Category: 6. Sports

  • Revealed: Major NBA brands linked to forced labor in China | NBA

    Revealed: Major NBA brands linked to forced labor in China | NBA

    When Enes Kanter Freedom appeared on a basketball court in his Boston Celtics jersey and a pair of trainers emblazoned with the slogan “Free Uyghur”, the reaction from Beijing was swift.

    “Literally at the half-time, they cancelled every Celtics game on television [in China] for the rest of the year,” the basketball player tells the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ) and the Guardian. That game, in October 2021, marked a turning point in his career. “That’s when the NBA got really angry at me,” says Freedom.

    Freedom, who has long been an outspoken critic of the Turkish government, had researched the issue after the concerned father of a fan challenged his silence on China’s treatment of Muslim minorities.

    In Xinjiang, China’s westernmost region, President Xi Jinping’s “war on terrorism” has involved oppression and detentions as a means of forcing ethnic minorities to assimilate into the dominant Chinese culture. Uyghurs and other minorities have been imprisoned in reeducation camps and pressured into forced labor at factories across the country.

    Freedom was already used to making statements in unconventional ways; he’d changed his surname from Kanter on becoming an American citizen. And as he dug deeper, he found it hard to believe that people weren’t more aware of what was happening in Xinjiang. So he decided to do something about it.

    “I reached out to these artists around the world, and I told them to put all their struggles on the shoe,” he says. “And I’m gonna go out there and play basketball.”

    That was the 11th year of Freedom’s NBA career. It would be his last.

    Teammates began to warn him, he later testified in front of Congress, that he’d never play in the league again. Shortly afterwards, he was released from his contract – a move the NBA says had nothing to do with his activism.

    The cancelled Celtics broadcasts weren’t the first time Beijing had punished the NBA: in 2019, Chinese state media pulled games from its schedule after NBA commissioner Adam Silver defended the actions of Daryl Morey, then a Houston Rockets executive, who had tweeted support for protesters in Hong Kong. The affair cost the NBA hundreds of millions of dollars.

    China is a multibillion-dollar market for the NBA, with more basketball fans than the US has people. Freedom says the league is beholden to Chinese interests.

    It’s also a huge platform for Chinese brands to advertise themselves to the world. The Chinese sportswear brand Li-Ning has been using NBA players to promote its footwear for over a decade, ever since Dwyane Wade ended his contract with Nike’s Jordan subsidiary and signed with the Chinese company in 2012.

    Li-Ning and other Chinese brands like Anta and 361 Degrees now compete with legacy American companies for lucrative sponsorship deals. Over a dozen NBA players had deals with the three brands in 2022, according to analysis from ESPN.

    Li-Ning has deals with the Golden State Warriors’ Jimmy Butler – also lured from Jordan in 2020 for a huge deal that includes various signature shoe lines – and the Houston Rockets’ Fred VanVleet, also president of the National Basketball Players Association. Anta sponsors stars including Klay Thompson and Kyrie Irving, while 361 Degrees’ roster includes the Serbian legend Nikola Jokić. (These sponsorship deals are made with the players directly and are not subject to NBA approval.)

    None of these players’ representatives responded to requests for comment.

    Now, TBIJ and the Guardian can reveal that all three brands are linked to the oppression Freedom highlighted on his trainers. And so is Nike.

    Leveraging forced labor

    Earlier this year a major investigation by TBIJ, the New York Times and Der Spiegel connected more than 100 global brands to the Xinjiang labor transfer scheme that moves ethnic minorities thousands of miles across China to work in eastern factories. The transfer scheme is a central pillar of the Chinese government’s systematic destruction of the Uyghur, Kazakh and Kyrgyz communities of Xinjiang.

    Anta, Li-Ning and 361 Degrees are among the brands that directly own production sites linked to these human rights abuses. And those labels are also supplied by other companies participating in the labor transfer program.

    A 361 Degrees factory in Fujian has taken Xinjiang workers for at least a decade: a “collective wedding” of Kazakh workers at the factory in 2015 referred to nearly 400 workers. Social media content from Xinjiang workers showing the factory compound was uploaded as recently as last year.

    At least three factories supplying Li-Ning have used workers from the labor transfer scheme. One clip uploaded by a Uyghur worker shows a pair of black and silver Li-Ning trainers on a conveyor belt at a factory in Hubei.

    “Life is too hard, but I don’t want to admit defeat,” reads the title of a video from a worker at a different Li-Ning supplier. “This guy is really ordering people to work a lot,” says the accompanying voiceover in Uyghur, referring to a Han Chinese supervisor who stands nearby, hands on hips. “If I don’t get out of here I know I’m gonna work myself to death.”

    Enes Kanter Freedom’s sneakers are seen before a 2021 game in Boston. Photograph: Omar Rawlings/Getty Images

    361 Degrees’ sponsorships stretch beyond the NBA to World Aquatics events and Olympic runners. Li-Ning’s partnerships, meanwhile, include China’s Olympic delegation and a clutch of young badminton pros in the UK. The brand has also made a point of supporting Beijing’s approach to Xinjiang.

    When global businesses began to remove Xinjiang cotton from their supply chains after concerns about forced labor in the fields, Li-Ning kept “made with Xinjiang cotton” on its clothing labels. While Nike and other global brands faced furious backlash from Chinese consumers for ceasing to use Xinjiang cotton – amplified by state media campaigns – Li-Ning’s sales and share price surged.

    Sporting partnerships of this sort allow these companies to bolster China’s soft power. When the Houston Rockets executive Morey made his statement in support of Hong Kong, Li-Ning and Anta both announced they would be halting their partnerships with the team.

    Li-Ning told us it “strictly opposes and prohibits any form of forced labor” in its supply chain and regularly audits its suppliers, with a “zero-tolerance” policy enforced. It added that the company “always upholds human rights and the legal rights of labor”.

    361 Degrees and Anta did not respond to requests for comment.

    Mike Bass, an NBA spokesperson, said: “We have always supported and will continue to support every member of the NBA family, including Enes Freedom, expressing their personal views on social and political issues. We will continue to follow US government guidance and policy regarding operating in China and more than 200 other countries and territories around the world where we engage fans.”

    Freedom isn’t surprised to hear that half a dozen factories in the supply chains of Li-Ning, Anta and 361 Degrees are tied to Xinjiang forced labor. But there’s one brand above all that he has questions for – and he has been asking them for the last four years.

    ‘Selective activism’

    “Who makes your shoes in China? Do you even know?” Freedom demanded of Nike in a video posted to Twitter (now X) in 2021.

    Nike has been a major commercial partner of the NBA since 1992 and last year signed on to be the league’s outfitting, merchandising, marketing and content partner until 2037 – a deal reportedly worth well over $1bn.

    Freedom’s questions came after Nike had been connected to a sneaker factory in Shandong province that had taken Uyghur transfer workers. Nike maintained that the supplier had stopped hiring workers from Xinjiang and that inspections had confirmed this.

    “Our ongoing diligence has not found evidence of employment of Uyghurs, or other ethnic minorities from [Xinjiang], elsewhere in our supply chain in China,” it said at the time.

    But TBIJ has found sources that link Nike to Fulgent Sun, a footwear manufacturer in Fujian province that has long absorbed workers from Xinjiang. The factory started working with the government to bring Uyghur and Kyrgyz people to Fujian in 2013.

    When approached with TBIJ’s findings, a Nike spokesperson said that the company had ended its relationship with the Fujian factory in 2015. They did acknowledge that Nike had sourced from an affiliated site in central China for its label Converse in recent years.

    However, various sources – from industry press and academic articles to Fulgent Sun’s own corporate materials – point to Nike being an important customer over the past decade.

    TBIJ pulled export records that showed multiple shipments from the Fujian factory to Nike in the US after 2015, including as recently as November 2022. The shipments were all delivered via one of the brand’s main logistics partners in the region.

    After seeing some of TBIJ’s evidence, Nike said its records “contradicted [TBIJ’s] claims”, and maintained it hadn’t purchased anything from the implicated factory since 2015. It added that it “remains committed to ethical and responsible manufacturing”.

    Fulgent Sun didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    Freedom – who wore a pair of shoes emblazoned with “Nike Hypocrite”, “Made with slave labor” and “No more excuses” in one of his final NBA games – claims it was criticism of both China and Nike that cost him his career.

    He’s saddened by what he calls selective activism from Nike, which has been a proud supporter of US-focused social justice movements like Black Lives Matter. “You stand up for things unless it hits your pocket, hurts you financially,” he says.

    “Stand up for what’s right,” he adds. Speaking to the NBA players sponsored by brands linked to human rights violations, he said: “Put yourself in their shoes. Imagine it was your sister or daughter. Would you still be silent?”

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  • Sabalenka gets revenge on Fernandez

    Sabalenka gets revenge on Fernandez


    NEW YORK:

    Aryna Sabalenka evened the score with Leylah Fernandez at the U.S. Open with a 6-3 7-6(2) win on Friday to keep alive her hopes of becoming the first player since Serena Williams to win consecutive titles at Flushing Meadows.

    The world number one had unfinished business with the Canadian, who stunned Sabalenka in straight sets in the 2021 semi-finals en route to her runners-up finish in their only previous meeting.

    There would be no repeat of that shock on Friday, with Sabalenka overcoming early jitters on Louis Armstrong Stadium, surviving a marathon opening game that featured three break points before finding her rhythm.

    Fernandez refused to go quietly and forced a second-set tiebreak before the Belarusian’s power prevailed.

    Sabalenka’s victory extends her perfect U.S. Open third-round record to 6-0. The win also brings her within four victories of matching Serena Williams’ feat of winning consecutive U.S. Open titles achieved more than a decade ago.

    The match began with Fernandez earning multiple break points in the opening game, but Sabalenka’s resilience shone through as she saved them all before eventually holding serve.

    That early test seemed to settle the world number one, who broke Fernandez’s serve in the fourth game and never looked back in the first set.

    “I really wanted this revenge,” Sabalenka said in her on-court interview. “I’m very happy with the win.”

    The second set proved far more competitive with both players trading holds until a tiebreak, where Sabalenka’s experience told as she raced to a 6-1 lead before sealing victory with a forehand winner.

     

     

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  • George Russell and Fernando Alonso have a close call in unusual incident during FP3 in Zandvoort

    George Russell and Fernando Alonso have a close call in unusual incident during FP3 in Zandvoort

    George Russell and Fernando Alonso had a very close call that saw them narrowly avoid contact in an unusual incident during third and final practice at the Dutch Grand Prix.

    The Mercedes driver was in front of Alonso heading out of the final corner but, as they approached the pit entry, the two-time World Champion had to take evading action when Russell suddenly moved over as if about to pit, only to then continue on for another lap.

    Alonso, left with nowhere to go, dived into the pits himself, leaving the Aston Martin man to remark: “They don’t look at their mirrors.” The incident will be investigated after the session.

    Hit go on the video player above to watch the moment unfold.

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  • Lando Norris dominates practice again from McLaren team mate Oscar Piastri

    Lando Norris dominates practice again from McLaren team mate Oscar Piastri

    Lando Norris completed a clean sweep of fastest Free Practice times ahead of the Dutch Grand Prix, finishing more than two-tenths clear of McLaren team mate Oscar Piastri in the third session.

    The duo stamped their authority on proceedings ahead of Qualifying on Saturday afternoon, finishing well clear of the rest of the field, which was headed by George Russell and Carlos Sainz.

    Heavy overnight rain left the track damp at the start of the one-hour session, with drivers in no rush to head out on to the Zandvoort Circuit for several minutes.

    Isack Hadjar was eventually the first to venture out, the Racing Bulls driver keen to make up for a lack of running in FP2 after coming to a stop on track with no laps under his belt.

    But the Frenchman completed just one lap on the intermediate tyre before pitting, stating over the radio that “the track is very green” as Kimi Antonelli was the next to explore the circuit but on medium Pirelli rubber.

    Antonelli moved back to the top with a 1m 13.740s and times began to tumble with the majority of the field performing installation laps approaching the 10-minute mark, with Franco Colapinto and Gabriel Bortoleto both jumping to the head of the standings on the hard tyre.

    Lance Stroll in his repaired Aston Martin – after a heavy shunt in FP2 which required a survival cell change overnight – became the first driver to use the soft tyre and set a sub 1m 12s time, registering a 1m 11.854s, which was quickly beaten by Antonelli and then Fernando Alonso, the latter with a 1m 11.082s.

    Friday pacesetter Norris set a new benchmark just after the 20-minute point, moving clear at the top of the times with a 1m 10.262s, with McLaren team mate Piastri less than one-tenth slower on his first lap with the soft tyre.

    Max Verstappen moved back up to third with the medium compound, just over four-tenths slower than Norris as track conditions continued to improve approaching the halfway point, although free air was at a premium with 20 cars out on circuit.

    With his second set of soft tyres, Piastri moved to the top with a 1m 10.120s, the Australian showing himself to be consistently quicker than Norris in the opening sector before losing time over the remainder of the lap.

    Qualifying simulations became the focus for all teams in the final 15 minutes, with Norris setting a new benchmark – a 1m 08.972s – which was comfortably quicker than any of his Friday efforts.

    Piastri was left trailing his team mate by more than two-tenths with his next effort, which proved to be the pair’s best laps.

    Verstappen’s first lap on softs left him nearly a full second slower than Norris, as Russell just slotted ahead of the Red Bull driver.

    Russell then suffered a bizarre moment as he was nearly collected by the Aston Martin of Alonso at high-speed as both headed towards the pit lane entrance, with the incident placed under investigation.

    Sainz slotted his Williams ahead of Verstappen, with the home hero left in fifth from Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari and the second Williams of Alex Albon. Stroll, Hadjar and Alonso completed the top 10.

    Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls), Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) and Bortoleto (Kick Sauber) finished 11th-13th, with Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari only 14th.
    Oliver Bearman (Haas) and Hulkenberg finished ahead of Antonelli, who was blocked by Stroll and Tsunoda on his final lap.

    Esteban Ocon (Haas) finished ahead of the Alpine pair, led by Pierre Gasly and then Colapinto, ahead of Qualifying later this afternoon.

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  • John McEnroe tells US Open star to ‘get your act together’ after worrying exit | Tennis | Sport

    John McEnroe tells US Open star to ‘get your act together’ after worrying exit | Tennis | Sport

    John McEnroe pulled no punches with his verdict on Daniil Medvedev’s humiliating meltdown at the US Open. The former champion was dumped out in the opening round by French qualifier Benjamin Bonzi in one of the tournament’s early shocks. The result was overshadowed by Medvedev’s petulant behaviour as the match began to slip away from him.

    In the third set, a photographer walked onto the court as Bonzi was preparing to serve on match point. Medvedev was left furious with the umpire’s decision to award his opponent a new first serve because of a delay caused by ‘outside interference’. He angrily confronted the official before shouting: “Guys, he wants to leave. He gets paid by the match, not by the hour.”

    The match was delayed for around seven minutes before Bonzi finally got to serve. When he did, he double-faulted and Medvedev claimed the next two sets to force a decider. Bonzi, however, battled back to win the match and progress to the second round.

    Medvedev went on to smash his racket in a furious rage and was later fined almost £31,500 by the United States Tennis Association (USTA). It means the Russian will have to forfeit about 40 per cent of the prize money he received.

    McEnroe was quizzed on Medvedev’s conduct on the Nothing Major Show and described the 29-year-old as ‘lost’ while urging him to avoid embarrassing himself again in future.

    “You know, he already has tapped out, like months ago,” said the American. “I’ve been worried about his level because he doesn’t know what the hell he’s doing at this point for a guy that good on hard courts.

    “This [meltdown] sort of cemented it, like how little confidence he has in anything. Bonzi showed a lot of balls at the end in the fifth set. I was sort of hoping Medvedev would win.

    “He’s got to get his act together. I’m not sure he can. I think he’s so lost right now. I’m not sure what’s going to happen with him in the future. I always liked Daniil. There’s something about the US Open that brings out the best and worst of him.”

    Medvedev has endured a forgettable year on the court, winning just one Grand Slam match at the Australian Open. He was dumped out in the opening rounds of the French Open and Wimbledon before suffering another early exit at the US Open.

    Speaking after his latest defeat, Medvedev admitted that he knew a hefty fine was coming his way. He refused to give much away, explaining that he did not want to land himself in even deeper trouble.

    “I have no idea how much the fine would be,” he said. “I’m getting a big enough fine so if I speak, I’m in big trouble, so I’m not going to speak.”

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  • Rashid Khan’s brother dies; Shaheen Afridi consoles Afghanistan spinner, Pakistan cricketers offer prayers

    Rashid Khan’s brother dies; Shaheen Afridi consoles Afghanistan spinner, Pakistan cricketers offer prayers

    The cricketing world rallied around Afghan spin sensation Rashid Khan this week following the tragic death of his elder brother, Haji Abdul Halim Shinwari. In a touching moment of sportsmanship, the Pakistan national team paused after their victory in the opening match of the tri-nation T20I series to offer heartfelt condolences and prayers to Rashid.

    Shaheen Shah Afridi hugs Rashid Khan to comfort him after his brother’s death

    The solemn tribute came just days after Afghanistan’s squad was shaken by the personal loss. Known for being a pillar of support in Rashid’s life, Haji Abdul Halim’s passing was met with an outpouring of grief from teammates, past and present. Many took to social media to express their sorrow, including opener Ibrahim Zadran, who wrote on X:

    “An elder brother is like a father for the family… Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’un. My heartfelt condolences to @rashidkhan_19 and his family.”

    Former national captain Asghar Afghan also expressed deep sympathy:

    “May Allah grant him the highest ranks of Paradise (Jannat al-Firdaus) and bestow beautiful patience upon their esteemed family. Ameen.”

    But perhaps the most poignant moment came on the field. Following their comprehensive win over Afghanistan by 39 runs in Sharjah, the Pakistan team gathered to honour Rashid and his family, offering prayers and words of comfort. A video capturing the emotional tribute quickly went viral, showcasing a moment that transcended competition.

    Pakistan pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi was seen hugging Rashid Khan to comfort the Afghan legend.

    Despite the personal turmoil, Rashid Khan took the field for his side, even contributing a late blitz of 39 off 16 balls. His valiant effort came after Afghanistan’s chase of Pakistan’s 182-run total unravelled under mounting pressure. The side collapsed from 93/2 to 97/7 in the middle overs, derailed by Haris Rauf’s blistering pace and Sufiyan Muqeem’s clever spin.

    Earlier, Pakistan posted a strong total on the back of Salman Ali Agha’s unbeaten 53, a calm and composed innings that rescued his team from a shaky 63/3 start. The Pakistan top order looked uncertain, but the middle-order effort ensured a competitive score that proved enough to secure victory.

    While the tri-series action continues in the lead-up to the Asia Cup, Rashid’s presence on the field—despite personal grief—was a testament to his character and dedication. And the gesture from Pakistan’s players served as a reminder that cricket, at its heart, remains a game of respect, unity, and humanity.

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  • Canada vs Wales LIVE: Women’s Rugby World Cup kick-off time, lineups, TV, radio commentary & updates

    Canada vs Wales LIVE: Women’s Rugby World Cup kick-off time, lineups, TV, radio commentary & updates

    Wales team newspublished at 11:34 British Summer Time

    Canada v Wales (12:00 BST)

    Image source, Huw Evans Picture Agency

    Wales boss Sean Lynn reacted to the performance against
    Scotland by making seven changes to the starting side.

    Both co-captains Alex Callender and Kate Williams are
    injured so flanker Bethan Lewis leads the side.

    There is an all-new front row of Maisie Davies, Molly
    Reardon and Sisilia Tuipulotu, while Abbie Fleming comes in at lock.

    Lewis is joined in the back row by Georgia Evans and
    Bryonie King with Carys Cox coming into midfield.

    There is youth on the bench in the shape of uncapped Branwen
    Metcalfe, Tilly Vucaj and Seren Lockwood.

    Wales: Nel Metcalfe; Jasmine Joyce-Butchers,
    Carys Cox, Courtney Keight, Lisa Neumann; Lleucu George, Keira Bevan; Maisie
    Davies, Molly Reardon, Sisilia Tuipulotu, Abbie Fleming, Gwen Crabb, Bryonie
    King, Bethan Lewis (capt), Georgia Evans

    Replacements: Kelsey Jones, Gwenllian Pyrs, Jenni
    Scoble, Tilly Vucaj, Branwen Metcalfe, Seren Lockwood, Kayleigh Powell, Kerin
    Lake.

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  • European soccer updates: Chelsea-Fulham, Man United-Burnley

    European soccer updates: Chelsea-Fulham, Man United-Burnley

    It’s the final weekend before the international break, and across Europe, several intriguing matchups are set to unfold.

    In the Premier League, Saturday kicks off with Chelsea hosting Fulham in a London derby. At Old Trafford, Ruben Amorim’s Manchester United look to put their humiliating Carabao Cup exit against Grimsby Town behind them when they face Burnley, with the Portuguese manager under mounting pressure to earn his first win of the season.

    Elsewhere, Thomas Frank will aim to extend his unbeaten run as Tottenham Hotspur take on Bournemouth, while Newcastle United seek redemption after a last-minute defeat to Liverpool when they travel to take on newly promoted Leeds United.

    Over in the Bundesliga, Vincent Kompany’s Bayern Munich continue their strong start, with all eyes once again on Harry Kane as they take on Augsburg. With plenty of action lined up across the continent, Saturday promises drama and storylines from every corner of Europe.

    Enjoy all the highlights and big moments across Europe from the day’s action.

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  • 2025/26 Champions League: All the league phase fixtures – UEFA.com

    1. 2025/26 Champions League: All the league phase fixtures  UEFA.com
    2. 2025/26 Europa League: Teams, dates, draws, format, final  UEFA.com
    3. The key questions & information ahead of the Europa League draw  Nottingham Forest FC
    4. Explained: Who are Kairat, the Champions League team who play closer to Tokyo than Paris? – The Athletic  The New York Times
    5. Champions League draw reaction: Good for Arsenal and Spurs, bad for PSG, must-see games  ESPN India

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  • France v Brazil match preview

    France v Brazil match preview

    France, as expected, are using the depth of their squad as they take on Brazil for the very first time. Just four players remain from their impressive opening 24-0 win over Italy, but the big news is the return of talismanic No.9 Pauline Bourdon Sansus – back after a two-match ban. 

    For As Yaras it is a chance to test themselves against one of the very best. All eyes are on the white line, with Brazil openly targeting a first RWC try. Either way, there will tons of colour, joy and commitment on show in Exeter. 

    Kick-off: 16:45 BST, Sunday, 31 August

    Venue: Sandy Park, Exeter

    If you have a ticket already, make sure you read Canada international and Exeter Chiefs legend Emily Tuttosi’s Guide to her home-from-home. 

    How to watch: Head here to get a last-minute ticket.

    Or check out our Global Guide to the TV options in your area. 

    France team 

    France’s key player: It is impossible to ignore Pauline Bourdon Sansus. Arguably the world’s best scrum-half, she is central to so much of France’s best stuff. Renewing her halfback partnership with Toulouse teammate Lina Queyroi at this stage of the tournament is great news for Les Bleues. 

    Brazil team

    Brazil’s key player: Number eight Iris Coluna has been a stalwart of Brazilian rugby and the 35-year-old, vice-captain, is intending to lead from the front against the mighty French. Expect plenty of energy and no little passion. 

    What they said: 

    France co-head coach Gaëlle Mignot: 

    “We’ve said it from the start – we want to build momentum. There was frustration in attack against Italy, some areas just didn’t click. When you get into the red zone 15 times and don’t come away with points, you know something’s missing.

    “Against Brazil the focus is on us. We need to finish our chances every time they come. 

    “Of course there was relief after that first match against the toughest team in the pool, but above all there was frustration that we hadn’t delivered a more complete performance. We’ve spent three months preparing very specific areas, and in attack we weren’t at the level we wanted.

    “This weekend we’ll have lots of possession, plenty of turnover ball – and in those situations, precision is everything.”

    France captain Marine Ménager:

    “It’s a first for me (being sole captain without usual co-captain Manae Feleu). I’ll be discovering some things, especially around what happens before and during the game. I’ll need support from the forwards because of my position, and also when it comes to communicating with the referee – my English isn’t strong enough. But I’ll be well supported: Agathe [Gerin] will be there to help me with that during the match.”

    Brazil head coach Emiliano Caffera: 

    “In South America, like in the men’s game; we have a potential in rugby. We need a structure; we are one of the two nations from 15 in South America. The other one, Colombia, was strong but there is a lot of change which has stopped them. We need to be with a lot of countries playing 15s; if not, we can’t grow.

    “All the 15s-playing nations play too far away from us. We don’t have championships to play for. Maybe this is a way to improve women’s rugby in South America but it’s not easy, we need a lot of things. We want to be the first country to pave the road for women’s rugby in South America.”

    Brazil captain Eshyllen Coimbra: 

    “We felt like we were ready, to be able to lead out for Brazil for the first time. We were living the dream for everyone! We felt proud of our dream coming true, we have had each other’s back, being together, not because it’s just our dream but the people who came before us too.”

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