PARIS — Canadian soccer officials admitted in evidence to FIFA that spying on opponents was routinely done, for the men's national team as well as the women's team which has been punished for using drones at the Paris Olympics.
The drone-spying scandal threatens to spread beyond the Olympics, where Canada is the defending women's champion, to the men's team at the 2026 World Cup.
Canada is one of the 2026 World Cup home teams, co-hosting the 48-team tournament with the United States and Mexico.
Canada lost its appeal Wednesday at the Court of Arbitration for Sport against 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.
The urgent verdict was published just hours before Canada — on zero points despite winning its first two games, against New Zealand and France — beat Colombia 1-0 to clinch a spot in the quarterfinals. The team will play Germany on Saturday in Marseille.
While Canada's players revived their Olympic title hopes on the field, the damage to the country's reputation for soccer integrity was hit hard Wednesday — and risks further damage from spinoff investigations.
FIFA on Wednesday published its judge's document with detailed evidence to explain the sweeping Olympic punishments.
Canada's appeal to CAS failed to overturn an unprecedented six-point deduction in the Group A standings, a 200,000 Swiss francs ($227,000) fine and one-year bans from global soccer for head coach Bev Priestman, an assistant coach and a performance analyst who flew the spying drone.