
Derek Cornelius has gone from the Vancouver Whitecaps to Ligue 1, and he started at centre-back as Canada opened their home World Cup. A left-sided defender now with Olympique Marseille, Cornelius gives Jesse Marsch aerial strength and experience at the back. See where he fits in our Canada World Cup 2026 profile.
From the Whitecaps to Marseille
Cornelius made his name at the Vancouver Whitecaps before taking his career to Europe, a journey that brought a loan spell at Rangers in Scotland and, ultimately, a move to Olympique Marseille in France. Establishing himself at a club of Marseille’s size is the clearest sign yet of how far he has come. The table below covers his main club spells in our database.
| Club | Apps | Tackles won | Interceptions | Clearances | Aerial duels won |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver Whitecaps | 45 | 15 | 17 | 133 | 41 |
| Rangers (loan) | 11 | 8 | 11 | 53 | 20 |
| Olympique Marseille | 31 | 17 | 15 | 54 | 32 |
What the numbers say
Cornelius is a front-foot, defend-the-box centre-back. He made 133 clearances in his Whitecaps years and added another 54 at Marseille, winning aerial duels at both, the profile of a defender who attacks the ball. The trade-off is a physical edge that brings cards — including two red cards at Marseille — but his willingness to step in and head danger away is exactly what Canada need alongside a calmer partner.
Derek Cornelius and Canada
For Canada, Cornelius is a first-choice centre-back, and in the opener he partnered young defender Luc de Fougerolles at the heart of the back line. His aerial presence helps Canada defend set pieces and crosses, a key trait in tournament football. For the full picture, see our Canada men’s national soccer team players guide.
Canada 1-1 Bosnia and what is next
Cornelius went the full 90 minutes at centre-back as Canada drew 1-1 with Bosnia and Herzegovina at BMO Field, winning nine duels, with four clearances, four aerial duels won, two tackles and an interception across the full 90, as the hosts rescued a point. See how the team rated in our Canada vs Bosnia player ratings. Attention now turns to Qatar on 18 June at BC Place — read our Canada vs Qatar prediction and the wider World Cup 2026 hub, with more on the squad at Canada Soccer.
A duel-winner who heads it clear
The clearance totals only tell half the story — it is how Cornelius clears that stands out. At the Vancouver Whitecaps, 70 of his 133 clearances came via a header, and the heading habit followed him to Europe, where roughly half his clearances at both Rangers and Marseille were nodded away. His aerial work has actually sharpened at the top level: he won 55 per cent of his aerial duels in Vancouver but climbed to around 65 per cent at both Rangers and Marseille.
He is also more secure than his physical, card-collecting reputation suggests. Across 31 Marseille appearances our data logs zero errors leading to a goal and just two occasions dispossessed on the ball, while his overall duel win rate sat at 60 per cent — an aggressive defender who, crucially, keeps winning his individual battles.
Derek Cornelius is a Canadian centre-back for Olympique Marseille and a starter for Canada at the World Cup 2026. He came through the Vancouver Whitecaps before building a career in Europe.
Cornelius started out at the Vancouver Whitecaps in MLS, then moved to Europe, with a loan spell at Rangers in Scotland before joining Olympique Marseille in France’s Ligue 1.
He is a left-sided centre-back, strong in the air and a heavy clearer of his lines, who reads danger and steps into challenges.
Yes. Cornelius started at centre-back in Canada’s World Cup 2026 opener, a 1-1 draw with Bosnia and Herzegovina at BMO Field.
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