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Tag: FIFA World Cup

  • Messi World Cup shirts will be auctioned. Sotheby’s thinks they could fetch record over $10 million

    Messi World Cup shirts will be auctioned. Sotheby’s thinks they could fetch record over $10 million

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    LONDON — Sotheby’s is to auction six shirts worn by Lionel Messi during Argentina’s winning run at last year’s soccer World Cup in Qatar and thinks they could become the most valuable collection of sports memorabilia ever sold at potentially more than $10 million.

    The auction house said Monday that it will put up for sale in New York six of the seven first-half shirts the Argentina captain wore in Qatar, including the one he donned in the dramatic win in the final against France.

    Argentina won the final, and its third World Cup, in a penalty shootout after a 3-3 draw at the Lusail Stadium, in which Messi had scored two goals.

    Sotheby’s, which was founded in London in 1744, will offer Messi’s shirts in New York between Nov. 30 and Dec. 14. The shirts will be on view at its New York headquarters in a free, public exhibition during the bidding dates.

    It is working with U.S.-based tech startup AC Momento, which partners with high-profile athletes to help manage their match-worn memorabilia.

    The current record for a game-worn item of sports memorabilia is Michael Jordan’s 1998 NBA Finals jersey, which sold for $10.1 million at Sotheby’s in New York in Sept. 2022.

    The current record for a game-worn item of soccer memorabilia is a shirt Diego Maradona wore in Argentina’s infamous 1986 quarterfinal 2-1 victory over England, where he infamously scored one goal with his hand, a goal he said owed much to the “Hand of God.” That sold for $9.3 million at Sotheby’s in London in May 2022.

    Winning, and lifting, the World Cup last year meant Messi emulated the feat of Maradona in 1986, the previous time Argentina won the trophy.

    A portion of the proceeds from the auction will be donated to UNICAS Project, led by Sant Joan de Déu (SJD) Barcelona Children’s Hospital with the support of the Leo Messi Foundation, to meet the needs of children suffering from rare diseases.

    The 36-year-old Messi, who currently plays for Inter Miami in the MLS, spent 17 years at Barcelona, winning Spain’s league on numerous occasions and the European Champions League on four occasions. He has won the Ballon d’Or, which is presented annually to the game’s top player, a record eight times.

    But it was with his belated triumph in Qatar that cemented his place among the all-time greats Pele and Maradona.

    That’s why his shirts are potentially so valuable.

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  • What’s in a game? ‘Dear England’ probes the nation through the lens of its soccer team

    What’s in a game? ‘Dear England’ probes the nation through the lens of its soccer team

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    LONDON — Outside of families, few relationships are as intense as those between sports teams and their fans. In the case of England’s bond with its national soccer team, it’s not always been healthy.

    James Graham’s play “Dear England” looks at the state of the nation through the ups and downs — and there have been many downs — of England’s men’s soccer team. From 1966 World Cup champions to persistent underachievers dogged by a rump of hooligan supporters, the team became a source of national anxiety.

    That changed under manager Gareth Southgate, who since 2016 has forged England’s most cohesive squad in many years. Best known for his low-key manner and three-piece suits, Southgate transformed the team’s fortunes and its culture, drawing new fans and instilling a newfound sense of pride.

    That redemptive story inspired Graham to use sports “to make sense of the national moment” for a country that has been plunged into political instability and forced to question its place in the world since the U.K.’s 2016 referendum decision to leave the European Union.

    “I think that there is a self-defeating tailspin we get into when we get in trouble,” Graham said, referring to both soccer and society. “As demonstrated in our political system right now. We keep doubling down on the failure.

    “I think we could possibly afford ourselves a healthier response to losing whereby you then reset and reform and reinvent — which is what Gareth tried to do,” Graham told The Associated Press during a break in rehearsals.

    Graham has become Britain’s go-to writer for state-of-the-nation drama with an entertaining twist. He turned backroom 1970s parliamentary machinations into riveting drama in “This House,” charted the rise of media mogul Rupert Murdoch in “Ink” and skewered a TV game-show cheating scandal in “Quiz.” Graham also scripted “Sherwood,” a TV detective drama steeped in the divisive legacy of Britain’s 1980s coal miners’ strike.

    Actor Joseph Fiennes, who plays Southgate with quiet intensity, said “there’s an absolute sense of joy which is at the heart of James’s writing” which lets the audience know “they’re there to have fun.”

    “And when you have fun, that experience can take you to places and get you to challenge ideas about yourself — identity, national identity, psyche, masculinity, mental health,” said Fiennes, whose screen performances include the title role “Shakespeare in Love” and an authoritarian patriarch in TV drama “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

    The play’s title comes from the open letter Southgate wrote to the nation on the eve of the European championships in 2021, praising his team and their role in forging “a much more tolerant and understanding society” and stressing the sport’s ability to “inspire and unite.”

    Graham frames it as a tale of redemption from a shattering moment in Southgate’s career as a player — his failed penalty kick in the semi-finals of the 1996 European championships that sent England out of the tournament.

    Fiennes said that made Southgate “the patron saint of penalty failures” – and gave him a deep empathy for his young players and a determinastion to make things better for them than they were for him.

    The psychology of make-or-break penalty kicks fascinates Graham, who as a 14-year-old watched Southgate miss that shot in 1996. He said it was the first time he felt “the universe saying, just because you want it doesn’t mean you deserve it, or doesn’t mean it’s going to happen.”

    “I love the metaphor of what the penalty represents, way beyond sport,” Graham said. “That moment when you have to make a decision and then there’s a consequence of that decision and it’s how you then deal with that failure or that loss. And that could be going on a date, going for a job. It could be anything. I feel like I’m constantly walking up to a ball and making a decision.”

    Graham says part of “Gareth’s gentle journey” has been to exorcise the “toxic tribalism” the team can attract. English soccer has become more family-friendly and its fans more diverse, helped by the inspiring success of the women’s squad, the Lionesses, who won the European championship in 2022.

    A year earlier, the men’s team made it to the final of the Euros, but did not get a fairytale ending. Amid outbreaks of fan violence, England lost the game — on penalties, of course — and the young Black players who had missed their shots received a torrent of online abuse.

    Not everyone welcomes the players’ decision to take the knee and speak out against racism, or supports player Marcus Rashford’s anti-poverty campaigning.

    And Southgate still hasn’t led England to a major trophy. The play ends at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, where – spoiler alert — England lost to France in the quarter-finals.

    That provides a perfect, poignant ending for a play. But Graham wishes it had been different.

    “I would probably sacrifice the ending of the play that we have for England to have won the World Cup again and just got rid of that itch that we can’t seem to scratch.”

    “Dear England” runs at the Prince Edward Theater in London until Jan. 13 and gets a cinema release across the U.K. and Ireland in January.

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  • Less than a year after Ronaldo career seemed in crisis, Portugal on the brink of reaching Euro 2024

    Less than a year after Ronaldo career seemed in crisis, Portugal on the brink of reaching Euro 2024

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    MANCHESTER, England — Cristiano Ronaldo is on the brink of leading Portugal to another major soccer tournament less than a year after his international career appeared to be over.

    It wasn’t clear what the future held for the five-time Champions League winner when he walked away from Manchester United last November and was then dropped by his country as it made an early exit from the World Cup in Qatar.

    His move to Saudi Arabia wasn’t exactly a guarantee of success, but Ronaldo has proven he is far from done. On Friday, Portugal can secure its place at next year’s European Championship in Germany.

    It will be a personal triumph for Ronaldo, who insisted his career wasn’t over after leaving European club soccer behind to join Al-Nassr last December.

    Not only has he been the catalyst for a slew of soccer’s biggest names, such as Neymar and Karim Benzema, following him to the Saudi league, but he has helped Portugal to its best-ever performance in a European qualifying campaign with six wins from six matches in Group J.

    A win against Slovakia on Friday will guarantee qualification and, if Ronaldo is selected, the chance for him to repeat his 2016 triumph with Portugal at the tournament.

    Things have also turned around for Portugal coach Roberto Martinez, who left his post as Belgium coach at the end of his contract after failing to advance from the group stage at the World Cup. He had been criticized for failing to make the most of the country’s golden generation that included Eden Hazard, Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku, despite leading the team to the semifinals of the 2018 World Cup and to No. 1 in the FIFA rankings — a position it held for four years.

    At the time of his appointment, one newspaper poll in Portugal claimed 75% of fans who responded were against it. But Martinez is on the verge of getting another chance to deliver the major trophy he never managed to win for Belgium.

    BRILLIANT BELLINGHAM

    Jude Bellingham continued his sensational start with Real Madrid on Saturday by equaling Ronaldo’s record of 10 goals in his first 10 games. That is the best scoring start for Madrid since Ronaldo achieved that feat when he joined from Manchester United in 2009.

    Bellingham has emerged as one of the brightest stars in Europe since the departures of Ronaldo and Neymar for Saudi Arabia and Lionel Messi for Inter Miami. He is now a key figure in the England team, which plays Italy at Wembley Stadium next week in a repeat of the Euro 2020 final.

    MBAPPE MISSION

    Things haven’t gone too well for Kylian Mbappe at Paris Saint-Germain in what could be his final season at the club, but at least he’s close to qualifying for Euro 2024 with France.

    PSG is in third place in the French league and last week lost to Newcastle in the Champions League.

    Mbappe, who has said he will leave the club when his contract expires, was initially made to train away from the first team as a result, but was then recalled. That led to renewed hope at PSG that he would extend his contract, but as it stands he will be a free agent at the end of the season.

    PSG’s loss to Newcastle also raises questions about its credentials to finally win the Champions League — European club soccer’s biggest trophy and one that Mbappe craves. The France forward has won several domestic honors with the club.

    With the national team, Mbappe won the World Cup in 2018 and finished runner-up last year. At least qualification for next year’s European Championship would give him the opportunity to win another major prize for his country.

    SPAIN’S WONDERKID

    Barcelona teenager Lamine Yamal, who was set to return to Spain’s national team with yet another record to his name, was dropped from the squad Tuesday because of an injury.

    The 16-year-old forward scored in Barcelona’s 2-2 draw at Granada on Sunday to become the youngest player to score in the Spanish league. He surpassed Malaga player Fabrice Olinga, who was a few days older when he scored against Celta Vigo in 2012. Yamal was already the youngest player to debut in the league, and the youngest to start in the Champions League.

    Yamal made his debut with Spain last month, and became the youngest scorer in a European Championship qualifier. He was also the youngest player to appear for Spain, and the hype surrounding the youngster has only increased since his first match with La Roja.

    Yamal has gained a more prominent role with Barcelona, and the same was expected to happen with the national team. But he will have to sit out the next two games after injuring a hip flexor while playing with the Catalan club late in the match against Granada.

    Spain plays against Scotland on Thursday and is at Norway on Sunday. Scotland leads Group A with 15 points, six more than Spain, which has a game in hand. Norway is third with seven points.

    Scotland can qualify for Euro 2024 by beating Spain. Scott McTominay warmed up for that match with two late goals for Manchester United on Saturday.

    The midfielder is a surprise name toward the top of the scoring charts in European qualifying, with only Romelu Lukaku ahead of him with eight goals. McTominay is in second place along with United teammate Rasmus Hojlund with six goals so far.

    ITALY’S REVIVAL

    Napoli’s loss appears to be Italy’s gain. Luciano Spalletti left Napoli at the end of last season after leading the club to its first Serie A title in 33 years and was later appointed Italy coach following Roberto Mancini’s resignation. While Napoli is currently looking like a shadow of the team that won the league title, Spalletti seems to have Italy playing like his former team.

    His first match in charge was a drab 1-1 draw at North Macedonia but the attacking flair that characterized Napoli last season was evident in Italy’s 2-1 win over Ukraine that got the Azzurri’s Euro 2024 qualifying campaign back on track.

    Italy moved into second place in Group C, above Ukraine on head-to-head record — with the return match scheduled for Nov. 20. The Azzurri have played a game less than Ukraine and England, which leads the group by six points. Italy hosts Malta on Saturday before playing England at Wembley three days later.

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    AP Sports Writers Tales Azzoni in Madrid and Daniella Matar in Milan contributed to this report.

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    James Robson is at https://twitter.com/jamesalanrobson

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    AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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  • Saudi Arabia formally informs FIFA of its wish to host the 2034 World Cup

    Saudi Arabia formally informs FIFA of its wish to host the 2034 World Cup

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    GENEVA — Saudi Arabia formally informed FIFA of its wish to host the men’s World Cup in 2034 on Monday in a bidding contest that increasingly looks designed for the kingdom to win.

    The Saudi Arabian soccer federation said it “submitted a letter of intent and signed declaration to FIFA to bid” in a vote that is open only to members of the Asian and Oceania soccer governing bodies.

    FIFA fast-tracked starting the 2034 contest last week after its ruling body also agreed to accept only one candidate for the 2030 World Cup — now an unprecedented six-nation, three-continent co-hosting plan in Europe, Africa and South America that removed those continents from bidding to get back-to-back tournaments.

    The Spain-Portugal-Morocco-Argentina-Paraguay-Uruguay project in 2030 will follow the inaugural 48-team, 104-game tournament in 2026 in the United States, Mexico and Canada. That allows the 2034 edition to return to Asia 12 years after Qatar hosted the 2022 World Cup.

    Last week, FIFA set tight deadlines of Oct. 31 to formally express interest in hosting and Nov. 30 to return a signed bidding agreement that requires the support of national governments.

    Australian soccer officials have shown interest in the 2034 tournament after successfully co-hosting the 32-team women’s edition with New Zealand two months ago, but they now have only eight weeks to produce a bidding agreement.

    Australia also may be short of the FIFA-demanded seven existing stadiums on a minimum slate of 14 soccer-suitable venues of at least 40,000-seating capacity.

    Saudi Arabia, which is preparing to host the 2027 Asian Cup, meets that FIFA criteria.

    The Saudi Arabian soccer federation also cited public pledges of support from “over 70” of FIFA’s 211 member federations.

    The aim is “unlocking new football opportunities at all levels and commitment to support the growth of the game across all corners of the globe,” said the Saudi federation, which has been signing working agreements with national and continental soccer bodies around the world over the past two years.

    FIFA members will have the final rubber-stamping decision on picking the 2030 and 2034 World Cup hosts late next year, though the 37-member FIFA Council chaired by president Gianni Infantino has already shaped the process.

    Infantino has built close ties to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on frequent visits to the oil-rich kingdom since before the 2018 World Cup.

    The Saudi soccer project has seen the sovereign wealth Public Investment Fund buy English club Newcastle in 2021. PIF also took majority control this year of four leading Saudi clubs which have spent massively this season on bringing players from European clubs, including Neymar and Karim Benzema.

    A Saudi-hosted World Cup, as in Qatar last year, likely would be played in November-December during the heart of the European season, and that will require dealing with influential European clubs and domestic leagues.

    The FIFA Council which agreed to the 2034 World Cup bidding process included nine delegates from European soccer body UEFA, which now has the 2030 tournament.

    The council was scheduled in June to approve bidding rules for 2030 but delayed that decision days after the Greek government said a speculated Saudi-led co-hosting plan that also included Egypt had been dropped.

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    AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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  • Fans cheer German basketball team’s return home after winning World Cup title

    Fans cheer German basketball team’s return home after winning World Cup title

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    Fans cheered Germany’s basketball team on its return home after winning the World Cup for the first time

    ByThe Associated Press

    September 12, 2023, 6:33 AM

    The German basketball team celebrates with fans after their arrival in Frankfurt, Germany, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023. Germany beat Serbia in the basketball world championships final in Manila last Sunday. Word in the background reads ‘World Champions’ (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

    The Associated Press

    FRANKFURT, Germany — Fans cheered Germany’s basketball team on its return home Tuesday after winning the World Cup for the first time.

    The team, led by tournament MVP Dennis Schröder of the Toronto Raptors, went direct from a long-haul flight from the Philippines to an event Tuesday morning at a sponsor’s headquarters in Frankfurt. A group of fans, including many children, and German politicians gathered to greet the champions.

    “I hope that we can get a lot of children and older people, move them to play basketball,” Schröder told the crowd as “We Are The Champions” played.

    In a country where soccer is the most popular sport, Germany’s World Cup campaign initially attracted little attention until the 113-111 upset win over the United States in the semifinals on Thursday.

    That unexpected victory brought momentum at home ahead of beating Serbia 83-77 in the final on Sunday. Even then, though, the team’s historic success had to compete for attention with the firing of the men’s national soccer team coach, which was announced in the final minutes of the gold-medal game.

    The next step for Germany is next year’s Paris Olympics.

    “This group of guys are the best 12 players, the best team, Germany’s ever seen,” coach Gordie Herbert said, “and they’re even better people.”

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba and AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • Luis Rubiales resigns as Spanish soccer president following unwanted kiss with World Cup winner Jennifer Hermoso | CNN

    Luis Rubiales resigns as Spanish soccer president following unwanted kiss with World Cup winner Jennifer Hermoso | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Luis Rubiales on Sunday resigned from his position as president of the Spanish soccer federation following weeks of fierce criticism over his unwanted kiss with Women’s World Cup winner Jennifer Hermoso.

    “Today, I notified the interim president at 930 pm, Mr. Pedro Rocha, that I have resigned as President of RFEF,” Rubiales said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter. “I have also let him know that I have also resigned my position in UEFA so that my Vice-presidency position can be filled.”

    “To insist on waiting around,” he continued, “and holding onto that won’t contribute anything positive, neither to the Federation nor to Spanish football. Among other things, because the powers that be will prevent my return.”

    Rubiales vowed to clear his name against what he called “excessive persecution.”

    “I have faith in the truth and I will do everything when it’s in my hands so that it prevails,” he wrote. “My daughters, my family and the people that love me have suffered the effects of an excessive persecution, as well as many falsehoods, but it’s also true that in the street, every day more, the truth is being imposed.”

    Rubiales’ unwanted kiss on Hermoso after the Spanish team’s victory in the Women’s World Cup final on August 20 sparked condemnation in Spain and across the world. The 46-year-old previously apologized and described the kiss as “mutual” – a claim Hermoso denied, saying she did not consent and was not respected.

    The Spaniard was provisionally suspended by global governing body FIFA for 90 days while a disciplinary investigation takes place. Pedro Rocha stepped into the role in the interim.

    CNN has reached out to RFEF but did not immediately hear back.

    The scandal involving Rubiales has triggered a crisis in Spanish soccer, with the government pushing for Rubiales to resign and RFEF last week removing World Cup-winning manager Jorge Vilda from his role. Vilda had been filmed seeming to inappropriately touch a female staff member during the Women’s World Cup Final. He was replaced by Montse Tomé, the first woman in Spanish national team history to hold the position.

    On Friday, the Spanish national prosecutor filed a complaint against Rubiales “for the crimes of sexual assault and coercion against Jennifer Hermoso,” according to a prosecutor’s statement, after Hermoso filed an official complaint with prosecutors.

    The complaint from the prosecutor’s office – part of the Spanish legal process – paves the way for Spain’s national court to launch a formal investigation into Rubiales and begin gathering evidence, which could lead to possible charges.

    Public outcry to the unwanted kiss has come from every sphere of Spanish society, including from politicians and sports stars.

    The coaches of Spain’s women’s team resigned en masse and more than 80 Spanish soccer players put their name on a statement supporting Hermoso, saying they would not return to the national team “if the current leaders continue” in their posts.

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  • World Cup medals at stake, with Serbia-Germany for gold, US-Canada for bronze

    World Cup medals at stake, with Serbia-Germany for gold, US-Canada for bronze

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    MANILA, Philippines — Serbia has a chance for its biggest win in 21 years. Canada is seeking its first medal at a major global tournament in 87 years. Germany is one win away from its biggest basketball accomplishment, ever.

    And then there’s the U.S., playing for bronze.

    The Basketball World Cup — a 32-team odyssey that played out in three countries over the last 2½ weeks — ends in Manila on Sunday with the medal games. It’s an all-European final with Germany (7-0) facing Serbia (6-1) for gold, and an all-North American matchup with Canada (5-2) playing the U.S. (5-2) for the bronze.

    “The world is good at basketball,” U.S. point guard and captain Jalen Brunson said Saturday at the team’s final practice of the summer. “Respect everybody.”

    Germany and Serbia have certainly earned tons of respect and will be on the medal podium together just as they were at the 2002 world championships; Serbia won its most recent world title in that event (as the former Yugoslavia) while Germany got what, until now, was its first and only World Cup or Olympics medal — a bronze.

    Germany reached the final by topping the U.S. 113-111 in the semifinals. Serbia beat Canada 95-86 in the other semifinal.

    “From the first day we got together this summer, we believed that we’re a special group and we can win against any team,” German forward Franz Wagner said.

    Serbian coach Svetislav Pesic was the gold-medal-winning coach in that 2002 tournament. Now 74, he has a chance to win the World Cup again 21 years later.

    “I don’t want to say it, but he’s toward the end of his career,” Serbian forward Filip Petrusev said. “He accepted the job to try to bring a medal back, so I think it means the world to him, means the world to us, everybody really back home.”

    There were 26 NBA players in the World Cup semifinals, 19 of them playing on the U.S. or Canadian rosters — and at least seven of those 19 guys won’t be going home with a medal. Germany has four NBA players, Serbia three.

    “Part of competition is you’re not going to win every time,” U.S. coach Steve Kerr said. “You’re going to compete, do everything you can to win, but part of competition is accepting the fact that there’s going to be some heartbreak.”

    There’s going to be more on Sunday for either the U.S. or Canada.

    The rivalry between neighbor nations officially goes back 87 years — they played in the final of the 1936 Olympic tournament, the U.S. winning 19-8 in a game played outdoors, in a rainstorm, on a clay court that was a muddy, sloppy mess. In senior men’s competitions, the U.S. is 21-1 against Canada; the loss was in the preliminary round of the 2005 FIBA Americas championship.

    “What we need to do now is bounce back and be excited for this next game,” Canada coach Jordi Fernandez said after his team fell in the semifinals, before knowing the Americans would be the opponent to decide bronze. “Me personally? I’m already excited. … We’re going to bounce back.”

    The Americans were saying all the right things Saturday on the bounce-back front.

    The mood was not festive, though wasn’t exactly funereal either. Kerr shot a few free throws before the team arrived. Assistant coach Erik Spoelstra was smiling and chatting with Anthony Edwards. Assistant coach Tyronn Lue was doing the same with Brunson.

    “It’s another opportunity to play the game we love,” U.S. forward Bobby Portis said. “At the end of the day, the dominoes fell how they fell. We didn’t reach the goal that we came here to achieve, but it’ll make us stronger. We’re still fighting for something.”

    That something is bronze, and it is the best-case scenario right now. Portis spent a long time talking with his Milwaukee teammate Khris Middleton after Friday’s loss; Middleton pointed out the silver (or in this case, bronze) lining of how at least Portis and this World Cup team still has a chance to play for a medal. Middleton was on the 2019 U.S. World Cup team that found itself playing for seventh place in Beijing.

    And the Americans fully expect that this game will be a big deal for Canada, which hasn’t medaled on a basketball stage this big since that slopfest on the clay court 87 years ago. Both the U.S. and Canada — as well as Serbia and Germany — have already qualified for the Paris Olympics, so the nations could be facing off again next year in France as well.

    “The United States and Canada, I think both of our countries will expect to see each other for the coming years,” U.S. guard Tyrese Haliburton said. “Seems like this is kind of the start of something that’s going to go on for a while.”

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    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba and AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • South Sudan to represent Africa, Japan to represent Asia in Paris Olympic basketball field

    South Sudan to represent Africa, Japan to represent Asia in Paris Olympic basketball field

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    MANILA, Philippines — It was a chant that Luol Deng waited years to lead. He stood along the side of the South Sudan locker room after their run in the World Cup was over, cupped his hands around his mouth and yelled the same thing, over and over.

    “Where we goin’?” he shouted.

    “Paris,” the players all responded.

    Deng’s vision when he founded the national team about a decade ago was to use basketball as a beacon of hope for his homeland. And his vision never seemed more real than on Saturday.

    A struggling country just 12 years removed from gaining its independence — making it the youngest nation in the world — is headed to the Paris Olympics as the automatic qualifier from Africa. Carlik Jones finished with 26 points, 15 assists and seven rebounds, and South Sudan rolled past Angola 101-78 on Saturday in the final game of the World Cup for both teams.

    The win, combined with Egypt’s 88-86 loss to New Zealand in a game that went final about a half hour later, clinched the Olympic berth for South Sudan as the highest-ranked African team in the tournament. And later Saturday, Japan joined the Olympic field as the highest-ranked World Cup team from Asia — clinching that spot by holding on for an 80-71 win over Cape Verde.

    “This team is a beam of light, like I keep on saying,” South Sudan coach Royal Ivey said. “We’re bringing unity, camaraderie, love and friendship to this country. This country’s only been independent for 12 years. To do this, for Luol Deng to put this together, this is incredible. This is incredible.”

    Marial Shayok scored 18, Nuni Omot — the reigning MVP of the NBA-backed Basketball Africa League — scored 17 and Wenyen Gabriel added 15 for South Sudan (3-2).

    Childe Dundao led Angola (1-4) with 21 points.

    South Sudan and Japan joined Australia (the Oceania automatic qualifier) and France (the host nation) as teams to have clinched spots in the 12-team Olympic men’s basketball field.

    The World Cup serves as a qualifier for seven teams — the two highest-ranked teams from the Americas, the top two from Europe, and the top finisher from Asia, Oceania and Africa — into the Olympic field. Those seven join France, and the other four spots will be decided in last-chance qualifying spots next summer.

    “I love this team,” Ivey said. “Man, this is a great feeling. This is a great feeling. I wish I could bottle this up right now.”

    Japan played host to the Olympics two summers ago and now has secured another trip to the games, though it was far from easy at the end.

    Keisei Tominaga put the hosts — Japan got to play its World Cup games in Okinawa — up 73-53 on a 3-pointer with 2:00 remaining in the third quarter.

    Cape Verde roared back. It held Japan scoreless for the next nine minutes, going on a 15-0 run to get within 73-68 on a 3-pointer by Betinho Gomes. Japan went 11 minutes without a field goal, but Joshua Hawkinson had the team’s only baskets of the final quarter. They both came in the last minute, one setting up a three-point play, the other a 3-pointer to help the hosts advance.

    Hawkinson had 29 points and Tominaga had 22 for Japan (3-2). Edy Tavares and Shane De Rosa each had 11 for Cape Verde (1-4).

    PHILIPPINES 96, CHINA 75

    At Manila, Jordan Clarkson wouldn’t let the host nation finish the World Cup winless.

    Clarkson scored 24 of his 34 points in a third-quarter outburst that turned the entire game around and the Philippines (1-4) rolled past China (1-4) in the finale for both teams. The win also ensured that the Philippines will have a chance to play in an Olympic qualifying tournament next summer.

    “We didn’t want our hosting to end without gifting the Filipino people with a victory,” Philippines coach Chot Reyes said in a televised interview after the national team ended a nine-game World Cup losing streak. “It’s storming outside, we’re basically playing for nothing, but they still came out.”

    Kaier Li, who goes by the name Kyle Anderson when he plays for the Minnesota Timberwolves, led China with 17 points. China was outscored 34-11 in the third quarter.

    NEW ZEALA

    ND 88, EGYPT 86

    At Manila, Izayah Le’Afa and Finn Delany each scored 27 points for New Zealand (2-3) in a back-and-forth game with 10 lead changes and nine ties.

    Ehab Amin and Amr El Gendy each scored 19 for Egypt (2-3).

    FRANCE 87, IVORY COAST 77

    At Jakarta, Isaia Cordinier scored 19 points and Rudy Gobert added 17 in his 100th national-team appearance for France (3-2).

    The Olympic silver medalists were eliminated from medal contention after losing their first two games of group-stage play, then won their final three games in Indonesia and leave the World Cup with a winning record.

    Nisre Zouzoua scored 18 points for Ivory Coast (1-4).

    FINLAND 90, VENEZUELA 75

    At Okinawa, Lauri Markkanen needed just under 25 minutes to score 32 points and grab nine rebounds while leading Finland (2-3) in its tournament finale. Pedro Chourio led Venezuela (0-5) with 17 points.

    MEXICO 93, JORDAN 80

    At Manila, Gabriel Giron scored 21 points for Mexico (2-3). Rondae Hollis-Jefferson finished with 26 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds for Jordan (0-5).

    LEBANON 81, IRAN 73

    At Jakarta, Wael Arakji scored 21 points for Lebanon (2-3). Mohammed Amini led Iran (0-5) with 22 points.

    ___

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  • USA Basketball overcomes tough test and rallies to beat Montenegro 85-73 at the World Cup

    USA Basketball overcomes tough test and rallies to beat Montenegro 85-73 at the World Cup

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    MANILA, Philippines — Everything had looked so easy for the U.S. at the Basketball World Cup. Points were coming in bunches, final scores were blowouts and stress wasn’t a problem.

    Until Friday.

    If the Americans were waiting a serious test at the World Cup, they can wait no more. Facing a 26.5-point underdog in Montenegro in a second-round opener for both teams, they trailed by a point at the half, didn’t take the lead for good until midway through the third quarter and still had a contest on their hands until the final minutes.

    They found a way in the end, winning 85-73 to remain unbeaten and move to the brink of the quarterfinals.

    “Great game for us … These games are going to happen,” said U.S. coach Steve Kerr.

    Anthony Edwards scored all of his team-high 17 points in the second half for the Americans (4-0), who got 12 from Austin Reaves and 11 from Jaren Jackson Jr. Mikal Bridges and Tyrese Haliburton each added 10 for the U.S., which didn’t pull away until late in the fourth.

    “It wasn’t the prettiest game,” Haliburton said. “But what FIBA games really are?”

    Nikola Vucevic had 18 points and 16 rebounds for Montenegro, which led 39-38 at the half. Kendrick Perry scored 14 for Montenegro (2-2).

    It was essentially a must-win for Montenegro, and it darn near pulled off a stunner.

    “We played well and we made it as tough for them as we could,” said Vucevic, who plays for the Chicago Bulls. “But in the end, quality prevailed.”

    The U.S. led 61-55 going into the fourth and tacked a point on to make it a seven-point edge — its biggest of the game to that point — early in the final quarter.

    Montenegro just wouldn’t go away. A 3-pointer by Nikola Ivanovic got the underdogs within 64-62 with 7:15 remaining, and the Americans couldn’t exhale until the final seconds — a far cry from the way the first three games of the tournament went, with points coming in bunches and the U.S. winning every game by at least 27 points.

    “It’s good for us to get one of these games,” Reaves said.

    Montenegro had a game plan and worked it nearly to perfection: Slow the Americans down by any means necessary — “our only hope,” Vucevic said. That included well-timed substitutions, sprinting back on defense, whatever it took.

    The Americans know they’ll see more of that going forward.

    “We’ve got to get stops and get rebounds so we can’t go against a set defense every time,” Edwards said. “If they set their defense, they’re going to pack the paint, load up and make us shoot. And I shot terrible from the outside today. I don’t know what’s going on but I’ll figure it out.”

    He figured it out only once from long range Friday, but it was a big moment. Edwards’ only 3-pointer came with 6:07 left, putting the U.S. up 69-62. It stayed a two-possession game, at least, for much of the remainder of the contest.

    “A small country like Montenegro, we played tonight maybe one of the best games ever,” Montenegro coach Bosko Radovic said. “We played such a good team.”

    TIP-INS

    USA: Kessler got earlier-than-usual minutes, in large part because of the success Montenegro’s big front line in the paint. Cam Johnson was not in Friday’s rotation. … Paolo Banchero played with a wrap on his right thumb, which he hurt on a pass in the Greece game.

    Montenegro: Before Friday, Montenegro had only a 4-4 record this summer — 2-1 at the World Cup, 2-3 in exhibitions leading up to the tournament. … Perry is a Florida native, someone who played four years of college basketball at Youngstown State (averaging 16.2 points) and briefly had time in the G League before spending the last decade or so in various international leagues.

    GAME 1

    Friday marked the first time the U.S. played the national team currently known as Montenegro at the senior men’s level. The U.S. beat the former Yugoslavia — made up of Serbia and Montenegro — in the gold-medal game at the 1996 Olympics.

    SLOW START

    Once again, the U.S. didn’t come out flying in the opening minutes. The Americans got down 14-4 to New Zealand and 6-2 to Greece to open those games, and they were in a quick 11-4 hole on Friday.

    USA: Play Lithuania on Sunday.

    Montenegro: Play Greece on Sunday.

    ___

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  • Japan rallies to beat Venezuela at World Cup, closes in on Olympic berth

    Japan rallies to beat Venezuela at World Cup, closes in on Olympic berth

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    Japan is one win away from getting back to the Olympics.

    Makoto Hiejima scored 23 points, Yuta Watanabe added 21 and Japan roared back from a 15-point third-quarter deficit to beat Venezuela 86-77 on Thursday in a classification round game at the Basketball World Cup in Okinawa, Japan.

    Yuki Kawamura scored 19 for Japan (2-2), which would clinch a berth in the Paris Olympics with a win over Cape Verde on Saturday.

    Garlo Sojo led Venezuela (0-4) with 20 points, and Nestor Colmenares added 17.

    A win Saturday would give Japan its second consecutive Olympic berth. The team played in the Tokyo Games two summers ago as the host nation, but fans could not attend because of restrictions related to the pandemic.

    FINLAND 100, CAPE VERDE 77

    At Okinawa, Lauri Markkanen scored 34 points and Finland (1-3) got its first win of the World Cup.

    Ivan Almeida led Cape Verde (1-3) with 17 points.

    SOUTH SUDAN 87, PHILIPPINES 68

    At Manila, Carlik Jones nearly had a triple-double — 17 points, 14 assists and nine rebounds — as South Sudan (2-2) kept alive in the race to take the automatic Olympic qualifying berth from the African region.

    Jordan Clarkson scored 24 for the Philippines (0-4).

    FRANCE 82, IRAN 55

    At Jakarta, France got 13 points from Elie Okobo and 12 from Nando De Colo to improve to 2-2 and now has a chance to leave this World Cup with a winning record.

    Rudy Gobert returned from an ankle issue and had nine points, nine rebounds and four blocks for France. Benham Yakhchali and Meisam Mirzaei led Iran (0-4) with 11 points apiece.

    CHINA 83, ANGOLA 76

    At Manila, Hu Jinqiu scored 20 points for China (1-3). Childe Dundao led Angola (1-3) with 17 points.

    MEXICO 108, NEW ZEALAND 100

    At Manila, Pako Cruz scored 27 points and Mexico (1-3) wasted most of a 19-point lead before holding on to top New Zealand.

    Reuben Te Rangi led all scorers with 32 for New Zealand (1-3).

    EGYPT 85, JORDAN 69

    At Manila, Assem Marei had 20 points and 14 rebounds, Ehab Amin added 20 points and Egypt (2-2) pulled away in the fourth quarter.

    Sami Bzai scored 18 for Jordan (0-4). Rondae Hollis-Jefferson played all 40 minutes, and had nine points.

    LEBANON 94, IVORY COAST 84

    At Jakarta, Amir Saoud scored 29 points and Omari Spellman added 25 to lead Lebanon (1-3) to its first win. Jean Phillipe Daily led Ivory Coast (1-3) with 21 points.

    ___

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  • How an unwanted kiss sparked a scandal in Spanish soccer | CNN

    How an unwanted kiss sparked a scandal in Spanish soccer | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    A week after clinching Spain’s first Women’s World Cup, the country’s soccer federation is at war with the very players who brought home the trophy.

    The scandal began just moments after La Roja’s historic 1-0 victory against England, when the head of the Spanish football federation (RFEF), Luis Rubiales, kissed midfielder Jennifer Hermoso on the lips.

    Rubiales, 46, said he made a mistake but that the kiss was consensual. Hermoso, 33, said she did not give her permission and felt violated.

    Fast forward eight days and Spain’s World Cup winners are refusing to play. The country’s football federation is threatening legal action. And Rubiales is vowing to “fight to the end.”

    The RFEF called regional federations to convene for an “extraordinary and urgent” meeting on Monday to address the current situation after Rubiales was provisionally suspended by FIFA, soccer’s world governing body, over the weekend.

    Here’s what you need to know.

    After sealing their victory on August 20, the Spanish squad lined up to receive their medals and congratulations from major political and football figures.

    Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA, was first in line. Next to him stood Spanish Queen Letizia and Princess Sofia. Rubiales stood to the younger royal’s left. He was followed by Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, among others.

    The medal ceremony began, and one-by-one, the champions were honored by the delegation. Infantino handed each player their medals. The royals then embraced them. Rubiales greeted many of them with a big bear hug and a kiss on the cheek, even lifting some into the air.

    The beginning of Rubiales and Hermoso’s encounter, however, was not caught on the live television feed. After showing one of the Spanish players kissing the Women’s World Cup Trophy, the broadcast cut to Rubiales hugging Hermoso. Rubiales’ arms are around Hermoso’s shoulders, with Hermoso’s around the top of Rubiales’ back. The pair briefly rock back and forth slightly, and Rubiales appears to say something in Hermoso’s ear.

    Rubiales puts his hands on the back of Hermoso’s head. He kisses her on the lips, then slaps her twice on the back before she continues down the procession.

    What Rubiales and Hermoso are saying

    Hermoso said at no point did she consent to the kiss.

    “I felt vulnerable and a victim of an impulse-driven, sexist, out of place act without any consent on my part,” she said on social media. “Simply put I was not respected.”

    Rubiales admitted he made a mistake on Monday, the day after Spain’s win, but later defended his actions. In a defiant speech on Friday, he said the kiss was “spontaneous, mutual, euphoric and (done) with consent.”

    He added that he would not resign and said he would “fight to the end.”

    Rubiales has been heavily criticized for his actions and could lose his job.

    FIFA has opened disciplinary proceedings against Rubiales and provisionally suspended him from all football-related activities. Spanish players’ union FUTPRO called for Rubiales to be punished after the kiss, while global players’ union FIFPRO called for “immediate disciplinary action” following Rubiales’ Friday speech.

    The president of Spain’s High Council of Sport, the Spanish government agency that oversees sporting activities, said the council would look to suspend Rubiales as quickly as it could while still allowing him proper due process.

    In response to Rubiales’ decision to stay, the RFEF vice president Rafael del Amo and 11 members of the Spanish national women’s soccer program have resigned.

    Players of the Pachuca women's club hold up a banner with a message that reads in Spanish:

    Players have also threatened to boycott competitions should Rubiales stay in his post.

    Hermoso and her teammates on Spain’s World Cup winning squad said they would not play again for the country until Rubiales has been removed from his position. Their coach, Jorge Vilda – who himself is embroiled in a controversy after video emerged of him appearing to inappropriately touch a female staff member during the World Cup final – called Rubiales’ behavior “improper.”

    On the men’s side, striker Borja Iglesia said on social media he would not play for the national team “until things change.” Men’s World Cup winners Iker Casillas and Andres Iniesta condemned Rubiales, as has current men’s team coach Luis de la Fuente. Other teams have showed solidarity.

    Atletico Madrid players line up for a photograph in support of Jennifer Hermoso in Madrid on Saturday.
    Players of Sevilla wear t-shirts in support for Jennifer Hermoso on Saturday in Seville, Spain.

    Politicians have weighed in as well.

    Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Rubiales’ initial apology was “unacceptable” and “not enough,” while a deputy prime minister, Yolanda Diaz, called for Rubiales to resign.

    The RFEF, however, is standing behind Rubiales. It accused Hermoso of lying about the incident and threatened legal action against her and others.

    By backing Rubiales, the Spanish football federation has opened a major rift between itself and its three most important partners – FIFA, the Spanish government and the unions that represent Spanish football players.

    On Monday, the presidents of Spain’s regional soccer federations joined calls for Rubiales’ resignation.

    “After the recent events and the unacceptable behaviours that have seriously damaged the image of Spanish football, the presidents request that, immediately, Mr. Luis Rubiales submits his resignation as president of the RFEF [Royal Spanish Football Federation],” the RFEF said on behalf of the committee of regional presidents, in a statement published following an emergency meeting,

    All 19 regional presidents are unanimously supporting the interim RFEF president, Pedro Rocha, “to lead a new stage of dialogue and reconciliation with all of the football institutions,” the statement read. Rocha replaced Rubiales after his FIFA suspension.

    Whether Rubiales can survive the pressure for him to step down remains to be seen.

    Along with the mounting pressure to resign, Rubiales also faces an investigation that could end in sexual aggression charges from Spanish prosecutors.

    The incident has shed a light on the issues of sexism and machismo in Spain, both of which the players’ union has vowed to fight back against.

    “The union is working so that acts like the ones we have seen never go unpunished, are sanctioned and the pertinent measures are adopted to protect the football players from actions that we believe are unacceptable,” the union said Wednesday.

    “It is necessary to continue advancing in the fight for equality, a fight that our players have led with determination, taking us to the position in which we find ourselves today.”

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  • ‘You gave me strength’: Spain’s Carmona learns of father’s death after firing team to World Cup victory | CNN

    ‘You gave me strength’: Spain’s Carmona learns of father’s death after firing team to World Cup victory | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Within the span of hours this weekend, Spain’s Women’s World Cup hero Olga Carmona experienced a career high and a deep loss, the latter of which was kept from her so she could focus on Sunday’s final.

    Carmona, who scored Spain’s winning goal against England, learned of her father’s death after the game, the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) said in a statement.

    “The RFEF deeply regrets to report the death of Olga Carmona’s father. The soccer player learned the sad news after the World Cup final. We send our most sincere hugs to Olga and her family in a moment of deep pain. We love you, Olga,” RFEF added.

    In an emotionally charged post on X, formally known as Twitter, Carmona likened her father to a star looking down on her while she played the final.

    “And without being aware of it, I had my Star before kick off,” she wrote. “I know you gave me the strength to accomplish something truly unique. I know you were watching me tonight and that you are proud of me. Rest in peace, dad.”

    Carmona posted another emotional tribute on X on Monday, the day after the World Cup final.

    “I don’t have the words to thank all of your love,” the post read. “Yesterday was the best and worst day of my life.

    “I know you’d want me to enjoy this historic moment – because of that I’ll be with my teammates, so that wherever you are, you’ll know that this star is also yours, Dad.”

    Carmona’s club, Real Madrid, also issued a statement expressing its condolences.

    “Real Madrid C.F., the president and the Board of Directors are deeply saddened by the passing of the father of our player Olga Carmona. Real Madrid would like to extend our condolences and heartfelt sympathy to Olga, her family and all her loved ones. May he rest in peace,” the statement read.

    Carmona’s 29th-minute strike proved to be the winner, making La Roja only the second country, after Germany, to win both the men’s and women’s World Cups.

    Following the goal, Carmona lifted her shirt in celebration. After the match, she explained the reason she did that was to honor the mother of her best friend who recently passed away.

    Carmona’s goal delivered Spain the win against the odds. That La Roja triumphed against the reigning European champion and pre-match favorite despite the disputes and divisions that have clouded the national team throughout the tournament makes this achievement extraordinary.

    Last year, 15 Spanish players declared themselves unavailable for selection, saying they were unhappy with the training methods of head coach Jorge Vilda, who had described the situation at the time as a “world embarrassment.”

    Only three of those 15 players who had written letters to RFEF last year, saying the “situation” within the national team was affecting their “emotional state” and health, were selected for the World Cup squad.

    The country is now the best in the world, but the international futures of those exiled players remain unclear. With victory, the questions surrounding the national set-up, of whether or how the dispute can be resolved, do not disappear.

    If the off-pitch issues can be resolved, Spain’s future shines bright, because now, incredibly, the Iberian nation is a Women’s World Cup winner at Under-17, Under-20 and senior level.

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  • Backlash After Spanish Football Exec Kisses World Cup Player During Medal Ceremony

    Backlash After Spanish Football Exec Kisses World Cup Player During Medal Ceremony

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    Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) President Luis Rubiales is under fire for kissing Spanish forward Jennifer Hermoso on the lips during the medal ceremony celebrating the team’s Women’s World Cup victory.

    After Spain took down England, 1-0, players queued onstage in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday to receive their medals and congratulations from officials.

    When Hermoso reached Rubiales, he embraced her, grabbed her face and kissed her, video of the moment showed.

    “Hey, but I didn’t like it,” Hermoso later said of the kiss in an Instagram Live as she and teammates celebrated in the locker room, according to a recording of the livestream posted online that has been translated from Spanish.

    However, in a statement given to media later by the RFEF, Hermoso described it as a “natural gesture of affection.”

    “It was a totally spontaneous mutual gesture because of the immense joy that winning a World Cup brings,” the statement attributed to Hermoso said, according to a translation. “The president and I have a great relationship, his behavior with all of us has been outstanding and it was a natural gesture of affection and gratitude.

    “We have won a World Cup and we are not going to lose sight of what is important,” the statement said.

    Rubiales greets player Aitana Bonmati of Spain during the medal ceremony. The Spanish soccer exec kissed several players on their cheeks.

    Catherine Ivill via Getty Images

    Rubiales rejected charges that the kiss was inappropriate, telling Spain’s Radio Marca that people describing it as such were “idiots.”

    “When two people have an unimportant gesture of affection, we can’t listen to idiocy,” he said.

    On social media, Rubiales’ actions were widely criticized.

    Craig Foster, a human rights activist and former Australian national soccer player, called for Rubiales to be “stood down immediately.”

    “Women in sport are daily subject to an extreme power differential, objectification, harassment, sexual abuse and an absence of agency and power. This is horrific,” he posted.

    Telegraph Women’s Sport reporter Molly McElwee said it was sickening.

    “For Luis Rubiales to do this to Jenni Hermoso during the proudest moment of her career, stood next to Spain’s royal family, and with the world’s media watching, makes me sick,” she wrote. “The complete audacity. Reminder that this is the leader of a federation that failed to back its players.”

    Rubiales also held and embraced other players as they received their medals, kissing some of them on their cheeks.

    Spanish TV presenter Claudya Carolina slammed Rubiales’ behavior as “unpresentable” and accused him of touching the players “excessively.”

    Spain’s World Cup victory follows a tumultuous year for the team, which revolted against its coach, Jorge Vilda, last fall.

    Fifteen players on the team said last year they would not play under Vilda, whose management and coaching style they said had negative affects on their emotional state and their health.

    The RFEF backed Vilda, who stayed on as coach. The players who rebuked him were forced to apologize as a condition of their return to the team.

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  • Sarina Wiegman: How the Dutchwoman turned England into a winning ‘machine’ | CNN

    Sarina Wiegman: How the Dutchwoman turned England into a winning ‘machine’ | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    The Lionesses had seemingly lost their ability to hunt.

    England had been on a poor run of form, at one stage losing seven out of 11 matches, and head coach Phil Neville was winding down the days until his exit.

    It was announced that Neville’s successor was to be the highly successful Netherlands head coach Sarina Wiegman, who had led her home nation to back-to-back major tournament finals, including a European Championship win in 2017.

    While success was always a possibility for this talented group of footballers, nobody could have imagined what was to come under Wiegman’s leadership.

    In the last major tournament before Wiegman took over, England crashed out in heartbreaking circumstances.

    In a tight World Cup semifinal game against the US – the eventual champion – England captain Steph Houghton missed a crucial late penalty as the Lionesses fell to a 2-1 defeat.

    It was the third major tournament in a row that England had fallen at this stage. With expectations and pressure growing, and with the European Championship on home soil on the horizon, England appointed a coach who had the crucial knowhow in getting a team over the line in tournament football.

    “She’s a proven winner and we’re confident she can take England to the next level, giving us the best possible opportunity of achieving our ambition to win a major tournament,” said Mark Bullingham, the English Football Association’s CEO, when Wiegman was appointed two years ago.

    While the England players’ abilities speak for themselves, Wiegman has helped to instill a formidable team mindset in the group through some “non-negotiable” philosophies.

    “I think in a team you always have to do your best,” she told CNN before the start of the Women’s World Cup. “That doesn’t mean you always have to run the fastest. That’s something different.

    “It’s doing what’s best for the team and what’s demanded of you, on and off the pitch.

    “When you start doing things on your own in a team sport, that’s really hard. You’re not going to reach the highest potential.”

    Heading into the Covid-19 delayed European Championship a year later, England was on a brilliant run of form of free-flowing soccer and goals aplenty.

    That form continued throughout the tournament, with the Lionesses scoring goals for fun on the way to a historic final at Wembley against Germany.

    In a tense game against an experienced Germany side, the Lionesses sealed a 2-1 win to end England’s 56-year-wait for a senior international soccer trophy.

    Wiegman helped end England's long wait for a major trophy.

    After the success of the Euros, England was among the favorites heading into the World Cup, although with injuries piling up pre-tournament Wiegman has had to find ways to rebuild her squad without crucial players.

    England captain Leah Williamson suffered an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in April, joining another star player from the winning Euros squad – Beth Mead – in suffering the same injury.

    “I’m a pretty positive person but, of course, I also have feelings,” Wiegman told The Independent ahead of Sunday’s final. “I feel very privileged to work with this team. It has been so great.

    “You have some setbacks with some players that got injured, which was very sad for them, but then you have to switch and say: ‘OK, this is the group of players we think are the best and this is the team now. We are going to go to the World Cup with them.’”

    With these key players out of the squad, Wiegman has reinvented the side throughout the World Cup and has implemented a system where the team can fluidly switch between different styles and formations.

    Humbly, Wiegman also attributes a successful change to a 3-5-2 formation to one of her assistant coaches, Arjan Veurink.

    “During the first two matches of the tournament we were struggling a little bit and also had moments where we were a little bit vulnerable,” Wiegman explained to reporters.

    “So after the second match Arjan [Veurink, her assistant] came to me and said: ‘Sarina, isn’t this the time to go to 3-5-2?’ I said: ‘You’re completely right. This is the moment, with the players available, we can get more from their strengths in this shape.’ So then we changed it.”

    The Dutch manager has instilled a real sense of togetherness in the England camp.

    In the 3-5-2 formation, Wiegman has removed one of the forward players for a defender, which has allowed the Lionesses to have greater control in games and be less susceptible to counter-attacks. It has also given more freedom to some of England’s attackers, especially the dangerous Lauren Hemp who has been freed of some of her defensive responsibilities and consequently thrived in attack against Australia in the semifinal.

    But not only did Wiegman have to deal with injuries ahead of the tournament, key midfielder Keira Walsh picked up a knee injury during the group stages and breakthrough star Lauren James was shown a red card in England’s round-of-16 win against Nigeria, meaning England not only had to play the rest of that match with 10 players but without James available for the quarterfinal and semifinal.

    “We dig deep as a group and we believe in our ability and, first and foremost, we believe in what we’re getting told to do,” England winger Chloe Kelly told the BBC after the tense penalty shootout win against Nigeria.

    Can England go back-to-back?

    A belief in the manager has led to unwavering support in Wiegman’s decision making and ideologies.

    One manager who knows a thing or two about women’s football is Chelsea Women’s manager Emma Hayes and when speaking to CNN’s Amanda Davies ahead of Sunday’s final she was full of praise for the Dutchwoman.

    “A top, world-class manager – she’s demonstrated that. To go back-to-back Euros, plus World Cup, shows her qualities,” said Hayes.

    “I think [she’s] fulfilled the potential of a group that were hitting their peak and she’s come in and steered that ship to winning.”

    Throughout her international managerial career, Wiegman has shown her ability to turn nearly-teams into winners. Hayes spoke of the winning machine that the 53-year-old has cultivated.

    Before the World Cup, England had won 26 of the 32 games under Wiegman and had only lost once – a friendly against Australia in April. The Lionesses have since added six wins to that tally in Australia and New Zealand.

    “They’ve become a bit of a machine. You know to think we’ve gone from a Euros to a World Cup final in the space of 12 months is just unbelievable,” Hayes said.

    “We’re going to feel a little bit spoiled, but at the same time we’re going to be in the World Cup final on Sunday and it’s amazing for everyone.”

    England’s success has led to Wiegman being recently linked to the vacant head coach role with the US Women’s team.

    “I’m really enjoying my job and I have the impression that people still like me doing that job,” Wiegman clarified to reporters this week. “I have no plans to leave.”

    No matter what happens in the World Cup final on Sunday, Wiegman has helped grow the women’s game in England immeasurably. But, for the team, winning on Sunday is all that matters.

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  • ‘Like a bad dream’: US faces unfamiliar emotions following dramatic Women’s World Cup exit | CNN

    ‘Like a bad dream’: US faces unfamiliar emotions following dramatic Women’s World Cup exit | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Disappointment is an unfamiliar emotion for the US when it comes to women’s soccer. This is a team that had not lost a Women’s World Cup match for 12 years, had never finished worse than third in the tournament, and was aiming for a historic World Cup three-peat, a near impossible feat never achieved in men’s or women’s soccer.

    So when the US crashed out of this World Cup in the round-of-16, losing a dramatic penalty shootout against Sweden in Melbourne on Sunday, there was a stunned sense of disbelief, of it all simply being a “bad dream,” as its legendary forward Alex Morgan said.

    Public figures sent consolation messages on social media, while the team itself – also mourning the impending retirement of iconic forward Megan Rapinoe and likely retirement of fellow stalwart Julie Ertz – huddled together on the pitch, before facing questions not previously asked of the US Women’s National Team (USWNT).

    “You made this sport matter,” First Lady Jill Biden wrote on Twitter. “Today, you inspired us with your grit and determination. We are proud of you. Always remember that you encourage women and girls everywhere to show up and fight for their dreams.”

    Meanwhile, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tweeted: “I’m forever proud of our #USWNT. This team will come back better and stronger, because that’s what American women do.”

    It was almost a different story. The US dominated much of the match, with only desperate, brilliant saves from Sweden goalkeeper Zećira Mušović denying the Americans goals on two separate occasions during the second half of regular time. But the game ticked into extra-time and, when the additional 30 minutes failed to produce a winner, into penalties.

    “We showed everything we could to win the game and, unfortunately, soccer can be cruel sometimes,” US coach Vlatko Andonovski said afterwards.

    “So proud of the team, of the women on the field,” Andonovski said. “I know we were criticized for the way we played and for different moments in the group stage. I think we came out today and showed what we’re all about, showed the grit, the resilience, the fight, the bravery.”

    Even before this defeat, it had been a difficult tournament for the US as it limped through the group stages, winning once – against Vietnam – and drawing against the Netherlands and Portugal.

    The US’ performance in that draw against Portugal prompted widespread criticism, for it was only the width of a goalpost that prevented a late Portuguese winner and the US from exiting the tournament in the group stages.

    “Being able to come out of the group stage where we didn’t play our best and changing it into this kind of performance. This is what this team is going to be made of with so many young players coming through,” captain Lindsey Horan said after the Sweden loss, looking towards the future of the team.

    Lindsey Horan reacts after the match.

    “We entertained, we created chances, we didn’t score and this is part of the game,” she added. “Penalties, to be frank, they suck, they’re too cruel. I’m proud of every player that stepped up to take a penalty today, score or miss, it’s courageous to go take a penalty. I’m very proud of my team.”

    As the young players emerge onto the world stage in the harshest cauldron imaginable, this defeat also marks the end of several iconic players’ international careers.

    Two-time World Cup winner Megan Rapinoe announced her imminent retirement before the tournament began and came on as a second-half substitute against Sweden but missed her penalty in the shootout.

    “It’s like a sick joke for me, personally. I’m like, ‘This is dark comedy, I missed a penalty,’” Megan Rapinoe told Fox Sports, as she was visibly emotional on the pitch afterwards.

    “I still just feel really grateful and joyful, and I know it’s the end and that’s sad,” she added. “But to know this is really the only time that I’ve been in one of these [situations] this early says so much about how much success I’ve been able to have, and just how much I’ve loved playing for this team and playing for this country. It’s been an honor.”

    Megan Rapinoe played in her last ever World Cup match for the US.

    Fellow two-time World Cup winner Julie Ertz also told Fox Sports afterwards, while fighting back tears, that she would probably never play for the USWNT ever again.

    “It’s an emotional time. So it absolutely sucks, I mean, penalties are the worst. But it’s an honor to represent this team. I’m excited for the future of the girls,” she said.

    It was the cruelest of defeats for the US after the penalty shootout went to sudden death and ended with the video assistant referee (VAR) determining that Lina Hurtig’s penalty had inched over the line despite US goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher initially appearing to save it.

    “We just lost the World Cup by a millimeter,” Naeher told Fox Sports. “That’s tough.”

    She added: “I’m proud of the fight of the team tonight. I think we knew that we hadn’t given our best in the group stage and we wanted a complete team performance. And the team came out, I thought we played great tonight. To come up short hurts. It’s going to hurt for a long time.”

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  • How to watch as France vs. Brazil highlights exciting Day 10 of Women’s World Cup | CNN

    How to watch as France vs. Brazil highlights exciting Day 10 of Women’s World Cup | CNN

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    Women’s World Cup 2023: Live scores, fixtures, results, tables and top scorers



    CNN
     — 

    Day 10 of the 2023 Women’s World Cup should prove to be a thriller.

    Saturday’s action is highlighted by the mouth-watering clash between European giant France and South American juggernaut Brazil, with As Canarinhas knowing a win will secure passage through to the last 16.

    Elsewhere, Sweden takes on Italy, before the potentially historic match up between Jamaica and Panama rounds off the day’s action.

    In the US, the matches will air on your local Fox channel. You can also stream the matches by signing in with your TV provider at foxsports.com or on the Fox Sports app. Telemundo and Peacock are providing Spanish-language coverage.

    Seven Network and Optus Sport are broadcasting matches in Australia and the BBC and ITV have the rights in the United Kingdom.

    A full breakdown of media rights holders in each country is available on the FIFA website.

    Sweden vs. Italy starts at 3:30 a.m. ET, France vs. Brazil kicks off at 6 a.m. ET and Panama takes on Jamaica at 8:30 a.m. ET.

    With victories in their opening Group G matches, and with Argentina and South Africa drawing on Friday, both Sweden and Italy can qualify for the knockout stages with another three points.

    Sweden will be the favorite going into Saturday’s first match, but the growth of women’s football in Italy has continued since the national team reached the second round of the knockout stages for the first time in its history four years ago in France.

    The Swedes needed a 90th-minute winner to edge past South Africa in its opening group match, denying Banyana Banyana a first ever Women’s World Cup point, and will certainly need to improve significantly to get past Italy.

    Italy’s 16-year-old sensation Giulia Dragoni – nicknamed ‘Little Messi’ – played a crucial role in the heart of the team’s midfield as Le Azzurre earned a narrow 1-0 win.

    Ary Borges scored the first hattrick of the tournament in Brazil's 4-0 win over Panama.

    It’s not often you get a heavyweight clash such as this in the group stages of the World Cup.

    There is an added layer of intrigue given France’s 0-0 draw against Jamaica in its opening match, with the pressure firmly on Les Bleues to try and avoid an early exit in Australia and New Zealand.

    Brazil, conversely, was impressive in its opening match against Panama, running out a comfortable 4-0 winner. Talisman and icon Marta, playing in her sixth and final World Cup, could come back into the starting lineup against France after starting on the bench against Panama.

    France, ranked fifth in the world, will be buoyed by the number of chances it created against Jamaica, but will need to be far less wasteful in front of goal to have any chance of beating Brazil.

    Jamaica's players celebrate after earning a draw against France.

    After securing the team’s first ever point at a Women’s World Cup, Jamaica will be full of confidence that it can go one better against Panama.

    The Reggae Girlz were hugely impressive against France in that goalless draw but will have to try and overcome Panama without star player Khadija ‘Bunny’ Shaw, who was sent off for a second bookable offense late in the previous game.

    With the country appearing at a Women’s World Cup for the first time, Panama’s players were reduced to tears during the national anthem ahead of the match against Brazil.

    The team will certainly have more of a chance against Jamaica and will likely be eying a first ever Women’s World Cup point.

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  • US fights back to draw with Netherlands at Women’s World Cup | CNN

    US fights back to draw with Netherlands at Women’s World Cup | CNN

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    Women’s World Cup 2023: Live scores, fixtures, results, tables and top scorers


    Wellington, New Zealand
    CNN
     — 

    In a closely-fought battle and rematch of the 2019 World Cup final, the United States Women’s National Team (USWNT) and the Netherlands – two of the world’s top teams – came to a 1-1 draw on Thursday at the 2023 Women’s World Cup.

    Chants of “U-S-A, U-S-A!” reverberating around the Wellington Regional Stadium as the team faced the Netherlands in their second match of the tournament soon dissipated after the Dutch took an early lead.

    Midfielder Jill Roord put the Netherlands on the board in the 17th minute, finding the back of the net past USWNT goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher.

    It was the first time the USWNT trailed in a Women’s World Cup match since 2011 in the quarterfinal against Brazil. Prior to Thursday, the US had gone 17 straight matches without trailing – the longest streak by any team in the tournament’s history.

    The Netherlands, meanwhile, was hungry for revenge after their 2-0 loss to the US in the 2019 World Cup.

    Despite trailing at the half, the USWNT outshot the Netherlands 9-2 in the first half – and all their scoring chances finally came to fruition in the 62nd minute.

    US captain Lindsey Horan scored the equalizer with a thumping header from a corner kick, prompting ecstatic celebrations in the stands.

    Just a few minutes later, the USWNT thought they had gone ahead after forward Alex Morgan found the back of the net – but she was offside and the goal was disallowed.

    Despite five minutes of added stoppage time, both teams weren’t able to best each other by the time the final whistle blew.

    With the draw, the USWNT extends their unbeaten streak to 19 matches at the World Cup – the longest in tournament history for both men’s and women’s editions.

    Speaking after the match, Horan called it “unbelievable” that the team was able to come back and score the equalizer to avoid a loss in the group stage.

    “I felt the momentum the whole time,” Horan said. “I think the first half we could be a little disappointed in how we played but I think we fixed things right away. The pressure that we got on, the amount of chances and opportunities that came from it – so proud of the team and their response.”

    USNWT forward Alex Morgan (left) and Dutch defender Stefanie van der Gragt (right) fight for the ball during the US-Netherlands match in the Women's World Cup on July 27, 2023.

    Horan was also complimentary of the Dutch side, following the recent history between the two teams.

    “It’s against a really good opponent. Very competitive team and one that we saw last World Cup do such good things. So for us, it’s going down a goal and coming up and getting able to tie … we keep moving forward,” Horan added.

    Dutch goalkeeper Daphne van Domselaar also praised her team’s performance after the match, saying they had “worked really hard” and been in frequent possession of the ball.

    “I think we were very calm, especially the first half,” she said. “The second half, they dominated more of the game and they had more chances. But after all, we can be very proud of ourselves.”

    Later on Thursday in a clash of fellow Group E contestants and two World Cup debutants, Portugal beat Vietnam 2-0 in the New Zealand city of Hamilton.

    Telma Encarnação opened the scoring in the opening 10 minutes before Francisca Nazareth gave Portugal a well-deserved two-goal cushion.

    Despite constant Portuguese pressure, the European side was unable to extend its lead further but picks up a vital three points as it seeks to reach the knockout stages of the Women’s World Cup for the first time ever.

    With two defeats in its first two games, Vietnam has been eliminated.

    Back-to-back defending champions USA are next scheduled to face Portugal on August 1, while the Netherlands goes against Vietnam that same day.

    The group matches conclude after August 3, with the tournament then moving into the knockout stage with the 16 remaining teams.

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  • France seeks better Women’s World Cup result after falling short in Paris four years ago

    France seeks better Women’s World Cup result after falling short in Paris four years ago

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    AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Four years after France fell flat in the Women’s World Cup as the host country, Les Bleus return to the global stage with a new coach determined to dethrone the United States.

    France hoped to contend for the 2019 tournament title but was eliminated by the Americans in the quarterfinals in Paris. The plan for a better result this year was nearly derailed in February when captain Wendie Renard quit the team “to protect my mental health” and two other players followed her exit.

    The French federation vowed to look into the situation and in March fired coach Corinne Diacre with a year remaining on her contract. The team replaced her with Hervé Renard, who resigned as coach of Saudi Arabia’s men’s team to take the job.

    Hervé Renard led Saudi Arabia to an upset over eventual winner Argentina in the men’s World Cup in November and, when he leads France against Jamaica on Sunday in a Group F match in Sydney, he will be just the second coach to manage at both the men’s and women’s World Cups.

    Hervé Renard also previously coached Morocco’s men’s team.

    His hiring prompted Wendie Renard to return to the team and she’ll be on the field for the first ever meeting between France and Jamaica in women’s international play. It is France’s fifth appearance in the tournament, and Jamaica’s second appearance.

    Jamaica lost all three of its matches in its 2019 debut, scoring only once while giving up 12 goals. Its play in this World Cup will hinge on the performance of Khadija Shaw, a Manchester City striker who was one of only two players to score at least 20 goals in the English Women’s Super League from 2022-23.

    Jamaica is one of many teams battling its federation over funding, and its players created a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for their preparations.

    NETHERLANDS-PORTUGAL

    The Netherlands returns to the Women’s World Cup looking to go just one spot further than 2019, when the Dutch lost to the United States in the final.

    The quest begins Sunday in a Group E match against Portugal in Dunedin. The Dutch beat Portugal 3-2 in the group stages of last summer’s Women’s UEFA European Championship, and Portugal has lost seven of its previous eight games — including five straight — against the Netherlands.

    The Netherlands is without star player and all-time leading scorer Vivianne Miedema, who ruptured her ACL playing for Arsenal in December.

    Portugal is one of eight teams making its tournament debut and has played in only two previous women’s international tournaments — the European Championships in 2017 and 2022. Portugal was knocked out in the group stage in both tournaments.

    But the focus ahead of this match has been the training conditions in New Zealand, and both teams have complained that the facilities have been inadequate. Portugal coach Francisco Neto said his squad could not practice on its assigned field Friday because heavy rain had made the playing surface inadequate.

    The Netherlands has complained that its practice field in Tauranga is designed for cricket and too hard for soccer.

    Neto said neither team can use it as an excuse in Sunday’s game.

    “It is what it is, and we need to adjust,” he said. “Everyone has some problems with that. When we come here we don’t have many choice of pitches. All the teams and coaches want the same for their teams. We have problems with that too, not just the Netherlands.”

    SWEDEN-SOUTH AFRICA

    Caroline Seger will start her fifth and final Women’s World Cup on Sunday when Sweden plays South Africa in a Group G match in Wellington.

    It will be Seger’s final opportunity to win a World Cup, one of the few gaps on her resume. Her 232 appearances for Sweden are the most for any female player in Europe.

    “The World Cup has been my goal all this time, to be there and be able to train and play football again is everything I’ve ever wanted. I’m super-proud of the journey I have had,” Seger said. “It’s about getting the only medal I am missing — to be here with this national team, this is my last chance. I won’t be playing any more World Cups.

    “So to be able to hopefully help the team in every way I can to bring home gold would be of course a dream come true.”

    Seger has two Olympic silver medals and two World Cup bronze medals. Sweden has never missed a Women’s World Cup, but has yet to win a major tournament.

    It’s been an emotional journey for her and she broke down in tears discussing her comeback from injury in time to play in one final tournament. The 38-year-old midfielder has been fighting calf problems and has barely played for club FC Rosengard this year.

    Sweden coach Peter Gerhardsson still chose her for the roster, even if there was no guarantee Seger would be fit to play. Seger was a second-half substitute in Sweden’s friendly against Norway in April but was replaced shortly afterwards because her calf was bothering her.

    “When I have felt that I am on the way back, I’ve had something happen that has caused me to back up again. Time runs away,” she said as she started to cry. “I never thought that I would miss so many matches, I didn’t see that coming. It’s been a bad period.”

    South Africa, meanwhile, is making its second tournament appearance. The team lost all three of its group games in 2019 and is the the lowest-ranked team in the group that includes Argentina and Italy.

    South Africa is also a team embroiled in controversy as its players boycotted a friendly this month in a dispute over wages. The South African Football Association put together a makeshift team that included a 13-year-old for the game, a 5-0 loss as the World Cup squad watched from the stands.

    The players said Saturday the pay dispute was settled and they are committed to playing the World Cup and will not strike.

    ___

    AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • U.S. second gentleman Emhoff meets New Zealand’s Ardern to discuss online hate as World Cup begins

    U.S. second gentleman Emhoff meets New Zealand’s Ardern to discuss online hate as World Cup begins

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    Doug Emhoff, the husband of U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, met with former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Friday to discuss ways to combat online hate and extremism

    FILE – Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff arrive in the East Room of the White House following a dinner reception for the governors and their spouses on Feb. 11, 2023, in Washington. Emhoff met with former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Friday, July 21, to discuss ways to combat online hate and extremism. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

    The Associated Press

    AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Doug Emhoff, the husband of U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, met with former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Friday to discuss ways to combat online hate and extremism.

    Emhoff was in Auckland to lead a delegation to the FIFA Women’s World Cup and meet with officials. He told a meeting of the Christchurch Call the world was witnessing a “global epidemic of hate.”

    Emhoff, who is Jewish, said he was “working against this scourge of anti-Semitism and this epidemic of hate in general. So this work is very, very personal to me.”

    “But my work is not just about Jews. It’s about all of us. It’s about combating hate in all of its forms,” he said.

    The group is named after the New Zealand city where a gunman in 2019 shot and killed 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques while streaming his attack online.

    Ardern thanked Emhoff for his work and for sharing in the “joyous occasion” of the World Cup. She launched the Christchurch Call with French President Emmanuel Macron two months after the Christchurch attack. After stepping down as leader earlier this year, she was appointed special envoy for the Christchurch Call, declining to take any pay for the role.

    Emhoff will next travel to Samoa.

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  • Stunning Hannah Wilkinson goal delivers shock win for New Zealand over Norway in opening Women’s World Cup match | CNN

    Stunning Hannah Wilkinson goal delivers shock win for New Zealand over Norway in opening Women’s World Cup match | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    World Cups are so often defined by their upsets, the surprise results that stun crowds and cause delirious celebrations.

    The first match of the 2023 Women’s World Cup duly delivered such scenes as co-hosts New Zealand shocked Norway 1-0 in Auckland, thanks to a stunning Hannah Wilkinson goal just after half-time.

    For so long, winning a World Cup game had proved to be an elusive goal for New Zealand. The Football Ferns’ previous five appearances in women’s tournaments had yielded not a single victory while the men also have not secured a win in their two World Cup appearances.

    It seemed fitting, then, that its first ever victory came on home turf in front of more than 40,000 raucous fans at an almost sold-out Eden Park, as New Zealand held on for the win despite Ria Percival’s penalty miss late in the game after a VAR decision.

    “I’m so, so proud, we’ve been fighting for this for so long. We had a clear goal that we wanted to inspire young girls here and around the world, and I think we did that this evening. Anything is possible,” New Zealand’s tearful captain Ali Riley told the BBC.

    The start of this World Cup has also been marked by tragedy as a rare multiple shooting in the center of Auckland rattled the city just hours before the opening match of the tournament.

    New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins outlined details of the attack in a hastily called news conference, confirming that three people had died – including the gunman – and several others were injured.

    Riley added: “This morning, something really, really tragic happened and we wanted to bring something positive tonight and we thought of the victims and the first responders and they made us so proud and we just wanted to just help bring something amazing today.”

    Harnessing the energy of the home crowd, New Zealand began brightly, holding the more favored Norway to a scoreless first half.

    The Football Ferns launched the first attack of the game as Wilkinson broke clear of the Norwegian defense before Norway began displaying its own offensive prowess, its star Ada Hegerberg just mistiming an ambitious bicycle kick at her first World Cup in eight years before Frida Maanum, under pressure, skied her attempt on goal.

    But immediately after halftime, all of New Zealand’s pressure eventually paid off, as Wilkinson scored the first goal of the game, clinically finishing a sweeping team move that sliced open the Gresshoppene defense.

    Still the game remained finely poised; Norway struggled to get the ball to its dangerous front three but still created chances as only an outstretched hand from New Zealand’s goalkeeper Victoria Esson prevented Tuva Hansen’s powerful long-range effort from finding the back of the net on 80 minutes.

    Norway's Ada Hegerberg reacts after missing a scoring chance.

    New Zealand had a chance to double its lead and effectively end the contest 10 minutes later when Norway conceded a penalty for handball, but Percival’s miss kept the game alive, and the tension coiled around it as nine minutes of injury time were added on and Norway continued to press for a last-gasp equalizer.

    The home team had done enough, however, and held on until the final whistle blew, prompting wild celebrations around the stadium as the players ran onto the field and the crowd exploded with joy.

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