Julian de Guzman has the opportunity to make history on Tuesday night â and so does the Canadian national team.
If the 34-year-old Ottawa Fury midfielder plays on Tuesday at El Salvador (8:30 pm ET), heâll set the all-time record for most Canadian national team appearances, with 85. In Friday nightâs 1-0 win against Honduras, de Guzman made his 84th appearance for Canada, tying Paul Stalteriâs all-time record; afterwards, he was pleased to be reminded of the milestone.
âItâs golden,â de Guzman said on Friday night. âIâve always looked up to a guy like Paul Stalteri; I played many years with him.
âTo achieve something like this, with the win, means a lot. It means the world.â
De Guzman was sure to emphasize the words âwith the win,â as he distinctly remembers the way that home draws (against Jamaica in 2008, and against Honduras in 2012) helped derail Canadaâs last few attempts at reaching the Hexagonal round in CONCACAF.
âWeâve been waiting years for this,â he said of Fridayâs result. âThis win at home is very special.â
Though the final score was tight, Canada certainly earned the victory, keeping their defensive shape to neutralize the Honduran attack, while also generating a few good scoring opportunities of their own, including a scorching first-half effort from de Guzman himself, parried away valiantly by the Honduran âkeeper.
âThatâs the philosophy Benito [Floro, Canadaâs head coach] has in place for us,â said de Guzman. â[Friday] was a pretty great demonstration of how we were able to put that in place and we were very effective in doing it.â
With their first three points secured, de Guzman and the Canadian team are now looking ahead to Tuesdayâs matchup in El Salvador. While de Guzman, who wore the captainâs armband on Friday night, can make individual history with his 85th cap, the team is also looking for some history of its own.
Canada hasnât won a game in Central America since 2004, a stumbling block thatâs helped keep them out of the Hex. But de Guzman, whoâs seen plenty of action around CONCACAF in his years with the national team, feels that this group could have what it takes to finally reverse that historical trend.
âWe have a lot ahead of us, and I think with this type of philosophy and mentality that we have, this is the only way to go and have ourselves make it to the Hex,â he said. âWe still definitely have a lot more to prove, but letâs get the win in El Salvador and then itâs there for the taking.â
De Guzman will turn 36 years old during the Hexagonal round, which begins next November. But should Canada make it, de Guzman hopes to still be with the team, doing his part.
âFor me, I still have a lot in the tank,â he said. âI definitely want to continue to play for another couple of years.â
When all is said and done, de Guzman could reach 90 or even 100 caps for Canada. But he doesnât place much importance on holding onto that record, whatever his final tally may be. For him, the ongoing growth and success of the national team program is of much greater significance.
âThese records are meant to be broken,â he said. âIf I could set something that could get broken by many other players in the future, it means Canadaâs doing a good job and weâre playing in the elite tournaments that we need to be.â




