Soccer-No wild goose chase: Two dogs keep birds off World Cup training pitch in Toronto


Sally, 2.5 years old, one of two border collies hired to keep Canada geese off a FIFA World Cup training pitch, stands at a goal post at a soccer field at the Centennial Park in Toronto, Canada, June 24, 2026. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

TORONTO, June 25 (Reuters) - ⁠Border collies Ben and Sally have a special mission for the World Cup ⁠in Toronto: keeping the notorious Canada geese off the training pitch used by ‌visiting teams to prepare for their games.

It is hard work that needs to be done twice a day, five days a week, while being on standby if the birds decide they would like some football action ​at the facilities in Centennial Park in the northwest corner ⁠of the city.

But Ben and Sally ⁠are always up for the task.

"They're absolutely perfect work companions. They will work from (dawn till ⁠dusk)and ‌still be wanting to go in the evening when we finish work," said Gareth Williams, the owner of Border Control Bird Dogs, a goose management agency ⁠contracted for the job.

Williams explained why the birds, which are ​protective and sometimes aggressive — ‌with a reputation for occupying green spaces near airports and parks — are a problem ⁠for organizers of ​the global showpiece event.

"It's very important to keep the soccer fields clear, because goose feces actually carry disease, which would obviously be bad for everybody. It also actually burns the turf, so ⁠it would cause the playing surface not to be ​as good," he said.

Eight-year-old Ben is easygoing and a veteran at the job. He is always on the lookout for a goose.

Sally, who is 2-1/2 years old, is on work mode ⁠the moment she dons a hi-vis vest, says her handler Spencer Jones. But he has no complaints.

"It's our first year working together, but the bond between her and (me)... it's grown so rapidly, and we've become an awesome team working at FIFA (World) Cup," Jones said.

While the ​agency has been helping manage goose population at green spaces ⁠including cemeteries, hospitals and golf courses in the province of Ontario for years, the dogs have ​brought special attention during the World Cup.

"It's actually been ‌a breath of fresh air to have the ​chance to make people aware of what we do," Williams said.

(Reporting by Bhargav Acharya, Kyaw Soe Oo and Imad Creidi in Toronto; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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