Alphonso Davies, Canada’s captain and arguably its most important player, has logged exactly zero minutes at the 2026 FIFA World Cup. A hamstring injury sustained in early May has kept the Bayern Munich left-back on the sidelines through all of Canada’s group stage matches, and his availability for the round-of-32 clash against South Africa remains a question mark.
For crypto observers, Davies is a familiar name for a different reason. He was one of the higher-profile athletes to dive into digital collectibles, launching an NFT collection on Binance’s marketplace back in August 2021. That collection moved 50,000 tokens at 10 BUSD apiece, generating roughly $500K in primary sales.
A captain in limbo
Canada advanced through the World Cup group stage as Group B runners-up, a legitimate achievement for a program still building its international pedigree. But the accomplishment comes with a significant asterisk: they did it without their best player.
Coach Jesse Marsch has described Davies as “available,” which in coaching speak usually means something between “he could theoretically stand upright” and “we’re terrified of re-injury.” Marsch has yet to field Davies in any match, keeping his updates deliberately vague while the team’s medical staff continues fitness evaluations.
The NFT chapter that never got a sequel
Davies’ foray into NFTs in 2021 landed during peak mania. The $500K in primary sales was a respectable haul, though modest compared to the numbers some collections were pulling at the time.
No significant new token launches, sponsorship announcements, or on-chain activities tied to Davies have emerged in the past month, or really in the years since. The NFT market has contracted dramatically from its 2021-2022 highs, and athlete-branded collections have been among the hardest-hit categories.
What this means for the sports-crypto intersection
For investors watching the sports-crypto crossover, the Davies situation is a useful case study in what not to expect. A player’s on-field performance, even at the World Cup, doesn’t translate into NFT market movement when the underlying collection has no active community, no roadmap, and no secondary market liquidity to speak of.
If Davies does return to the pitch against South Africa and delivers a memorable performance, the most likely outcome for his 2021 NFT collection is exactly nothing. The collectors who bought those 50,000 tokens at 10 BUSD each are holding assets from a different era of crypto enthusiasm, one that the market has largely moved past.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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