Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

US program aims to ensure player safety

- By Anne M. Peterson

U.S. Soccer has introduced a Safe Soccer program that will require comprehens­ive vetting of individual­s involved in the sport as the federation continues to address its investigat­ion into coach misconduct in the National Women’s Soccer League.

The Safe Soccer program announced Monday aims to overhaul the criteria for participat­ion in the sport from the youth level to the profession­al leagues. It includes safety training, background checks and annual reviews.

The rollout will start with a pilot program involving U.S. Soccer staff but eventually will reach “all participan­ts in the soccer ecosystem,” the federation announced. The process is expected to take several years.

“We want to make sure that we’re getting bad actors out of our game. But we also want to make sure that we’re incentiviz­ing, motivating and rewarding people who are doing the right thing,” said former U.S. national team defender Danielle Slaton, chair of U.S. Soccer’s Yates Implementa­tion Committee.

“The challenge is how we do that and I think a lot of that is going to be up to the (participan­t safety) task force, up to our membership and up to all of us working to pull in the same direction on that front,” Slaton added.

Both U.S. Soccer and the NWSL pledged to implement recommenda­tions made in two scathing reports on systemic abuse and misconduct in the nation’s top profession­al women’s league.

U.S. Soccer published the results of its investigat­ion, led by former acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Q. Yates, in October. A separate report commission­ed by the NWSL and its players union was released in December. Both sides look to both expand and adopt measures to ensure player safety in the new year.

Among the Yates report recommenda­tions was a requiremen­t that teams disclose coach misconduct to the league and USSF to ensure coaches aren’t allowed to move between teams. It also called for timely investigat­ion into allegation­s of abuse and meaningful vetting of participan­ts.

Mana Shim and fellow former NWSL player Sinead Farrelly came forward in 2021 with allegation­s of harassment and sexual coercion against longtime league coach Paul Riley. He was among five of the league’s 10 coaches who were fired or resigned that year amid claims of misconduct. He denied the allegation­s.

Shim is now chair of the USSF’s Participan­t Safety Taskforce, which aims to implement safeguardi­ng measures across soccer in the United States. Shannon Boxx, a U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer, also is on the task force.

The implementa­tion committee has proposed amendments to the federation’s profession­al league standards for all affiliated leagues, including Major League Soccer, the NWSL, United Soccer League and others.

The proposed changes include prohibitin­g the use of nondisclos­ure and non-disparagem­ent agreements that hide informatio­n about abuse allegation­s.

The standards would also require teams to designate a player safety officer, provide training and education on abuse and misconduct, and produce annual safeguardi­ng reports to U.S. Soccer.

Those changes must be approved by U.S. Soccer’s Board of Directors, which meets in March.

The Yates report made 12 overall recommenda­tions “aimed at preventing abuse in the future, holding wrongdoers accountabl­e, enhancing transparen­cy, addressing safety in youth soccer and fostering a profession­al environmen­t where players are treated with respect.” U.S. Soccer has either implemente­d or is acting on the recommenda­tions. The federation is also working closely with the NWSL to make reforms.

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