Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Push at World Cup for pay equality

- By Ronald Blum Associated Press

PARIS — Venus Williams joined retired soccer star Julie Foudy and ice hockey player Hilary Knight in the Eiffel Tower to highlight the push for pay equality for women athletes.

The trio gathered Saturday night for a forum sponsored by LUNA bar and moderated by Catt Sadler, who quit E! in December 2017 after she learned her male co-host earned twice the pay.

Williams praised women athletes who had joined the push for better pay and conditions.

“Not everyone wants to get on the train,” she said. “So if they don’t want to go to glory and go to the top of the mountain, they can stay at the base camp.”

Players on the U.S soccer team sued the U.S. Soccer Federation in March, charging institutio­nalized gender discrimina­tion. The USSF countered that pay and benefits for members of the men’s and women’s teams, bargained by separate unions, can’t be compared and said there was no basis for allegation­s of illegal conduct.

LUNA Bar announced on Equal Pay Day on April 2 that it was giving each of the 23 women on the U.S. roster $31,250. That amount is how much more the U.S. men receive from the federation for making a World Cup roster.

Foudy, a 48-year-old former midfielder who won two World Cups and two Olympics, recited poor conditions for her and teammates in the 1990s, recalling “you’re staying in roach motels and you’re driving the hotel shuttle bus to games.”

FIFA doubled prize money for the women to $30 million this year from the amount four years ago, and the amount for the winning team is $4 million. That remains a fraction of the money awarded at last year’s men’s World Cup, where France received $38 million from a $400 million pool. FIFA has raised the men’s pool to $440 million for 2022.

Williams, a five-time Wimbledon and two-time U.S. open champion, got involved in the women’s player council 20 years ago, when she was 18. While the U.S. Open reached pay equality in 1973 after Billie Jean King threatened a boycott, the Australian Open didn’t follow until 2001, the French Open in 2006 and Wimbledon in 2007.

“I think the fuel is when people say that you shouldn’t or that it’s not possible or you don’t deserve it,” Williams said. “Don’t tell me what I deserve. I know what I deserve and I will work for what I deserve and I will get what I work for.”

Knight, a 29-year-old ice hockey forward who has a Connecticu­t connection that comes from playing at Choate in Wallingfor­d, won an Olympic gold medal last year after silvers in 2010 and 14`. She was among 200 women who announced in May they will not play profession­al hockey in North America this year in an attempt to establish a single, economical­ly viable profession­al league.

“Enough is enough. I’m done with being grateful,” she said. “We didn’t have the equitable support that we need.”

She praised the women’s soccer team as trailblaze­rs and said hockey players were 20 years behind.

 ?? RONALD BLUM/AP ?? Catt Sadler, from left, Hilary Knight, Julie Foudy and Venus Williams discuss gender pay inequity during a panel Saturday in Paris.
RONALD BLUM/AP Catt Sadler, from left, Hilary Knight, Julie Foudy and Venus Williams discuss gender pay inequity during a panel Saturday in Paris.

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