To compound that core of reliable talent, the manager has looked beyond Canadian borders to think about the future.
Part of the key to the success has been Marsch’s shrewd usage of the player pool. Canada is enjoying a rich vein of talent (Marsch refuses to call it a golden generation.) Perhaps the real key, though, has been taking a page out of the American playbook and exploring opportunities with dual-nationals.
It’s become a point of controversy in the United States, the polarizing pinching of talent that could play for multiple nations. Marsch has no problem with doing so - but admits that there are some non-negotiables. Chief among them: they have to be proud to wear the shirt.
“In their blood, do they really feel Canadian? And are they honored to be part of this? And, and that's been a lot of the discussion with all of them,” he said.
The process is exhaustive. Marsch had a few names in mind when he took the job. Some agents also reached out with pitches. And then there were the surprise ones.
Victor Orta was Marsch’s director of football during his 12 months as manager at Leeds. He got in touch with Marsch after seeing his Sevilla side matched up against a 6-5 forward in a preseason friendly. A year later, that No. 9, Promise David, was bagging goals for fun for Union SG in the Belgian League. After numerous conversations with Marsch - and plenty of chatter in social media - he pledged his international future to Canada in February 2025.
It has taken a lot of Zoom calls, too. Consider Gabe Biancheri, a jewel of the Man United academy born in Cardiff, Wales but with Italian and Canadian heritage. Marsch had conversations with both him and his parents to see if Canada would be the right fit.
“His dad is Italian, like, full of the accent and Italian and everything. And his mom is fully Canadian. So then talking to them about how they feel about it, what they think, and then also hearing what Gabe thinks,” he said. “These are fun conversations to think about the potential of what some of these young, talented people would mean to being part of the Canadian setup.”
Biancheri was also recruited by Wales, and hadn’t set foot in Canada until early June. But he had the heritage and cultural understanding. More importantly, though, Marsch insisted he would jell with the group - and deemed him the right fit.
The manager’s allure was enough. His current crop will back that up.
Veteran midfielder Samuel Piette told GOAL that Marsch has taken his game to another level. Jacob Shaffelburg, a workmanlike midfielder at Nashville, broke out at the 2024 Copa America, and gave Marsch all of the credit.
“Since Day 1, he's kind of understood what type of player I am, what I need to succeed, and everything he needs to do to help me get to where I should be,” Shaffelburg said.