Albuquerque Journal

Rapinoe not pleased with Sunday’s scheduling

U.S. star says women competing with Copa and Gold Cup is ‘ridiculous’

- BY RONALD BLUM

Megan Rapinoe considers Sunday to be the final insult.

Just a few hours after the United States and the Netherland­s meet in the Women’s World Cup final in France, Brazil or Peru will celebrate winning the Copa America, South America’s men’s championsh­ip. And then at night, the United States or Mexico will win the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the men’s title of

North and Central America and the Caribbean.

A TV triple of championsh­ips for some is yet another slight for others.

“It’s ridiculous, and disappoint­ing, to be honest,” said Rapinoe, the star American midfielder.

FIFA said playing the three finals on the same day would boost attention for all

“The scheduling of the different events has gone through a comprehens­ive consultanc­y process, which has involved all key stakeholde­rs and taken into account different aspects of the women’s and men’s internatio­nal match calendars,” the governing body said in a statement. “It is a rare and exciting occurrence.”

CONCACAF President Victor Montaglian­i told The New York Times, however, the decision to schedule the Gold Cup final for Sunday was not deliberate and was due to a “clerical error.”

“It’s terrible,” said former American midfielder Aly Wagner, now Fox’s lead World Cup match analyst. “It is so disturbing to me that the Women’s World Cup does not have its own day to stand on its own and have a final to highlight these tremendous athletes and their work and their accomplish­ment. They wouldn’t dream of doing it to the men. Why would they do it to the women?”

FIFA announced the Women’s World Cup dates at the emblem launch on Sept. 18, 2017 , then revealed the full schedule the following Feb. 9 .

CONCACAF did not announce the expansion of the Gold Cup from 12 teams to 16 until Feb. 26, 2018, then said last Sept. 27 that the final would be held at Chicago’s Soldier Field on July 7. South America’s governing body made the Copa America dates known since at least early 2018 and said last Dec. 18 the final would kick off at 2 p.m. Mountain time.

The Women’s World Cup final will start at 9 a.m. on Fox, followed by the Copa America final at 2 p.m. on ESPN+ and the CONCACAF final at 7:15 p.m. on FS1. Telemundo, a sister network of NBC, has Women’s World Cup and Copa America Spanishlan­guage U.S. rights, while Univision has the Gold Cup.

“I really am a believer in the rising tide lifts all ships,” said David Neal, executive producer of Fox’s World Cup coverage. “Because of the timing of them, it’s probably not going to hurt anybody.”

Advertiser­s don’t seem to think the three finals will cannibaliz­e each other.

“It doesn’t alter in any way shape or form what we plan to do. I’m not sure whether it’ll splinter viewership or not,” said Chris Curtin, chief brand and innovation marketing officer of Visa, one of six FIFA partners.

Advertiser­s focus on their product’s marketing and activation and pretty much ignore the other tournament­s.

“The priority for Coca-Cola is the FIFA Women’s World Cup and we’re going to do everything we can to bring a lot of attention, a lot people in front of TVs, to watch the game, to watch the final,” said Ricardo Fort, head of global sponsorshi­ps at The Coca-Cola Co., another FIFA partner. “Too bad for the other finals. I’m pretty sure the Women’s World Cup final is going to be a big global event again.”

For the U.S. women’s team, vocal advocates for gender equity, the three finals are just another in a long parade of putdowns that include lower prize money and arrangemen­ts inferior to those provided for the men.

“I don’t really understand why there’s such a resistance against going all-in on women,” Rapinoe said. “I think it’s pretty clear women in sport have not been treated with the same care and financing and all of that that men’s sports has.”

 ?? FRANCISCO SECO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? United States’ Megan Rapinoe celebrates after scoring against Francel. Rapinoe says, ‘it’s ridiculous and disappoint­ing,’ to have three finals on Sunday.
FRANCISCO SECO/ASSOCIATED PRESS United States’ Megan Rapinoe celebrates after scoring against Francel. Rapinoe says, ‘it’s ridiculous and disappoint­ing,’ to have three finals on Sunday.
 ?? LAUREN CIPRIANI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Megan Rapinoe, the star midfielder for the U.S. women’s national team, missed the semifinal with a hamstring injury but is expected to play in the final on Sunday.
LAUREN CIPRIANI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Megan Rapinoe, the star midfielder for the U.S. women’s national team, missed the semifinal with a hamstring injury but is expected to play in the final on Sunday.

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