Canada fought back to earn a brilliant 1-1 draw against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the two sides’ opening World Cup group match in Toronto, courtesy of a late goal from substitute striker Cyle Larin.Jesse Marsch’s team went behind to Jovo Lukic’s effort in the 21st minute, the Bosnia and Herzegovina striker scoring his first goal for his country. Without their captain Alphonso Davies, who is nursing a hamstring injury, and with Jonathan David wasting a fine chance to score in the first half, Canada were up against it.But they improved in the second half and scored a deserved equaliser through Larin, not long after Sead Kolasinac, the former Arsenal defender, had produced a miraculous goal-line clearance for Bosnia and Herzegovina.The draw gives Canada their first point in World Cup history, with their record before this match being played six, lost six.Joshua Kloke, Amy Lawrence and Lukas Weese analyse the talking points from BMO Field…Canada start to deliver on Marsch’s promiseOne week before Canada’s World Cup opener, head coach Marsch made a promise.“I know the goals haven’t been coming,” he said after his side didn’t make the most of their chances in the final pre-tournament tune-up friendly, a 1-1 draw against the Republic of Ireland. “And I’ve been saying they’re coming. And I’m going to say it again… they’re coming.”In the 17th minute here, it looked like Marsch was going to be proven wrong. Jonathan David was unmarked and had a deflection fall nicely to him near the penalty spot. But Canada’s all-time leading scorer sent an ineffective left-footed shot safely into Nikola Vasilj’s arms.Jonathan David fluffed a first-half chance to equalise (Photo Agency/Getty Images)Canada then looked entirely too nervy at times. That glorious missed opportunity seemed to weigh heavily on their shoulders. Finish that chance, and the crowd momentum would have built to incredible levels.That wasn’t Canada’s only missed chance, to be sure. It looked like Marsch would have to answer for his team’s lack of scoring yet again.Until Larin, the man who once held the title of Canada’s all-time goal-scoring leader, stepped onto the pitch with 14 minutes of the 90 to go.With a remarkable turn and first touch in the Bosnia box in the 78th minute, Larin did as he has done 30 times before for Canada. He bagged a goal when his nation needed it.