The Denver Post

U.S. women win it all this time on their own terms

- By Tim Dahlberg

Megan Rapinoe left early, her work done for the day. The celebratio­n came early, too, for a U.S. team determined up until the final minute to win this Women’s World Cup on its own terms.

No excuses. Certainly no apologies.

Just dominant soccer from a team that embraced the moment both on the pitch and in front of the microphone­s in France.

The argument about equal pay ends now. These women deserve more, much more, than anyone on the perenniall­y underachie­ving U.S. men’s team.

And give them an extra pat on the back for doing it their own way.

“An amazing group of players but even better group of people,” U.S. coach Jill Ellis said. “They put their hearts and soul into this journey and I can’t thank them enough.”

There should be thanks all around for this team, and not just because they won another World Cup. That was almost expected — the U.S. has now won four of the eight Women’s World Cups — but not many thought that it

would play out in this fashion.

They kicked off the tournament by preening and posing with each goal — all 13 of them — in a rout of Thailand. They spoke out about parity in their paychecks and equal rights, and their pink haired captain got into a tiff with President Donald Trump over a possible White House visit.

And when their 2-0 win over the Netherland­s was over, the message had gotten through. Fans dressed in red, white and blue chanted “Equal Pay” in support of their lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation.

“Give the people what they want,” Rapinoe said.

The equal pay will come, if not for this team then maybe for the next. It has to, because not only are the U.S. women more successful than the men, they are far more entertaini­ng.

That showed when Rapinoe posed dramatical­ly after putting the U.S. ahead for good with a second half penalty shot. It showed with some final match head banging that put one player out of the final and left another bloodied.

It showed all tournament long whenever controvers­y threatened to interfere with the mission of a group of very talented players and a coach not afraid to push all the right buttons.

“We’re crazy, that’s what makes it special,” Rapinoe said. “We have no quit in us, we’re so tight and we’ll do anything to win.”

What it means for the future of women’s soccer is less clear, if only because great breakthrou­ghs that were predicted from earlier World Cup titles never quite happened. The good news is there were some encouragin­g signs this week with ESPN agreeing to televise National Women’s Soccer League games the rest of the season and Budweiser announcing on Sunday it was signing on as a multiyear national sponsor of the league.

What is also evident is that the rest of the world is catching up to the U.S., though the Americans never trailed in any match. With European countries in particular devoting more resources to the women’s game, there’s going to be a World Cup in the not so distant future in which the U.S. isn’t an overwhelmi­ng favorite.

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