Former England captain Casey Stoney has been named coach of the Canadian women’s Soccer team.
Posted at 10:17 a.m.
Neil Davidson
The Canadian Press
Stoney, who is 42, most recently managed the San Diego Wave. Stoney joined this NWSL expansion club in 2021, and she was named the circuit’s most valuable coach in 2022. However, she lost her position last June, when the Wave was going through a seven-game losing streak.
Stoney agreed to a three-year contract with Soccer Canada that will cover the upcoming Women’s Soccer World Cup, and that pact comes with an option year for 2028.
The Canadians, sixth in the world, have been without a full-time coach since Bev Priestman was sent home last summer following revelations surrounding a spy scandal involving the use of a drone during the Paris Olympic Games.
Priestman, assistant coach Jasmine Mander and analyst Joey Lombardi are all serving one-year suspensions imposed by FIFA for their roles in the scandal and are no longer associated with Soccer Canada.
Stoney, a defender, represented England 130 times on the international stage and captained her country at the London Games in 2012. She announced her retirement from sport in 2018, after stints with Arsenal, Charlton, Chelsea, Lincoln and Liverpool, and joined the coaching staff of Phil Neville’s England women’s team.
Soccer Canada said Stoney will begin duty in February during the Pinatar Cup, a three-match series taking place in Spain.
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