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Club World Cup quiz: What's the day job of Auckland's amateur goalscorer?

Club World Cup quiz: What's the day job of Auckland's amateur goalscorer?

BBC News2 days ago

The Fifa Club World Cup group stage finished early on Friday morning. How closely have you been paying attention? From presidential visits to Lionel Messi free-kicks, test yourself with these seven questions.
Go to our dedicated football quizzes page, where you can have a go at previous editions and sign up for notifications to get the latest quizzes sent straight to your device

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Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Wales
Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Wales

The Guardian

time42 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Women's Euro 2025 team guides: Wales

This article is part of the Guardian's Euro 2025 Experts' Network, a cooperation between some of the best media organisations from the 16 countries who qualified. is running previews from two teams each day in the run-up to the tournament kicking off on 2 July. Wales are making their long-awaited debut at a major tournament, but they are not content to travel to Switzerland as glorified tourists. They aim to emulate their male counterparts at France 2016 and travel deep into the knockout phase. Not that escaping the initial group stage – let alone reaching the semi-finals – will be easy for a side grouped with England, France and the Netherlands. Despite some springtime Nations League knocks – most notably June's 4-1 home loss to Italy – they remain undeterred. That Italy reverse apart, the team ranked 30th in the world have never conceded more than twice in a game or lost by more than a single goal during Rhian Wilkinson's 15-month reign. This year they twice held the highly regarded Sweden to 1-1 draws, with those performances suggesting they have improved almost beyond recognition since Wilkinson succeeded Gemma Grainger last year. Wilkinson has created a hybrid, uber-flexible playing style and, alternating between a back three and a back four, rotates her squad depending on the opposition. 'We've grown so much under Rhian,' says the captain, Angharad James. 'She's taken us to another level.' If much depends on Jess Fishlock, the still impressive 38-year-old midfielder, and national leading scorer, raging against the light and the similarly influential Sophie Ingle proving her fitness, the squad possesses healthy depth and dynamism. As Fishlock says: 'Players have come to life under Rhian.' The grassroots women's game in Wales has enjoyed a 45% growth in participation since 2021, while attendances for internationals have risen dramatically, with a record crowd of 16,865 watching the first leg of November's Euro 2025 qualifying playoff against the Republic of Ireland in Cardiff. Since 2023, men and women have been paid equally for representing Wales. The 43-year-old Rhian Wilkinson comes equipped with the tournament experience her players lack. Although Wilkinson's mother is Welsh and her late father English, she was born in Montreal and, bar a solitary childhood year spent in the Vale of Glamorgan, grew up mainly in Quebec before winning 183 capsfor Canada as a defender. Along the way she collected two Olympic bronze medals and a Pan-American Games gold and played for assorted clubs in the United States and Norway. She was as a highly regarded assistant coach with Canada and England before becoming head coach of Portland Thorns, whom she took to the NWSL title. She stepped down in December 2022 after an investigation into a relationship with a player at the club, despite it clearing Wilkinson of any wrongdoing. Now Wilkinson has led Wales into their first major tournament. To say she has proved transformational is an understatement. A music lover, Wilkinson is an accomplished cellist who emphasised her sporting versatility by starring at ringette, a form of ice hockey, in her youth. Even at 38, Jess Fishlock is eminently capable of switching the lights on for Wales. Much more than just her country's record goalscorer, the holder of 162 caps is a versatile, tempo-setting midfielder who has swapped her native Cardiff for life by the Pacific with Seattle Reign. While she has won numerous honours in the US, Fishlock has also won the Champions League with FFC Frankfurt and Lyon and domestic titles at Seattle, Melbourne City and AZ Alkmaar. In 2018, she was awarded the MBE for services to women's football and the LGBT community. 'Jess is an icon of Welsh sport and an unbelievable player,' says Wilkinson. 'She's a great person and a great talent. She provides magic moments. Whenever Jess is on the field something's happening. She's one of football's special talents.' Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion Wales do not generally concede too many goals and Olivia Clark's reassuring presence represents a big reason why. The Lincolnshire-born goalkeeper is still only 23 and it is not so long ago she was playing for Nettleham in the seventh tier of England's domestic game. Now she is at Leicester, where she works with Tom Pressman, the senior Wales goalkeeping coach, who has the same role at her club. Clark credits Pressman with turning her into a first-choice international and last January his presence at Leicester prompted her to leave the Netherlands where she had been playing Champions League football for Twente. The football pyramid in Wales, overseen by the Welsh FA, has four tiers. The top division is semi-professional and its title winners qualify for the Champions League preliminary rounds. In recent years attendances for key top-flight games have risen from the hundreds into, on some occasions, the thousands. Media coverage is growing, but remains limited and heavily localised. Only one Wales-based team plays in the English League pyramid where Gwalia United, formerly Cardiff City Ladies, reside in the third tier. Although many Wales internationals initially emerge from their country's domestic system, the squad are all full-time professionals employed outside Wales. Given Wales have ended up in the 'Group of Death' – also featuring England, France and the Netherlands – reaching the knockout phase will be tough. That, though, is where Wilkinson firmly believes her team belongs. Opponents will underestimate a side with the potential to disrupt the established order at their peril.

Wales enjoy 'truly overwhelming' Swiss reception
Wales enjoy 'truly overwhelming' Swiss reception

BBC News

time42 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Wales enjoy 'truly overwhelming' Swiss reception

Captain Angharad James says the reception the Wales squad have received on their arrival in Switzerland has been "truly overwhelming".Wales' first major tournament appearance begins on Saturday, 5 June with Rhian Wilkinson's side facing Netherlands in players arrived in their training base of Weinfelden on Sunday, 29 June and were greeted prior to their first training session by hundreds of local school children."It is truly overwhelming. The locals are supporting us and it has been a crazy welcome, unforgettable," James told BBC Sport a week-long training camp in Lagos in Portugal, Wales have arrived in Switzerland with temperatures soaring across Europe as their preparations for their opening game ramp up."It feels real now. Our backroom staff have done a great job of making us feel at home here," James said."It's a pretty cool experience. There is pure excitement from the group, we can't wait to get started." James reiterated her belief that despite being drawn in as tough a group as they possibly could – with games against France and England also to come – Wales, the lowest ranked side in the tournament, are confident of causing some upsets."Our fans have been amazing. It's been a progression over the years. We want to inspire the next generation," James said."I am really excited and proud of this group of players. I really do believe we can go into this tournament and upset a few teams."As long as we perform, I really believe in us, I really truly believe we will do well."Wales' first training session was conducted in heat over 30C, but James said that has been no issue for the Wales players."We acclimatised in Portugal, we had a really good training camp and an in-house game that was very competitive," James added."What more do you want? A beautiful day here in Switzerland… the group is excited."

Collisions and collapses: how humanoids fared in their first football match
Collisions and collapses: how humanoids fared in their first football match

The Independent

time43 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Collisions and collapses: how humanoids fared in their first football match

The first fully autonomous three-on-three humanoid football match, powered entirely by artificial intelligence, took place in Beijing as a preview for the upcoming World Humanoid Robot Games. During the event, some robots collapsed and had to be stretchered off by humans, despite being designed to self-right, while others struggled with kicking and experienced slow-motion collisions. China is using sports competitions, including football, boxing, and marathons, to accelerate the development of AI-powered humanoid robots. Cheng Hao, CEO of Booster Robotics, stated that these sports events are ideal for testing and refining both algorithms and integrated hardware-software systems, emphasising the importance of safety for future human interaction. Tsinghua University's THU Robotics team secured the championship, defeating China Agricultural University's Mountain Sea team with a final score of 5-3.

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