On July 22, the New Zealand women's football (soccer) team was training in Saint-Étienne, France, for its upcoming Olympics matchup against Canada when team officials noticed a drone hovering near the practice pitch. Suspecting skullduggery, the New Zealand squad called the local police, and gendarmes located and then detained the nearby drone operator. He turned out to be one Joseph Lombardi, an "unaccredited analyst with Canada Soccer"—and he was apparently spying on the New Zealand practice and relaying information to a Canadian assistant coach.
On July 23, the New Zealand Olympic Committee put out a statement saying it was "deeply shocked and disappointed by this incident, which occurred just three days before the sides are due to face each other in their opening game of Paris 2024." It also complained to the official International Olympic Committee integrity unit.
Early today, July 24, the Canadian side issued its own statement saying that it "stands for fair-play and we are shocked and disappointed. We offer our heartfelt apologies to New Zealand Football, to all the players affected, and to the New Zealand Olympic Committee."
Later in the day, a follow-up Canadian statement revealed that this was actually the second drone-spying incident; the New Zealand side had also been watched by drone at its July 19 practice.
Team Canada announced four responses to these incidents: