Orlando Sentinel

Yellow card for soccer pay difference­s

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Los Angeles Times

Tuesday in Columbus, Ohio, the U.S. Men’s National Team moved a big step closer to qualifying for the 2018 World Cup soccer tournament with a mustwin victory over the visiting Guatemalan team. Few, though, think the American men will get very far in the tournament itself. In fact, the team’s best finish since the quadrennia­l World Cup’s infancy was a loss in the 2002 quarter-finals.

Compare that with the Women’s National Team, which has won three World Cup trophies and four Olympic gold medals, and has been ranked No. 1 in the world nearly continuous­ly since 2008. The men’s national team? Ranked 30th among their gender peers, wedged between Ireland and the Cape Verde Islands. The women’s World Cup final last year, which the Americans won, set a record for American soccer viewership, and ticket sales for its domestic games have fed millions in revenues to the U.S. Soccer Federation, which oversees both teams.

Yet, according to a complaint filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission, the women earn substantia­lly less than their male counterpar­ts, despite nearly identical job requiremen­ts.

Though it’s hard to draw an apples-to-apples comparison because of differing remunerati­on agreements, members of the women’s national team can make about $99,000 if they win 20 “friendlies” — exhibition games — while the men can earn about $263,000 for the same number of appearance­s and wins. Even their per diem payments are different; the men receive $62.50 for domestic games, while the women receive $50

Without addressing the specifics of the complaint, the soccer federation argued Thursday that it has advanced women’s soccer in the U.S., and that it is locked in contract negotiatio­ns with the union representi­ng the national team players, five of whom filed the EEOC complaint. The two sides also are embroiled in a legal dispute over extension of the last contract, which expired in December 2012.

So is this complaint just a negotiatin­g ploy by the players? A cynic might see it that way. But using the federation’s most recent annual report, the players lay out a pretty compelling case that their success on the field turned a projected net loss of $430,000 for both national teams into a projected $17.7 million surplus in the fiscal year that ended March 31. They’ve also generated as much revenue from national team events during recent World Cup years as the men have. That suggests a significan­t inequity in pay that the federation needs to address.

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