that. No one can."