
Canada women stumble in second half but beat Ireland 47-26 in final World Cup warm-up
After running up a comfortable 33-7 lead in the first half, the second-ranked Canadian women were outscored 19-14 by the fifth-ranked Irish in the second.
The Canadians, who improved to 6-0-1 this year, have the next five days off before reassembling for the 16-team World Cup.
Canada, which finished fourth at the last World Cup in November 2022, opens tournament play against No. 14 Fiji on Aug. 23 in York, then faces No. 9 Wales on Aug. 30 in Manchester and No. 8 Scotland on Sept. 6 in Exeter.
'We're ready,' said Canadian No. 8 Fabiola Forteza, named player of the match.
The Irish, who finished third in Six Nations play this year at 2-3-0 behind No. 1 England and No. 4 France, are in Pool C with No. 3 New Zealand, No. 11 Japan and No. 13 Spain.
Justine Pelletier, DaLeaka Menin, Paige Farries, Julia Schell and Sophie de Goede also scored tries for Canada with de Goede adding six conversions.
'We were expecting physicality from the Irish team and that's what we got. But we kept on grinding,' said Forteza.
Anna McGann and Béibhinn Parsons each scored two tries for Ireland. Dannah O'Brien booted three conversions at Affidea Stadium, formerly known as Kingspan Stadium.
'I'm really proud of our second-half performance,' said Irish co-captain Sam Monaghan.
Both teams had players sent to the sin-bin in the first half with Menin sidelined for 10 minutes when the prop was yellow-carded in the 19th minute for head contact in a tackle, and hooker Neve Jones paying the price for too many Irish infractions.
The teams exchanged converted tries while Menin was off. Canada scored a try while Jones was off. Irish fullback Stacey Flood was yellow-carded in the 79th minute for head contact with de Goede scoring soon after.
Canada lost captain Alex Tessier in the 24th minute after the star centre failed a head injury assessment.
Canada improved to 16-5-1 since the last World Cup, with four of the losses to England and one to New Zealand. Canada tied New Zealand 27-27 in May in Pacific Four Series play.
The Canadians threatened early, taking advantage of four straight penalties against Ireland. But the Irish resisted, winning a penalty at the breakdown near the goal-line to end the attack.
Canada went ahead 7-0 after Ireland failed to find touch on a penalty. That opened the door to the Canadian backs and Symonds broke a tackle and slashed through the Irish defence in the 10th minute.
Four minutes later, Pelletier took advantage of an opening at the breakdown and ran in for a second try.
Ireland replied in the 21st minute through a fine solo effort from Parsons with Canada down a player. But Symonds scored her second, dancing through the Irish defence for a 21-7 lead in the 24th minute.
Ireland was warned twice in the first half by French referee Aurélie Groizeleau for taking too many penalties and Jones paid the price in the 30th minute for the next infraction.
Canada took advantage three minutes later with Menin bulling her way over from close range to up the lead to 26-7. Farries added another on the stroke of halftime.
Ireland came out with purpose in the second half, scoring tries from McGann in the 59th and 62nd minute, with the second a fine solo effort, and Parsons in the 71st.
The Canadians answered with tries from Schell (in the 56th minute) and de Goede (80th).
Canada improved to 4-1-0 all-time against Ireland. The teams last met in October at the WXV 1 tournament, with Canada winning 21-8 in Langley, B.C.
Seeking consistency ahead of the World Cup, Canada coach Kevin Rouet made just three changes to his lineup that beat the 10th-ranked United States 42-10 in Ottawa on Aug. 1.
With Gabby Senft being rested, Caroline Crossley slotted into the back row with Forteza shifting from flanker to No. 8. Pelletier, who came off the bench against the Americans, started at scrum half with Olivia Apps coming off the bench. Alysha Corrigan returned at wing after an injury absence.
Irish coach Scott Bemand, who is set to announce his World Cup roster Monday, made 10 changes to the team that rallied from a 14-0 deficit to beat Scotland 27-21 last weekend in Cork.
—
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 9, 2025

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
36 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Thunder's Lu Dort to have NBA title parade in Montreal next week
MONTREAL – The Larry O'Brien Trophy will be in Montreal next week. Lu Dort, who won an NBA championship in June with the Oklahoma City Thunder alongside fellow Canadian Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, will have a two-day celebration in his home city. On Aug. 20, Dort will be accepting a special invitation from Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante to City Hall. About 200 members of the sports community will be there to recognize his championship win and his dedication to youth in Montreal. The following day, there will be a homecoming parade in Montreal-Nord, the borough where he grew up. Dort will also host the fifth edition of Camp Élite, bringing together 50 of Québec's top young male basketball players for two days of training, mentorship and motivation. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'This summer has been a dream come true — winning the championship and having the opportunity to come back home, with the trophy, to celebrate here in Montréal,' Dort said in a release. 'I'm just grateful to share this with the people who have supported me from day one.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 13, 2025.


Winnipeg Free Press
4 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Spain women's team coach Montse Tomé is ‘disappointed' after not having her contract extended
MADRID (AP) — Montse Tomé had been expecting to keep her job as coach of Spain's women's national team after leading it to the final of the European Championship last month and says she doesn't know why her contract wasn't extended. 'Things happen in soccer that you don't expect,' Tome said in an interview with Spanish radio Cadena Ser. The Spanish soccer federation announced Monday that it was not extending Tomé's contract and will replace her with former player Sonia Bermúdez. The announcement came two weeks after Spain lost the Euro 2025 final to England in a penalty shootout. Tomé, who took over the job after Spain won the 2023 World Cup, also led Spain to the title of the inaugural Women's Nations League last year. Tomé said she was taken by surprise with the federation's decision to not extend her contract that expires at the end of the month. She said federation president Rafael Louzán had told her that she would remain in charge if Spain did well at Euro 2025. 'He has always shown a lot of confidence in me, but I'm a little disappointed about how everything was handled. He didn't keep his word about the continuity. I felt that he was happy with my work,' Tomé said. 'It was hard to understand everything that happened since the final. It's understandable that the federation wants to go into a new direction, but that message wasn't really clear for me. They had given me a different impression.' Goodbye messages Tomé said she was not bothered by not receiving goodbye messages from her players on social media. 'I received many messages from them,' she said. 'I felt very respected by everyone. I'm not concerned about whether they posted them online or not.' The decision to replace Tomé — the first women to coach the senior women's team in Spain — was made by the federation's board members. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. She had been an assistant to former coach Jorge Vilda during the World Cup and was promoted in the fallout of former federation president Luis Rubiales' nonconsensual kiss of player Jenni Hermoso. Tomé had been criticized by some for not including Hermoso in recent call-ups, but she always maintained it was a decision based on sporting performances. 'I don't want to think it had anything to do with it,' Tomé said. 'Since I was appointed, they allowed me to make decisions based on my sporting criteria. No one told me to bring in this player or another. I've never had to send the list of players to a president.' ___ AP soccer:


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
No. 4 Clemson's experience makes the Tigers the ACC favorite. Can anyone challenge them?
No. 4 Clemson won so much over more than a decade that it felt like a step back when the Tigers didn't reach 10 wins two years ago in the first of back-to-back four-loss seasons. Still, the Tigers are the reigning Atlantic Coast Conference champions and coming off a trip to the College Football Playoff. Experience from that run is part of why the Tigers are the runaway preseason pick to finish atop the ACC again. 'Experience, as they say, doesn't come at a discount,' coach Dabo Swinney said. Clemson won at least 10 games from 2011-2022, including two national championships and eight ACC titles, before a nine-win year in 2023. The Tigers (10-4) beat SMU for last year's title. 'I think our mentality is, man, we're keeping our head down, just kind of keeping it low,' said quarterback Cade Klubnik, the preseason ACC player of the year. Clemson returns four Associated Press All-ACC picks from last year, including first-team offensive lineman Blake Miller and two defensive linemen (Peter Woods and T.J. Parker) ranked in the top three among returners at their position nationally by Pro Football Focus. Overall, Clemson held 11 of 27 spots on the preseason all-ACC team. No other team held more than three. If not Clemson, then who? The ACC has two other teams ranked in the preseason AP Top 25 with No. 10 Miami and No. 16 SMU. The Hurricanes were the league's highest-ranked team much of last year, though they missed the ACC title game after losing at Syracuse. They brought in Georgia transfer quarterback Carson Beck as the successor to No. 1 overall NFL draft pick Cam Ward. The Mustangs have back-to-back 11-win seasons under Rhett Lashlee, who led SMU to an 8-0 record in its first league season. SMU returns quarterback Kevin Jennings (28 total touchdowns last year), and AP all-ACC picks in offensive lineman Logan Parr, safety Isaiah Nwokobia and kicker Collin Rogers. Seminoles' response Florida State entered last season as the reigning ACC champion and preseason favorite, then went 2-10. Coach Mike Norvell's offseason included hiring two coordinators, notably former Auburn and UCF head coach Gus Malzahn for the offense. 'When you come to Florida State, you'd better embrace the highest of expectations, because it's what I have, it's what our program has,' Norvell said. New faces Three new coaches arrive in North Carolina's Bill Belichick, Wake Forest's Jake Dickert and Stanford's Frank Reich. Belichick led the New England Patriots to six Super Bowl titles but this is his first college season, while the school is betting on the 73-year-old to elevate its football profile after moving on from Mack Brown. Dickert left Washington State for Wake Forest after Dave Clawson unexpectedly stepped down after the season. Reich, who joins Belichick and Boston College's Bill O'Brien as the ACC's national-high three former NFL head coaches, is an interim coach after the spring firing of Troy Taylor due to off-field concerns. Irish factor Sixth-ranked Notre Dame has six games against ACC teams as part of its annual scheduling partnership with the league, with the football independent being a member of all other ACC sports. Those don't count in the league standings but certainly have CFP implications for last year's national runner-up. The biggest comes with an opening-game trip to Miami (Aug. 31), along with trips to Boston College (Nov. 1), Pittsburgh (Nov. 15) and Stanford (Nov. 29). The Irish's home games come against N.C. State (Oct. 11) and Syracuse (Nov. 22). Heading west Boston College, Duke, FSU, UNC, Pittsburgh and Virginia are this year's teams to touch all four U.S. continental time zones for a league road trip in Year 2 of westward expansion. California hosts the Blue Devils (Oct. 4), Tar Heels (Oct. 17) and Cavaliers (Nov. 1). Stanford hosts the Eagles (Sept. 13), Seminoles (Oct. 18) and Panthers (Nov. 1). That would leave Clemson and Georgia Tech as the only ACC teams yet to travel to California. Both go next year, the Tigers to Cal and the Yellow Jackets to Stanford. Marquee matchups The league gets immediate measuring-stick matchups. Week 1 features LSU visiting Clemson, Alabama visiting Florida State, TCU visiting UNC and Georgia Tech visiting Colorado. There are also Atlanta games with Syracuse meeting Tennessee and Virginia Tech facing South Carolina. Key conference games include Clemson visiting Georgia Tech (Sept. 13), hosting SMU (Oct. 18) and traveling to Louisville (Nov. 14). Miami hosts Louisville (Oct. 17) and visits SMU (Nov. 1), while SMU hosts Louisville (Nov. 22). The ACC title game is Dec. 6 in Charlotte, North Carolina. ___ AP college football: and