Banned Coach Bev Priestman 'Heartbroken', Apologizes in Canada Drone-spying Scandal at Olympics

 Embattled Canada women’s soccer coach Bev Priestman - The AP
 Embattled Canada women’s soccer coach Bev Priestman - The AP
TT

Banned Coach Bev Priestman 'Heartbroken', Apologizes in Canada Drone-spying Scandal at Olympics

 Embattled Canada women’s soccer coach Bev Priestman - The AP
 Embattled Canada women’s soccer coach Bev Priestman - The AP

Embattled Canada women’s soccer coach Bev Priestman apologized to her players Sunday and pledged to cooperate with an investigation into the drone-spying scandal at the Paris Olympics.

The team was deducted six points and Priestman was banned for a year after two of her assistants were caught using drones to spy on New Zealand’s practices before their opening game Wednesday, The AP reported.

“I am absolutely heartbroken for the players, and I would like to apologize from the bottom of my heart for the impact this situation has had on all of them,” Priestman said in a statement. “As the leader of the team on the field, I want to take accountability, and I plan to fully cooperate with the investigation.”

Canada kept alive its hopes of advancing despite the sanction by beating France 2-1 Sunday after Vanessa Gilles's winner in the 12th minute of added time in Saint-Etienne. But the win still left the defending Olympic champion pointless and in need of victory against Colombia in its final Group A game.

Canada's players celebrated wildly after the winning goal - likely in response to the pressure the team has felt after a turbulent first week at the Games.

Priestman led Canada to the Olympic title in Tokyo in 2021, but her reputation has been marred by the scandal, which has raised questions about the practices of the country’s men’s and women’s soccer teams and how widespread the issue could be.

She also apologized to Canada as a nation, but appeared to try to defend her legacy.

“This program and team have allowed this country to reach the pinnacle of women’s soccer, and their winning of the gold medal was earned through sheer grit and determination, despite reports to the contrary,” she said. “I fought with every ounce of my being to make this program better, much of which will never be known or understood. I wish I could say more, but I will refrain at this time, given the appeals process and the ongoing investigation.”

It has emerged that a complaint against the women’s team for filming an opponent’s training session was made at the 2022 CONCACAF W Championship, which served as a qualification tournament for last summer’s Women’s World Cup.

The revelation is part of the fallout of the drone scandal.

FIFA banned Priestman — who had already been sent home from France — and two of her coaches and imposed a hefty $226,000 fine on Canada Soccer.

There was little sympathy from Germany coach Horst Hrubesch, who said Canada's behavior was “stupidity.”

Canada was looking into an appeal, but said they suspected a “systemic ethical shortcoming.”

Also Sunday, Canada sports minister Carla Qualtrough said the government will withhold funding “relating to suspended Canada Soccer officials for the duration of their FIFA sanction.” Drone surveillance of a closed practice, she said, “is cheating.” She called the episode a “significant distraction and embarrassment” for all Canadians.

Canada Soccer CEO and general secretary Kevin Blue said this week he learned of a possible drone incident involving the men’s national team at the recent Copa America.

He said it was his understanding that it did not have an impact on the competitive integrity of the tournament but would not offer details.

Asked whether men’s coach Jesse Marsch was aware of possible drone usage at that tournament that ended this month in the United States, Blue said Marsch was aware after the fact and has “denounced it as a practice to his staff.” Canada lost in the Copa semifinals to Argentina 2-0.

A CONCACAF official confirmed a complaint at the 2022 W Championship but offered few details. The United States defeated Canada in the tournament final in Mexico, with both countries earning a berth in the Women’s World Cup and Olympics.

The Sports Network in Canada reported other incidents of surveillance, including at the Tokyo Games, citing unnamed sources with knowledge of the filming.

FIFA declined comment when asked by the AP if the matter would lead to a wider investigation into drone spying in soccer.

The case is an embarrassment for the Canadian federation, which is teaming with the United States and Mexico to host the 2026 men’s World Cup across North America.

Meanwhile, Canada’s sanctions are likely heading for the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s special Olympic court in Paris.

Canada Soccer and the Canadian Olympic Committee said late Saturday that they planned to appeal the points deduction, which makes it difficult, but not impossible for Canada’s women to advance to the knockout round.

“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,” David Shoemaker, the Olympic committee’s CEO and secretary general, said in a statement. “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.”

Interim coach Andy Spence is leading the team, along with assistant Neil Wood and goalkeepers coach Jen Herst.

“There’s no training for this,” Spence said at practice on Saturday. “I’ve been asked to lead and that’s what I’m going to do to my very best capabilities.”

The Canadians won their opener 2-1 over New Zealand.

Former national team player Diana Matheson said in a social media post that “Canadians are with you. ... Take 6 points away from us? Fine, let’s go get 9.”

The scandal erupted in the days leading up to the Olympic tournament when New Zealand complained about drones flying over practice. Two team staff members, assistant coach Jasmine Mander and analyst Joseph Lombardi, were sent home.

Priestman initially removed herself from the opener but was later suspended for the tournament.



France Survive Paraguay’s Prickly Test but Warning Lights Flash

Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
TT

France Survive Paraguay’s Prickly Test but Warning Lights Flash

Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)

France arrived in Philadelphia ‌with the swagger of World Cup heavyweights and left looking like they had spent the afternoon wrestling a cactus, grinding out a narrow victory over Paraguay in sweltering conditions.

Their win was less a showcase of French elegance than a survival exercise, with Kylian Mbappe's penalty finally settling an ill-tempered contest that Paraguay had dragged into their preferred territory of physical confrontation and tactical disruption.

Paraguay offered something France rarely face: tight man-marking, bodies around the wingers and just enough fouls, fussing and provocation to make the favorites twitch.

It almost worked.

Rarely do Mbappe, Ousmane Dembele and Michael Olise look so short of rhythm. France ‌are used ‌to facing zonal blocks, rehearsed pressing traps and neat ‌defensive ⁠lines.

Paraguay instead turned ⁠the match into a series of physical personal duels, doubling up wide and denying the French attackers the time and angles they usually bend to their will.

The first half told the story, with France failing to create a clear-cut chance before the break.

Paraguay keeper Orlando Gill was required only to deal with a harmless low effort from Adrien Rabiot, while the excellent Matias Galarza ⁠and Andres Cubas closed central spaces and gave France ‌little comfort.

Miguel Almiron and Julio Enciso also ‌gave Paraguay just enough menace to make France center-backs William Saliba and Dayot ‌Upamecano work, even if that threat often came from scraps rather than ‌structure.

Yet Paraguay's plan carried a fatal flaw that became more glaring as the heat intensified. Their defensive approach came with almost no counter-attacking mechanism beyond long balls into space.

That left Enciso chasing hopeful passes while teammates sank deeper. It was containment ‌without release, resistance without a pressure valve.

Against a side of France's quality, that is a dangerous way to ⁠live. Eventually, their ⁠depth told when substitute Desire Doue forced a penalty and Mbappe converted, sending Gill the wrong way.

It was a brave Paraguay performance. Their resolve, similar to that shown in knocking out Germany on penalties, again made life miserable for a more decorated opponent.

Yet defending almost constantly in extreme heat, especially after an earlier extra-time ordeal, demanded perfection and one mistake was enough to cause their downfall.

For France, this served as a useful alarm bell. They found a way through, but not with authority. Paraguay tested their patience, their temperament and their ability to adapt to a style rarely seen in Europe.

Next come Morocco, comfortable winners over Canada, on Thursday, giving France little time to lick their Philadelphia battle wounds before another examination of their title credentials.


Ancelotti Hopeful of Raphinha Return as Brazil Plot Haaland Shutdown

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Brazil Training - Columbia Park Training Facility, Morristown, New Jersey, US - July 4, 2026 Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti during training. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Brazil Training - Columbia Park Training Facility, Morristown, New Jersey, US - July 4, 2026 Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti during training. (Reuters)
TT

Ancelotti Hopeful of Raphinha Return as Brazil Plot Haaland Shutdown

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Brazil Training - Columbia Park Training Facility, Morristown, New Jersey, US - July 4, 2026 Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti during training. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Brazil Training - Columbia Park Training Facility, Morristown, New Jersey, US - July 4, 2026 Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti during training. (Reuters)

Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti said Raphinha is ready to play a part after returning from injury in Sunday's World Cup last-16 clash with Norway, but acknowledged his side would have to find a different solution to replace the injured Lucas Paqueta.

Raphinha returned to training on Friday after two weeks out with a hamstring injury sustained during Brazil's group-stage win over Haiti. The forward is not ready to start, Ancelotti said, but could feature from the bench against a Norway side led by Erling Haaland.

"Raphinha is progressing very well," Ancelotti told reporters on Saturday. "He is still not at 100%, but he is available to be ‌on the bench ‌and to be able to play a few minutes or be ‌useful ⁠at certain moments.

"He ⁠recovered very well and very quickly. We are very happy with this because Raphinha is a very, very important player for the team."

Brazil will be without Paqueta after the midfielder suffered a hamstring strain in their 2-1 win over Japan in the previous round, leaving Ancelotti to reshuffle his midfield.

"We don't have a player in the squad with Lucas Paqueta's quality, so we have to replace him with another player," Ancelotti said. "The characteristics are different. Danilo is different from Gabriel, who is different from ⁠Matheus Cunha and Ederson.

"I will choose the player based on our ‌game plan, obviously taking into account the strength of the ‌opponent, but also what is functional to the idea we want to implement tomorrow."

Raphinha's possible return, alongside ‌Neymar's availability, gives Brazil added experience and invention in attack as they seek a place ‌in the quarter-finals.

But Norway pose a formidable threat through Haaland, whose pace and power have made him one of the tournament's most feared forwards.

"Everyone knows Haaland," Ancelotti said. "I don't have to explain to my defenders how Haaland plays. They know him better than I do because they have played against him many times.

"We ‌are focused on preparing well for the match, obviously including Haaland’s characteristics, which we must take into account because he is a very, ⁠very dangerous forward."

Brazil midfielder ⁠Bruno Guimaraes said the key would be denying Haaland the service he needs to decide the match.

"We have to try to prevent the ball from reaching him," Guimaraes said. "We will be attacking, but there always has to be someone glued to him so we don't give him space, because we know that with just one ball he can decide a match."

Guimaraes expects Norway to target Brazil from set pieces in what he described as a potentially cagey contest.

"They will put a lot of balls into our box and, at every corner or free kick, they will give everything to try to score," he said. "We trained a lot during the week to neutralize their strengths. It is going to be a very difficult match."

Ancelotti said the prospect of knockout football always brought concern, but insisted his players were ready.

"I am worried, as usual," he said. "But worried does not mean anxious. I am confident. We improved, and I hope we can improve again tomorrow."


Deschamps Hails France for Staying Cool in World Cup Win Over Paraguay

Didier Deschamps, head coach of France, applauds fans after the 1-0 victory during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Didier Deschamps, head coach of France, applauds fans after the 1-0 victory during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
TT

Deschamps Hails France for Staying Cool in World Cup Win Over Paraguay

Didier Deschamps, head coach of France, applauds fans after the 1-0 victory during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Didier Deschamps, head coach of France, applauds fans after the 1-0 victory during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)

France coach Didier Deschamps hailed his side for keeping their cool against an aggressive Paraguay team in heatwave conditions Saturday as the favorites reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup.

"It wasn't easy. They used every resource possible. It is maybe not the kind of football that brings people to the stadium, playing with that aggression, exaggerating everything," Deschamps told French broadcaster M6.

Kylian Mbappe decided the game with a penalty in the 70th minute on a sweltering afternoon at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, following a foul on Desire Doue.

Mbappe's goal was his seventh so far at the tournament, pulling him level again with Lionel Messi as the joint-leading scorer.

Before that, it had been a frustrating afternoon for Les Bleus, and a sharp contrast to their previous free-scoring matches at the tournament.

France had scored 13 goals in their four World Cup outings prior to this game, but on Saturday they struggled to make clear chances despite totally dominating possession.

Their most creative players -- Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembele and Bradley Barcola -- all found the going tough against a niggly Paraguayan team looking to cause another upset after ousting Germany in the last 32.

"We stayed focused on our game. It was difficult, they had lots of men behind the ball and they defend well," added Deschamps.

"Obviously the temperatures made it hard to play with intensity and without that they defended well."

- Heatwave -

The match was played in the late afternoon heat, with temperatures hitting 38 degrees Celsius (100 Fahrenheit) in Philadelphia as the city marked the July 4 weekend and the 250th anniversary of American independence.

Deschamps was also left perplexed that his team collected three yellow cards, while not a single Paraguay player was booked.

"I am not going to criticize the referee, but we finished the game with three bookings and yet there were a lot of things going on," Deschamps said in his post-match press conference, as he suggested he and his team were subjected to verbal aggression too.

"I won't criticize Paraguay. Every team can play however they want, but I could do without the insults.

"The most important thing is that there were no incidents at the end. But all that matters is that we have qualified."

Deschamps said he had to resort to using two of his strongest players to protect captain Mbappe against Paraguayan aggression towards the end of the match.

"We kept our nerve and that is an essential thing. It doesn't win you the game but it is important," he added.

"This experience will help us. After all, we have a lot of players who are playing at their first World Cup," he added.

"I wouldn't say it had been easy for us up to now but now we have had a different type of game."

France move on to a quarter-final tie next Thursday in Foxborough, Massachusetts, against Morocco, who beat Canada 3-0 in the last 16 earlier Saturday.

That game will be a repeat of the 2022 semi-final which France won 2-0, before they went on to lose the final on penalties to Argentina.

"Morocco are one of the best teams. We played them four years ago in Doha and they also got to the Africa Cup of Nations final," Deschamps said.

He will hope his squad recover quickly from the Paraguay clash, and that key midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni comes back after missing Saturday's game with a thigh injury.

"We have a few days now to recuperate. We have some tired players and a few little knocks too."