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Arsenal's monster transfer fee for Canadian Olivia Smith buzzes at home

Arsenal's monster transfer fee for Canadian Olivia Smith buzzes at home

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A Canadian player setting a new benchmark in the women's soccer transfer market floats a lot of boats, says Northern Super League co-founder and former Canadian international Diana Matheson.
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The one million pounds (C$1.85 million) Arsenal paid Liverpool for 20-year-old forward Olivia Smith of Whitby, Ont., in the Women's Super League is the biggest price tag in women's soccer history for a transfer.
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Matheson says an accelerating transfer fee market bodes well for the NSL, which kicked off this year with six teams and a mission to provide the first domestic women's pro league for Canadian and international players.
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'The growth of the market really helps us sell to investors in Canada and abroad,' she said. 'The transfer market is obviously a piece of that puzzle.
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'This is where the market is at that a Canadian player is going for this and how exciting is it like that we're not far around the corner now that we have a professional league, that if top Canadians choose to leave the Canadian league in the future, clubs could be selling them for a whole lot of money because we create such world-class players.'
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Smith's transfer to the Gunners announced Thursday surpassed the previous high of 900,000 pounds (C$1.6 million) Chelsea paid the NWSL's San Diego Wave for American centre back Naomi Girma in January.
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'To be part of a movement that's changing how the game is valued is an honour,' Smith said in a statement released by her public relations agency.
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'This is a huge step forward for women's soccer and for Canadian soccer. I hope this shows young Canadian girls that anything is possible.'
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Serita Thurton of the NSL's Wild FC said rumours about Smith's transfer to Arsenal before it was announced was a topic of discussion in the Calgary club's dressing room.
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'Seeing a Canadian player break a record like this, it kind of just shows that Canada has a lot to offer when it comes to quality in soccer players,' said the forward from Ajax, Ont.
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'It definitely makes our league look a lot better. Even though she isn't playing it, just the fact that it is a Canadian league, it does make a statement saying that Canada has quality players and that we're a football country in our own right. So yeah, it definitely has a good look in that sense.'
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Alberta's Drew Stuve wins third Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship bout
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Winnipeg Free Press

time3 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Alberta's Drew Stuve wins third Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship bout

ENOCH – Local favourite Drew (Wild Boy) Stuve made short work of American Will (The Brown Bomber) Santiago on Saturday in the main event of BKFC Fight Night Edmonton, the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship's third-ever show in Canada. The lopsided fight was stopped at one minute 37 seconds of the first round at the River Cree Resort and Casino in suburban Enoch. At six-foot-two, Stuve towered over the five-foot-eight Santiago who took the fight when original opponent Michael Manno dropped out. Stuve was the aggressor with Santiago only offering the occasional lunging attack. Stuve finished the fight with a clubbing right to the head that felled the 42-year-old Santiago for the second time in the round. 'Respect to Will for taking the fight on short notice but I knew as soon as he did it was over,' said Stuve. 'I'm not here to play around. I'm here to go for the (championship) belt. Get me in the States. (I'm) 3-0 here in my home. You see the support I have here.' The 28-year-old Stuve improved to 3-0-0 in BKFC action while Santiago fell to 2-2-1. BKFC bouts are contested in a ring with five, two-minute rounds. Fighters are permitted to wrap and tape the wrist, thumb and mid-hand, but no gauze or tape can be within 2.5 centimetres of the knuckles. Punches are the only strike allowed. Without the benefit of gloves, cuts are common. And they can lead to doctor-mandated stoppages that prevent the losing fighter from absorbing more damage. In his BKFC debut in March 2024, Stuve defeated fellow Canadian (Lethal) Jay Kelly by first-round TKO. Last August, he stopped B.C.-based Briton Sonny (The Savage) Smith at 1:11 of the second round. Stuve, who cuts a figure with his shaved head, handlebar moustache and copious tattoos, has fought on all three of the BKFC Canadian cards. The first two were BKFC Prospects cards featuring up-and-coming talent. Saturday's was a regular BKFC show. Stuve, whose boxing record is 1-1-0 as a pro, drew the attention of BKFC after impressing at tryouts at Edmonton's Wolfhouse MMA gym. After contesting his first two BKFC bouts at welterweight (165 pounds), Stuve has moved up to middleweight (175 pounds) after putting on pounds through a weightlifting program. Santiago has a 9-7-0 record as a pro mixed martial arts fighter, losing to American Kevin Holland on Dana White's Contender Series in June 2018. Holland has gone on to post a 15-11-0 record with one no contest in the UFC. Originally from Boston, Santiago moved to New Mexico to train at the storied Jackson Wink MMA Academy in Albuquerque. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 9, 2025.

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