6:39 am today

Canada withholds funding for officials after drone scandal

6:39 am today
Suspended Canada women's football coach Bev Priestman.

Suspended Canada women's football coach Bev Priestman. Photo: AFP

Sport Canada is withholding funding allocated for salaries of women's soccer coach Bev Priestman and two other suspended team officials, calling the drone scandal that has rocked the Paris Olympic soccer tournament an embarrassment to all Canadians.

Canada's team were docked six points in a massive blow to their hopes of retaining the Olympic title, while Priestman and officials Joseph Lombardi and Jasmine Mander were banned from any soccer-related activity for one year by FIFA.

"Using a drone to surveil another team during a closed practice is cheating," Canada's sport minister Carla Qualtrough said in a statement.

"It is completely unfair to Canadian players and to opposing teams. It undermines the integrity of the game itself.

"Given that the Women's Program receives funding from Sport Canada, we are withholding funding relating to suspended Canada Soccer officials for the duration of their FIFA sanction."

Sport Canada is in the process of determining the exact amount of funding to be withheld, the Minister's office told Reuters in a statement, adding the withheld funding will not impact the overall available funding to the women's program.

"There is a deeply concerning pattern of behaviour at Canada Soccer." the statement said.

"We must, and will, get to the bottom of this. This issue has caused significant distraction and embarrassment for Team Canada and all Canadians here in Paris and at home."

New Zealand's midfielder #08 Macey Fraser (R) and Canada's forward #16 Janine Beckie fight for the ball in the women's group A football match between Canada and New Zealand during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the Geoffroy-Guichard Stadium in Saint-Etienne on July 25, 2024. (Photo by Arnaud FINISTRE / AFP)

Photo: AFP / ARNAUD FINISTRE

Canada Soccer has said it was exploring how it could appeal the six-point penalty imposed by FIFA, which left Canada on minus three points in Group A with two matches left to play.

Former Canada players are supporting the team.

"Furious. Fuming. Sad. Heartbroken. These players don't deserve this," former goalkeeper Stephanie Labbe, who helped Canada win gold in Tokyo, posted on X.

"They've been let down by so many of their own people, not just NT (national team) staff."

Diana Matheson, who retired in 2020 after 206 appearances for Canada, gave her full support to the team.

"I stand with the players. I'm with you. Canadians are with you. Last game, next game, all the games, we are right there with you," she said.

- Reuters

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