All Scores

Venezuelan national team players detail abuse by former coach

Two dozen players from Venezuela’s women’s national soccer teams signed a letter on Tuesday, accusing former coach Kenneth Zseremeta of sexual harassment and abuse.

Zseremeta led the women’s national teams at various levels for nine years. He was fired in 2017.

Atletico Madrid star Deyna Castellanos signed and published the joint letter on her social media channels in addition to a personal statement about the Paul Riley scandal that rocked the NWSL last week.

According to the letter, one player revealed last year that she had been sexually abused by Zseremeta since the age of 14.

The players said the coach repeatedly asked them about their sexuality and sexual orientation and there were cases of “physical and psychological abuse during training” sessions. He also frequently “harassed” players, the letter read, with phone call invitations, massages and inappropriate gifts.

“Today we understand that these actions had the intent of manipulating us and making us feel guilty. Players of the LGBTI community were constantly questioned for their sexual orientation and the harassment of the heterosexual [players] was constant,” the letter said. “There were threats and manipulation about telling parents of the players about their sexual orientation if they did not obey or perform as expected.”

Zsemereta led Venezuela to a fourth-place finish at the U17 World Cup in 2014. It was the first time a Venezuelan national team, men’s or women’s, had reached the semifinals of a global tournament organized by FIFA.

Zsemereta was fired as coach of the U20 women’s national team in 2017 after players complained about malnourishment during the country’s severe economic crisis.

The allegations come as the NWSL reckons with a scandal of its own. In response to allegations of sexual coercion and emotional abuse made against Riley, the NWSL, US Soccer and FIFA have each opened investigations into the league while league commissioner Lisa Baird resigned last Friday.

Team USA Drops Full 232-Athlete Olympic Roster Ahead of 2026 Winter Games

US ski star Lindsey Vonn smiles and waves from the podium at a 2026 FIS World Cup competition.
Team USA alpine skiier Lindsey Vonn will compete in her fifth Olympic Games next month. (Hans Bezard/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

Team USA is coming in hot, releasing their full 232-player 2026 Olympic roster as the largest US contingent in history gears up for February's Winter Games in Italy.

"Right and left, we have just so many people able to get on the podium at these Games," said speed skater Erin Jackson, as she gears up to defend her 500-meter gold medal in her third Olympic appearance. "I'm really excited."

Between the men's and women's events, 98 of the participating US athletes are returning Olympians, including 33 previous podium finishers — 18 of them gold medalists.

Even more, seven members of Team USA are entering their fifth Winter Games, including decorated alpine skier Lindsey Vonn, hockey captain Hilary Knight, snowboarder Faye Thelen, and bobsled teammates Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Elana Meyers Taylor.

"I think my age is a big advantage actually," Vonn told reporters. "I have been in that start gate more than anyone else that's in the starting gate."

Meanwhile, the 134 fresh faces will look to have an immediate impact on the Olympic medal table for Team USA, including athletes like 20-year-old Stanford soccer defender and US cross-country skiier Sammy Smith and 15-year-old halfpipe freestyle skiier Abby Winterberger — the youngest member of the 2026 US roster.

How to watch Team USA at the 2026 Winter Olympics

The 2026 Winter Olympics officially kick off in Italy on February 6th, though a few events — including curling and women's hockey — will get underway on February 4th and 5th.

Full live coverage of the 2026 Olympic Games will air in the US across NBC platforms.

USWNT Takes On Chile to Cap January Friendlies

USWNT captain Trinity Rodman addresses her teammates in a huddle before a 2026 friendly against Paraguay.
Tuesday's friendly against Chile will be the last USWNT match before the player pool narrows in March. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

The world No. 2 USWNT returns to action on Tuesday night, taking the pitch for the first time in Santa Barbara, California, to close out the team's January friendlies against No. 47 Chile.

Tuesday also marks the final match before US manager Emma Hayes begins narrowing her player pool ahead of the 2026 SheBelieves Cup in March, with competition mounting in the lead-up to the 2027 World Cup qualifiers in November.

"I have a really good idea of the pool," Hayes told reporters prior to Tuesday's friendly. "I know which group of players we're going to be building around."

With a roster comprised entirely of NWSL players, Hayes will also be managing fitness as the team gears up for their second game in four days.

"One thing I have almost agreed to do, knowing where the players are at this stage of the season with their NWSL club, is to not start a player for two games," Hayes said.

"I'm putting together a whole new lineup," she continued. "Which itself will bring another set of challenges, whether that be first caps, whether that will be inexperience, [or] collectively playing together."

Three January call-ups remain uncapped, as North Carolina Courage midfielder Riley Jackson, Denver Summit defender Ayo Oke, and Bay FC goalkeeper Jordan Silkowitz look to make Tuesday night's starting XI.

How to watch the USWNT vs. Chile

The No. 2 USWNT will close out their January friendlies against No. 47 Chile at 10 PM ET on Tuesday, with live coverage airing on TBS.

Breanna Stewart Takes a Stand, Launches Hometown Foundation

Mist BC star Breanna Stewart holds up a sign that says "Abolish ICE" during her intro at a 2026 Unrivaled game.
WNBA star Breanna Stewart launched her foundation one day after protesting the recent ICE shooting of ICU nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. (Unrivaled Basketball)

WNBA star Breanna Stewart is making her voice heard, with the New York Liberty forward launching her Syracuse-focused Breanna Stewart Foundation one day after protesting Saturday's ICE shooting in Minneapolis on the Unrivaled 3×3 court.

First acknowledging the platform that basketball gave her, the Unrivaled co-founder said in her Monday social media post "my responsibility goes far beyond the game."

"This foundation starts where I'm from, Syracuse, and grows through New York because real impact has to begin at home," Stewart explained.

In partnership with Athletes for Impact, the Breanna Stewart Foundation aims to build "long-term, sustainable systems for women and youth in the community" to combat poverty through initiatives like healthcare services, education and mentoring opportunities, and sports programs.

The news came after Stewart held up a hand-written sign reading "Abolish ICE" during Sunday's Unrivaled introductions, with the Mist BC star calling attention to this month's fatal shootings at the hands of federal immigration agents in Minnesota.

"I wanted to have a simple message of 'Abolish ICE,' which means having policies to uplift families and communities instead of fueling fear and violence," Stewart said after Mist BC's win.

"All day yesterday, I was just disgusted from everything that you see on Instagram and in the news," she added. "It's scary.... You see it splitting up families and dissecting communities.... It's the worst in all ways."

"We're so fueled by hate right now instead of love."

Gotham FC Hunts International Glory at 2026 FIFA W Champions Cup in London

Gotham FC star Rose Lavelle celebrates her title-winning goal with teammates Midge Purce and Jaedyn Shaw during the 2025 NWSL Championship match.
Gotham FC will take on Brazil's SC Corinthians in Wednesday's FIFA W Champions Cup semifinals. (Elsa/NWSL via Getty Images)

Gotham FC steps back into the spotlight on Wednesday, when the reigning NWSL and Concacaf W Champions Cup winners take on SC Corinthians in the 2026 FIFA W Champions Cup semifinals in London.

"The hunger they have to win is unbelievable. It's in their nature," Gotham head coach Juan Carlos Amorós said of his team's continued title quest. "They win one competition and they're already thinking about the next one."

"This is where we want to be: competing in the semifinals, competing in the finals, competing to raise another trophy. That's the standard here at Gotham," defender Mandy Freeman echoed.

Further bolstering the US team is recent rookie signee Jordynn Dudley, who joins the NWSL club fresh off her own title-winning run at Florida State.

Hours after Gotham squares off against Brazil's 2025 Série A1 winners, UWCL champions Arsenal will face Moroccan Women's Championship titans ASFAR in the inaugural four-team competition's other semifinal.

The final and third-place matches will take place on Sunday, with a history-making $3.95 million total prize pool on the line.

The tournament winners will take home $2.3 million, while the runners-up net $1 million and each third-place team leaves with $200,000 — with $100,000 and $150,000 already sent to the clubs eliminated from the competition's play-in round.

How to watch the 2026 FIFA W Champions Cup semifinals

Gotham will kick off Wednesday's 2026 FIFA W Champions Cup semifinals against Corinthians at 7:30 AM ET, before Arsenal plays ASFAR at 1 PM ET.

Both clashes will air live on DAZN.