Orlando Sentinel

Women’s soccer grows in diversity

- By Kevin Baxter

LOS ANGELES — Growing up in a bedroom community across the East River from Manhattan, Crystal Dunn was often the only African-American on her school and club soccer teams.

Casey Short, who was raised two years and 800 miles away in suburban Chicago, had the same experience. So did Lynn Williams, who is from Fresno, where she both played soccer and watched it on television.

“Growing you, you didn’t really see a lot of women of color on TV,” said Williams, who analyzed the evidence and concluded early she didn’t have a future in the sport. “As a little girl you look at the TV screen and you usually go toward things [where] you see people that look like you.”

Little girls watching women’s soccer on TV today are likely to have a completely different experience. In the last couple of years African-American participat­ion in the sport has gone from isolated to indispensa­ble, and that’s bringing positive change to a game that has long lacked diversity. Five of the first 10 players selected in the NWSL draft earlier this month are African-American, a record total. Nine of the 22 women who started in last women’s College Cup final between USC and West Virginia are black.

And when the Trojans won, Keidane McAlpine became just the second African American coach to win an NCAA women’s soccer title.

But perhaps the most striking break from the past was the roster national team that coach Jill Ellis summoned to the StubHub Center this month for a 10-day winter training camp. Eleven of the 35 players called up — including Dunn, Short and Williams, who greatly misjudged her future in the sport — are AfricanAme­rican.

That, too, would be a record — if records on such things were kept. By way of comparison, Ellis started just two African Americans (Christen Press and Sydney Leroux) in the 2015 World Cup and three (Press, Dunn and Mallory Pugh) in last summer’s Olympics.

The transforma­tion, the coach said, is an important one for reasons that stretch far beyond the playing field.

“The more representa­tive any environmen­t — a team, a business, a school — can be of our populace, the more genuine that environmen­t becomes,” Ellis said. “It is fantastic that soccer is continuing to increase its reach in our country. With that, the platforms that feed our senior team, our youth national teams and colleges, are more diverse than they have ever been.

“It’s then natural that our senior team be reflective of this positive growth.”

McAlpine said that growth is obvious on the college recruiting trail, which runs through the nation’s high schools and youth leagues.

“We are starting to see more and more women of color that are able to play the game and play the game very well,” he said. “And I say women of color to broaden it. Latinas, black women, Asian — you’re starting to see a great crosssecti­on of women of color.

“Our game, being the world’s game, is far more open to people of color because it’s not a game that originated in the [United] States.”

The men’s national team has long reflected that. Nine of the 32 players new coach Bruce Arena called into his training camp this month are black, as were eight of the 23 players former coach Jurgen Klinsmann took to the last World Cup.

On the women’s side, however, the game has long been seen as a primarily white suburban sport.

“I think about when I was growing up, who I looked up to. The [national] team was pretty much all white,” Short said.

And though she said she never saw color — “I saw it like, ‘I want to do that. I want to be like them’ ” — Short understand­s she and the other African Americans on the national team and in the NWSL have become trailblaze­rs and role models for young girls who may want to follow them.

“It’s awesome that there’s more and that little girls can look on the TV and say, ‘Hey, she looks like me.’ Or, ‘She has crazy hair like me,’ ” said Short, who is in her third national team camp. “If she can do it, if she can play at the highest level, then I have a chance as well.”

Some of the new generation of players have offered more than just an example, though. They’ve offered excellence as well.

Dunn and Williams, who played her college soccer at Pepperdine, are both former NWSL scoring champions and MVPs. Pugh, still just 18, became the youngest American to score a goal in the Olympic Games when she tallied against Colombia last August.

And Press, who grew up in Los Angeles, won the Hermann Trophy — soccer’s equivalent of the Heisman — at Stanford, where she set six school records. And as the pool of women’s soccer talent in the U.S. expands and diversifie­s, that bar will only be pushed higher.

“There are better players that are being picked and showcased because they are actually now in the game,” McAlpine said. “For a long time we weren’t.”

 ?? PEDRO VILELA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Crystal Dunn, foreground, is among 11 African-Americans called up to the U.S. national winter training camp.
PEDRO VILELA/GETTY IMAGES Crystal Dunn, foreground, is among 11 African-Americans called up to the U.S. national winter training camp.

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