Where to watch Mexico vs. Canada live stream, TV channel, lineups, start time for international friendly
With both sides riding a recent high, Mexico and Canada clash in a September international friendly from JerryWorld in Dallas on Tuesday to close out this month’s international window.
Both teams picked up momentum-boosting results on the weekend, to put recent adversity to bed.
Canada, coached by American-born boss Jesse Marsch, downed the United States 2-1 on Saturday to give Les Rouges their second-ever victory over the USMNT on U.S. soil and the first since 1957. The result also puts to bed some talk of the recent drone spying scandal that erupted during the Olympics and caught the CanMNT in its vortex.
Mexico, meanwhile, pummeled New Zealand 3-0 at the Rose Bowl in their weekend friendly. El Tri have been mired in a years-long slump that saw them eliminated in the group stage of both the 2022 World Cup and this past summer’s Copa America, so any positive results are welcome regardless of opponent.
Mexico vs. Canada live stream, TV channelDate: Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024Time: 8:30 p.m. ET / 5:30 p.m. PTRegionTVStreamingUSAFOX Deportes, TUDN, UniMasFubo, TUDN app/website, Univision NOWCanadaOneSoccerFubo CanadaThis match will be televised in the United States in Spanish on Fox Deportes, TUDN, and Univision. All three channels can be found on Fubo, which is offering a free trial for new users.
A special promotion means you can also currently save $30 on your first month of Fubo! For a limited time, you can get your first month of Fubo for as low as $49.99. Stream ESPN, ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC and 200+ top channels of live TV and sports without cable. (Participating plans only. Taxes and fees may apply.)
In Canada, the game will be televised on OneSoccer, which is available to stream on Fubo Canada.
What time is Mexico vs. Canada kickoff?This international friendly match kicks off from AT&T Stadium on Tuesday, September 10 at 7:30 p.m. local time in Dallas, TX.
Here’s how that time translates across the time zones in North America:
 DateKickoff timeEastern TimeSat, Sep. 79 p.m.Central TimeSat, Sep. 78 p.m.Mountain TimeSat, Sep. 77 p.m.Pacific TimeSat, Sep. 76 p.m.MORE: Find out which games are streaming free on MLS Season pass from Apple TV each week
Mexico vs. Canada lineups & team newsStar winger Hirving “Chucky” Lozano had been out of the national team picture for some time due to poor club form, but with four goals and an assist to start the new season at PSV, his continued absence from the squad is now a major point of contention for fans.
After missing the Copa America due to injury, goalkeeper Luis Malagon is back in the fold and ready to be the starter in the post-Guillermo Ochoa era, but he did not get the start against New Zealand, as Jose Rangel was given a go.
Lynchpin midfielder Edson Alvarez has only just returned from his hamstring injury suffered in the Copa America and therefore was given the international break to rest.
Mexico projected starting lineup (4-2-3-1): Malagon (GK) — J. Sanchez, Montes, Vasquez, Gallardo — Romo, Chavez — Huerta, Pineda, Quinones — Gimenez.
Head coach Marsch has called in a full-strength roster for these September friendlies and started a first-choice XI against the United States. Stars Alphonso Davies, Jonathan David, and Stephen Eustaquio were all heavily involved as were many of their other Copa America starters.
The midfield spots alongside Eustaquio are the positions most up for grabs. Ali Ahmed had a spectacular performance against the United States and likely has earned another run-out.
Full-back Sam Adekugbe was forced to withdraw from the squad before the matches due to a mild groin strain, having also missed the Copa America with a calf problem.
Canada projected starting lineup (4-2-3-1): Crepeau (GK) — Johnston, Bombito, Cornelius, Davies — Ahmed, Choiniere, Eustaquio— David, Larin, Shaffelburg.
Mexico vs. Canada predictionScore prediction:Â Mexico 1-2 CanadaWhile El Tri put in a good performance against 94th-ranked New Zealand on Saturday, they have nothing from the last few years to prove they can repeat that strong effort against a well-coached and in-form side like Canada.
As an American who knows the U.S. national team system well, Jesse Marsch will be well-versed on how to attack Mexico, while his pressing system will be somewhat foreign to Javier Aguirre and the El Tri staff.
Canada is playing well right now, and even in a hostile environment like Dallas, they should manage to secure another strong performance and result against a team still finding its way.