Ivory Coast's Wahi refused entry to Canada ahead of Germany World Cup tie
Striker Elye Wahi, under investigation for suspected match-fixing, has been blocked from crossing into Canada for Ivory Coast's group-stage game against Germany.
The Ivory Coast football federation said on 18 June 2026 that forward Elye Wahi has been refused entry into Canada for his side's next World Cup fixture, the latest turn in a tournament already shadowed by off-field investigations into the player. The federation announced the decision the same day, in a statement carried by BBC Sport at 11:39 UTC and elaborated by ESPN at 15:25 UTC, framing the visa refusal as the reason Wahi would be unavailable for the group-stage meeting with Germany.
The striker is the subject of an investigation into suspected match-fixing, a separate matter from the immigration question but one that has clearly followed him across borders. Canada's border agency has not, in the reporting available, given a public reason for the refusal, and neither has the federation speculated on one. Two things are now in play at once: an ongoing sporting-integrity probe, and a state-level decision about who gets to cross an international frontier in a tournament co-hosted across North America.
What is known, and in what order
BBC Sport's 11:39 UTC bulletin led with the federation's confirmation, citing the federation directly. ESPN, four hours later, added the match-fixing dimension, identifying the player by name and tying the visa refusal to the wider inquiry. The two reports are consistent: the federation says he is not travelling; the underlying suspicion is that his name has become a problem at the border. Neither outlet reported a statement from Canadian immigration authorities, and neither attributed a reason to the refusal. The federation's silence on causation is itself part of the story — it is not claiming, in the available reporting, that Canada acted on the match-fixing file specifically.
Why Canada is the venue, and why that matters
The 2026 World Cup is staged across the United States, Mexico and Canada, a hosting arrangement that puts the Canadian leg of the tournament on a different legal footing from games in the other two countries. Canadian border officials have discretion over who enters for the duration of a match window, and the federation's decision to disclose the refusal publicly suggests it considers the situation exceptional rather than routine. For Ivory Coast, the practical effect is immediate: a forward is unavailable for a group fixture, with knock-out implications depending on results elsewhere in the group.
The match-fixing question hangs over the squad
The investigation into Wahi predates the tournament and is the kind of matter that sporting federations handle internally in the first instance, often with national police and betting-integrity units alongside them. The sources available do not specify which body is leading, what matches are under review, or what timeline the inquiry is operating on. They confirm only that the suspicion is live enough to follow a player into a World Cup squad and, now, into the immigration queue of a host nation. That is the detail worth registering: the legal file and the tournament file have collided in public view, and neither is going away this week.
What remains uncertain
The reporting does not name the visa category, the legal basis for refusal, or whether Canada coordinated with football's governing bodies. The federation has not said whether it will appeal, request a reversal, or simply absorb the loss. The match-fixing investigation is described in both reports as ongoing, with no outcome and no public timeline. For a reader trying to read the situation cleanly, the honest position is that two distinct decisions — one by Canadian authorities, one by the football-integrity system — are running in parallel, and the available sources do not yet connect them in any formal way.
This piece draws on wire copy from BBC Sport and ESPN; the federation's own statement is the underlying primary source for the travel decision.
