8:34 am today

Canadian women's team loses six points, coach banned over drone scandal

8:34 am today

By Karolos Grohmann and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber, Reuters

Canada forward Nichelle Prince beats CJ Bott of New Zealand for the ball in the Football Ferns' opening match at the Paris Olympics.

Canada forward Nichelle Prince beats CJ Bott of New Zealand for the ball in the Football Ferns' opening match at the Paris Olympics. Photo: Arnaud FINISTRE / AFP

Canada were deducted six points in the Olympic women's soccer tournament and their head coach Bev Priestman banned for a year, global governing body FIFA said on Saturday, following a drone spying scandal that has tainted their gold medal defence.

The Canadian Soccer Association, which said it was exploring how it could appeal the six-point deduction, was also fined 200,000 Swiss francs (NZ$383,855) in a case that rocked the Paris Games' football tournament.

Priestman, who has coached the team since 2020 and led them to the Olympic title in Tokyo a year later, and Canadian officials Joseph Lombardi and Jasmine Mander have been banned from any soccer-related activity for one year for "offensive behaviour and violation of the principles of fair play", FIFA said.

New Zealand complained that Canadian staff flew drones over their training sessions before their opening fixture at the Olympics, which Canada won 2-1.

Following FIFA's decision, the reigning Olympic champions will drop to minus three points in Group A, with two matches left to play, and a mountain to climb if they are to move past the group stage.

The decision remains subject to a potential appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

"We feel terrible for the athletes on the Canadian Women's Olympic soccer team who as far as we understand played no role in this matter," said David Shoemaker, chief executive and secretary general of the Canadian Olympic Committee.

"In support of the athletes, together with Canada Soccer, we are exploring rights of appeal related to the six point deduction at this Olympic tournament."

Canada Soccer chief executive and General Secretary, Kevin Blue, described the FIFA decision as "excessively punitive" towards the players.

Canada are scheduled to play France, who top Group A on three points, on Sunday. They then take on Colombia, who like New Zealand have no points, on Wednesday.

Canada's coach Beverly Priestman is seen on the touchline during the Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup Group B football match between Nigeria and Canada at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, also known as AAMI Park, in Melbourne on July 21, 2023. (Photo by WILLIAM WEST / AFP)

Head coach Bev Priestman. Photo: William West/AFP

The top two teams in each group and the two best third-ranked teams qualify for the Olympic quarterfinals.

The incident caused Priestman and the other officials involved to be suspended by Canada Soccer, the sport's national governing body, and sent home from the Games.

The Canadian Olympic Committee removed Priestman on Thursday after her suspension by Canada Soccer. Assistant Andy Spence will coach Canada for the remainder of the Games.

Priestman apologised on Wednesday for what had happened and said ultimate responsibility lay with her.

"This does not represent the values that our team stands for," she said.

The scandal has led to angry calls for the Canadian women's team to be sent home from the Games.

Canadian sports network TSN reported that drone use predates the 2024 Olympics, with sources telling the network the team had also filmed other opponents' training, including at the previous Olympic tournament in 2021.

"CSA was found responsible for failing to respect the applicable FIFA regulations in connection with its failure to ensure the compliance of its participating officials... with the prohibition on flying drones over any training sites," FIFA said.

"The officials were each found responsible for offensive behaviour and violation of the principles of fair play in connection with the CSAG's Women's representative team's drones usage."

On Friday, former Canadian national team players Christine Sinclair and Stephanie Labbe said players had never been shown drone footage during their time on the team.

- Reuters

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