Daniel Jebbison at FIFA World Cup 2026

Preston North End
Primary
Striker
Others
Forward
Daniel Jebbison is a 22-year-old Canadian striker who plays for Preston North End. This page covers his profile, personal information, club career, Canada record, transfer value, salary, net worth, playing style, and 2026 World Cup outlook.
Quick Answer
Daniel Jebbison is a 22-year-old Canada forward for Preston North End.
He is primarily used as a striker, with cover across forward.
His current club contract runs through 30 June 2028.
His reported weekly salary is ~£10,000, and his estimated net worth is ~£2 million.
Early Life and Background
Daniel Jebbison's early football path matters because Canada's current player pool comes from MLS, European academies, college routes, and late-developing professional pathways. Sheffield United, Bournemouth, and Preston built his senior pathway before Canada added his size and pace to the striker pool.
That route shaped the current version of his game. Forwards move from squad option to tournament option when their club minutes produce repeatable end product and sharper decisions. Canada need that development to show up in short tournament windows, where one role mistake can change a match.
Birthplace, family, and youth football journey
Birthplace and youth football context explain more than a date line for Daniel Jebbison. Canada players often build senior value by handling different leagues, travel demands, and tactical jobs before the national team relies on them.
Family support, early coaching, and weekly competition shape habits that remain visible at senior level: first touch, body position, scanning, recovery runs, and response after mistakes. Those habits matter when Canada ask him to play against stronger teams in a home World Cup.
Daniel Jebbison Personal Info and Profile
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full name | Daniel Jebbison |
| Date of birth | 13 August 2003 |
| Age | 22 |
| Nationality | Canada |
| Height | 6 ft 3 in (190 cm) |
| Weight | 190 lbs (86 kg) |
| Position | Forward |
| Preferred foot | Right |
| Current club | Preston North End |
| Jersey number | 19 |
| Weekly salary | ~£10,000 |
| Estimated net worth | ~£2 million |
| Contract end | 30 June 2028 |
| Transfer value | €6.00m |
Daniel Jebbison's profile starts with fixed football details: age 22, Canadian nationality, striker role, current club Preston North End, and market value €6.00m. Those fields help readers separate the player's public football profile from selection debates that can change during a tournament year.
The salary and net worth fields use public estimates, while the football section gives more weight to club rhythm, Canada caps, position, and the role he can perform in 2026.
Daniel Jebbison Club Career
Early clubs and development
Daniel Jebbison's early club career built the base for his Canada case. The first senior steps gave him match responsibility, while later moves tested whether his strongest traits could travel into faster and more tactical football.
That development arc matters because Canada need players who can adapt. A player who has handled different coaches, leagues, and dressing rooms gives the staff evidence that his game can survive a tournament opponent changing the rhythm.
Current club and recent form
Preston North End is the club setting that now frames Daniel Jebbison's 2026 preparation path. Canada need players arriving from real weekly pressure, with a role that keeps their core actions sharp.
As a forward, he must bring movement between defenders, pressing, chance creation, finishing, and runs into the box. Club form does not guarantee a Canada role, but it gives the staff a live picture of timing, fitness, and decision-making.
Canada's World Cup squad will need clear jobs around the headline names. Daniel Jebbison strengthens his case when he makes his zone reliable and gives the team a role that works against more than one type of opponent.
Daniel Jebbison - Stats and Performance
| Season | Club | Appearances | Goals | Assists |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-26 | Preston North End | 28 | 6 | 2 |
Daniel Jebbison's stats need to be read through his job rather than one headline number. Attacking numbers matter, but Canada also need pressing, channel runs, final passes, and the ability to threaten without constant service.
The club table gives readers a quick view of his current minutes and output. Canada also judge pressing choices, defensive recovery, spacing, and decision speed, so the numbers work best as a base layer rather than a full report.
Daniel Jebbison has 7 senior Canada caps and 0 goals in the profile data used here. That record shows whether he already owns tournament trust or still needs club form to push him toward a stronger 2026 role.
International Career
Caps, goals, and major tournaments
Daniel Jebbison's Canada career sits inside a competitive player pool built around 2026 co-host pressure. Every position now carries a clearer tournament standard than Canada faced a decade ago.
His senior record lists 7 caps and 0 goals. Those numbers matter because they show how much trust he has already earned in competitive windows and friendly camps.
Jesse Marsch's Canada need role clarity. Daniel Jebbison can help if his club form keeps matching the job Canada need from him: movement between defenders, pressing, chance creation, finishing, and runs into the box.
| National team | Caps | Goals | Tournament involvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | 7 | 0 | Senior Canada pool option for the 2026 preparation path |
World Cup Record by Tournament
| Year | Host | Matches | Goals | Assists | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | USA / Canada / Mexico | 0 | 0 | 0 | World Cup debut - upcoming |
Daniel Jebbison does not have a previous senior World Cup appearance in this table. The 2026 tournament gives him a chance to turn Canada selection into World Cup minutes.
First-time World Cup players can still matter for Canada. The squad needs energy, role discipline, and current club form around the experienced core.
Honours and Trophies
Daniel Jebbison's verified major honours table is not shown because the local data does not contain a clean senior trophy list for him. The section stays focused on his Canada role, club standing, and 2026 relevance.
That keeps the page useful without adding unverified awards. A verified trophy list can be added later without changing the locked player-profile structure.
Transfer News and Market Value
Daniel Jebbison's transfer and market section separates club status from market price. His current club is Preston North End, while the listed market value is €6.00m. Market value helps readers understand public football valuation, but it does not measure every part of his usefulness to Canada.
Contract context also matters. A younger player may carry resale upside, while an older specialist can remain useful in tournament football even when the price drops. Canada judge the player by the job he can perform, not by the market line alone.
Daniel Jebbison Salary and Net Worth
Daniel Jebbison's weekly salary is listed at ~£10,000. That figure should be read separately from transfer value because wages reflect contract terms, not resale price.
Daniel Jebbison's estimated net worth is listed at ~£2 million. Net worth estimates combine football earnings and commercial income, so they should not be confused with weekly salary.
Daniel Jebbison 2026 Style, Strengths, and Tournament Outlook
Daniel Jebbison's 2026 outlook depends on whether his club form keeps matching Canada's squad need. His strongest case is the role he gives the attack: movement between defenders, pressing, chance creation, finishing, and runs into the box.
Canada need forwards who can turn fast breaks and half-chances into shots before stronger opponents reset. The next months matter because Canada need more than names. They need players who can complete specific jobs without forcing the whole team to adjust around them.
The realistic outlook is selection competition unless he is already a fixed starter. Daniel Jebbison can strengthen his place by staying fit, keeping minutes at Preston North End, and giving Marsch a role that holds up against stronger opponents.




