Canada makes quarters after 6-pt. spying penalty
Open Extended Reactions
Vanessa Gilles scored in the 62nd minute to give Canada a 1-0 victory over Colombia and send the team into the quarterfinals of the Paris Olympics on Wednesday despite losing six points in the tournament because of a drone spying scandal.
Canada will face Germany in a quarterfinals Saturday in Marseille.
Earlier in the day, the defending Olympic champions lost their bid to overturn the FIFA-ordered points deduction for filming an opponent's practice in France.
Canada, which won its first two matches but effectively earned no points from those victories, went into Wednesday's match in Nice in need of a win to stand a chance of advancing.
Canada had asked the Court of Arbitration for Sport to overturn a six-point penalty imposed by the sport's world governing body for spying on New Zealand practices ahead of their opening game last week.
Editor's Picks
- Canada loses women's soccer drone spying appeal4hESPN News ServicesCanada's Olympic spying scandal: Everything you need to know3dSam Borden2024 Olympic Games women's soccer: Bracket and fixtures schedule49mESPN
2 Related
The six-point penalty for an in-tournament violation of FIFA rules is unprecedented in modern soccer.
As well as the points penalty, Canada coach Bev Priestman, an assistant coach and a performance analyst were all given one-year bans and sent home from the Olympics
Priestman was the coach when Canada won the gold medal in Tokyo three years ago.
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Source: espn.co.uk
Comments
This article has 0 comment(s) , give your comment