USA TODAY US Edition

Canada Soccer president resigns under pressure

- Nancy Armour

The president of the Canadian soccer federation has resigned following accusation­s by the women’s national team of unequal and inequitabl­e treatment.

Nick Bontis said Monday that he was resigning immediatel­y, acknowledg­ing “this moment requires change.”

“Canada Soccer and both of our National Team Programs have the real potential to sign a historic collective bargaining agreement,” he wrote. “Once signed, it will be a landmark deal that will set our nation apart from virtually every other FIFA Member Associatio­n.

“While I have been one of the biggest proponents of equalizing the competitiv­e performanc­e environmen­t for our Women’s National Team, I will unfortunat­ely not be leading this organizati­on when it happens.”

Resignatio­n follows strike threat

Bontis’ resignatio­n comes less than two weeks after the women’s team tried to strike during the SheBelieve­s Cup over budget cuts that left the Olympic champions with significan­tly fewer resources ahead of this summer’s World Cup than the Canadian men had ahead of their World Cup last year.

The women said they can invite fewer players into training camps and have had their number of staff members cut. They said they’ve been told they won’t play home games ahead of the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

Informed they weren’t legally allowed to strike, Canada played in the SheBelieve­s Cup under protest, turning their warmup shirts inside out so the Canada logo could not be seen. They also came out for the national anthem before their first game, against the U.S. women, in purple shirts with “Enough is enough” written in big, bold letters.

The U.S. women and other national teams wore purple wristbands in support of the Canadian women.

“To everyone who has supported us as we started this fight…the fans, players, coaches, thank you. We are inspired and motivated… and we will win,” the team’s players union said last week on Twitter.

Women’s team not alone in criticism of federation

The Canadian women are being backed by the men’s national team, which had its own issues with the federation last year. The Canadian men boycotted a June friendly against Panama in a protest over pay and what it said was the federation’s lack of transparen­cy about its finances.

Much of the dispute stems from a deal between Canada Soccer and Canada Soccer Business, which runs the profession­al league, that gives CSB a significan­t portion of the federation’s revenue in exchange for a guaranteed fee each year. The players say Canada Soccer is giving away money that should be used to develop the game and squanderin­g an opportunit­y to capitalize on growing interest.

Besides the women’s gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics, the men qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 36 years. Canada is also co-hosting the men’s World Cup in 2026 with the United States and Mexico.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Canada players wear “enough is enough” shirts during the national anthem on Feb. 19.
CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/USA TODAY SPORTS Canada players wear “enough is enough” shirts during the national anthem on Feb. 19.

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