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Women’s soccer players kneel in unison for anthem as first U.S. pro sports league resumes play.

NWSL players kneel in unison for anthem as team sports return

- Ky Andy alayton New York Daily News

Team sports returned Saturday with a dramatic opening scene.

The National Women’s Soccer League became the first North American pro sports league to resume play since the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic, kicking off its Challenge Cup with a showdown between the North Carolina Courage and the Portland Thorns in Herriman, Utah.

But before the first kick of the ball, players made it clear there were more important things at stake than a soccer game.

Both teams took the field wearing Black Lives Matter Tshirts and then, in a scene never seen before in pro team sports in the U.S., all players in the starting lineup took a knee during the playing of the national anthem.

“We took a knee today to protest racial injustice, police brutality, and systemic racism against Black people and people of color in America,” the teams said in a joint statement released before the game. “We love our country and we have taken this opportunit­y to hold it to a higher standard.

“It is our duty to demand that the liberties and freedoms this nation was founded upon are extended to everyone.”

A substitute player, members of the coaching staff and the officials appeared to be the only ones to stand during the playing of the “Star Spangled Banner.” The players also wore “Black

Lives Matter” armbands during the game.

“You love to see these women using their voice, demanding better for America, and for black people and people of color.” U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe said via Twitter.

Rapinoe, who opted not to join her NWSL club (Reign) for the eight-team, month-long “bubble” tournament in Utah, was among the first high-profile athletes to take a knee after 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick started the movement in 2016.

The recent killings of black people — including George Floyd in Minneapoli­s and Breonna Taylor in Louisville — at the hands of white officers have helped awaken a country to what for which Kaepernick was willing to sacrifice his football career. It took four years, but even NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell and Saints QB Drew Brees finally began to accept the national anthem protest movement was not about disrespect­ing the flag. Earlier this month U.S. Soccer even rescinded its anthem policy and apologized for having it in the first place.

That change in mindset was on full display at the start of the NWSL’S Challenge Cup. The league had said Friday that it would support the players in however they decided to use their platform to advocate for social justice.

Tennis icon and women’s sports pioneer Billie Jean King applauded the efforts of the two

teams.

“This is how you use your platform for change,” King tweeted.

“That was powerful,” Yael Averbuch West, the executive director of the NWSL players’ union wrote on Twitter. “Thank you @ NWSL @Cbssports and @ nwsl — players for drawing attention to what really matters .... Very proud of this league.”

On the field, the NWSL’S eighth season got underway ahead of the other major team sports. Major League Soccer is scheduled for a July 8 start, while the NBA and WNBA plan to restart its seasons at the end of July and the NHL in August. Major League Baseball had initially hoped for a patriotic July 4 return, but after the players and owners fought a bitter battle over dollars, baseball is currently scheduled to return on July 23 or 24.

“It’s a significan­t statement for all sports,” NWSL Commission­er Lisa Baird said during an interview at halftime of the CBS broadcast of the game.

“We want to bring sports back with health, safety and wellness in mind for all the players and I’m just so proud of these women out here on this field playing with all their hearts, but we do miss the fans.”

As with the other sports leagues attempting to return during the coronaviru­s pandemic, games are being played without spectators.

The back-to-back league champion Courage triumphed in the tournament’s opening game, 2-1, over the Thorns after a stoppage-time goal by Lynn Williams.

But the NWSL’S return to the field for the 23-game tournament at two venues in the Salt Lake City area was not without its bumps. The Orlando Pride pulled out of the Challenge Cup earlier this week after a night at a local bar led to six players and four staffers testing positive for COVID-19.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RICK BOWMER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Players for the Portland Thorns, left, and the North Carolina Courage kneel during the national anthem before their NWSL Challenge Cup match Saturday. The league said it would support the players in however they decided to use their platform to advocate for social justice.
PHOTOS BY RICK BOWMER – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Players for the Portland Thorns, left, and the North Carolina Courage kneel during the national anthem before their NWSL Challenge Cup match Saturday. The league said it would support the players in however they decided to use their platform to advocate for social justice.
 ??  ?? North Carolina Courage goalie Stephanie Labbe leaps to make a save on a shot by the Portland Thorns Saturday. The Courage won, 2-1.
North Carolina Courage goalie Stephanie Labbe leaps to make a save on a shot by the Portland Thorns Saturday. The Courage won, 2-1.

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