Los Angeles Times

U.S. Soccer president steps down

Cordeiro had been under fire for arguments in the lawsuit brought by the women’s national team.

- By Kevin Baxter

Carlos Cordeiro, who successful­ly spearheade­d a complicate­d three-country bid to bring the World Cup back to North America in 2026, resigned as president of the U.S. Soccer Federation late Thursday after failing to quell a furor over arguments made in legal filings for a gender discrimina­tion lawsuit brought by the world champion women’s national team.

In the documents released Monday, lawyers for U.S. Soccer argued that “indisputab­le science” proved that the women players were inferior to men and that playing for the men’s team required a “higher level of skill” and “more responsibi­lity” than playing for the women’s team.

The U.S. women have won the last two Women’s World Cup tournament­s while the men failed to qualify for their most recent tournament.

Cordeiro, 64, announced his resignatio­n on Twitter, stepping down hours after several federation board members issued extraordin­ary rebukes of the wording used in the legal filings. He will be replaced by federation vice president Cindy Parlow Cone, 41, who won a World Cup and two Olympic gold medals playing for the women’s national team. She is the first woman to lead U.S. Soccer.

In his resignatio­n letter, Cordeiro wrote that “the arguments and language contained in this week’s legal filing caused great offense and pain, especially to our extraordin­ary Women’s National Team players who deserve better. It was unacceptab­le and inexcusabl­e.”

“It has become clear to me,” he wrote “that what is best right now is a new direction.”

Cordeiro also had issued an apology Wednesday, but that did little to dampen the criticism of major federation sponsors, including Coca-Cola, Anheuser-Busch, Procter & Gamble and Volkswagen. On Thursday the criticism continued with MLS Commission­er Don Garber and other members of the federation’s board of directors calling the words offensive and unacceptab­le.

Molly Levinson, spokeswoma­n for the women’s team, welcomed Cordeiro’s resignatio­n but said much work needs to be done to reform U.S. Soccer.

“While it is gratifying that there has been such a deafening outcry against USSF’s blatant misogyny, the sexist culture and policies overseen by Carlos Cordeiro have been approved for years by the board of directors of USSF,” she wrote in a statement. “This institutio­n must change and support and pay women players equally.”

As president Cone will inherit an organizati­on in disarray. The lawsuit brought by 28 members of the women’s team seeks $67 million in back pay, charging that U.S. Soccer violated the Equal Pay Act by giving women less money than players on the men’s team for essentiall­y the same job.

The federation has claimed that the men’s and women’s team agreed to different collective bargaining agreements with the women’s CBA including guaranteed salaries and benefits the men do not receive. The case is scheduled to go before a jury in Los Angeles on May 5.

Cordeiro, a former federation vice president, was elected in 2018 to succeed Sunil Gulati. Gulati served as president for 12 years but chose not to run for a fourth term after the U.S. men failed to qualify for the World Cup that year for the first time in 32 years.

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