Lodi News-Sentinel

WNBA players, sports legends react to SCOTUS abortion decision

- Myah Taylor and Iliana Limon Romero

LOS ANGELES — Anger, frustratio­n and broken heart emojis began filling the Twitter and Instagram feeds of athletes on Friday morning.

The WNBA, long known for quickly speaking out on social justice issues, led a wave of athletes denouncing the Supreme Court for overturnin­g the landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision and ruling states may again outlaw abortion. Opinion polls show most Americans support access to abortion, at least in the early months of a pregnancy, but half of the states are expected to pass or enforce laws that make most abortions illegal.

Some expressed frustratio­n that the ruling came on the day after the 50th anniversar­y of Title IX was celebrated and on the heels of the Supreme Court relaxing some gun laws.

The Women’s National Basketball Players Associatio­n released a statement Friday condemning the ruling, with many players and teams quickly following its lead.

“Are we in a democracy where guns have more rights than women?” the associatio­n wrote in the statement, which called out the high court for being “out of touch with the country and any sense of human decency.”

The Sparks were among a handful of teams using team social media accounts to state they were “outraged by today’s Supreme Court decision.”

“This ruling strips women of their fundamenta­l right to have autonomy over their own bodies. As we have for over 25 years, the Los Angeles Sparks organizati­on will continue to fight and advocate for women’s freedoms, health equity, and social justice,” a team statement read.

Sparks guard Lexie Brown tweeted, “Like how did we get here? So much happening in this country and this is what they want to focus on. It’s really terrifying actually.”

And Sparks teammate Katie Lou Samuelson posted, “Wow… this is an absolute travesty.”

Sue Bird, the Seattle Storm star, expressed her disappoint­ment on Twitter shortly after the news broke. She has since shared voter advocacy informatio­n and tweets about reproducti­ve rights by state.

The Storm tweeted in a statement that they are “furious and ready to fight.”

Billie Jean King, the tennis legend and Long Beach native, tweeted Friday that “it is a sad day in the United States.” King spoke out about her journey getting an abortion in her memoir “All In” and continued her rallying cry for abortion rights after a draft of the Supreme Court decision leaked in May.

Fellow tennis great Martina Navratilov­a expressed her frustratio­n over the ruling and tweeted, “Welcome to Gilead,” alluding to the fictional location of the popular book and television series “The Handmaid’s Tale,” where women are stripped of all individual rights.

Male athletes and coaches have begun chiming in as well.

Lakers star LeBron James retweeted former President Obama’s statements about the ruling, while Austin Rivers asked on Twitter, “Is America going backwards?”

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