Canada Soccer condemns 'unacceptable' pattern revealed in Olympics drone inquiry

web editor  

Canada Soccer reported that an internal evaluation conducted by a staff member of the women's soccer team at the Paris Olympics revealed a consistent pattern of unacceptable behavior and a lack of proper supervision in the use of drones.

Canada's women's team were engulfed in a spying scandal at the Games after New Zealand's team said their training session was disrupted by a drone flown by a Canada staff member.

Canada were docked six points in the Olympic tournament while head coach Bev Priestman, who steered them to gold at the Tokyo Games three years before, was banned for a year by world soccer's governing body FIFA.

Canada reached the quarter-finals where they lost to Germany.

"Our initial review of the conclusions of the independent investigator reveals that the drone incident in Paris was a symptom of a past pattern of an unacceptable culture and insufficient oversight within the national teams," Canada Soccer CEO and General Secretary Kevin Blue said in a statement.

Blue said Canada Soccer would reveal "key conclusions" from the report within a week and would outline the next steps the organisation will take to address the findings.

Peter Augruso, board chair for Canada Soccer, said they were committed to "renewing" the organisation following the embarrassing incident.

"We know that more needs to be done and change takes time," he said.