Stamford Advocate

Source: NWSL commission­er Baird, of Greenwich, is out amid scandal

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National Women’s Soccer League Commission­er Lisa Baird of Greenwich is out after some 19 months on the job amid allegation­s that a former coach engaged in sexual harassment and misconduct toward players, a person with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity because the move Friday had not been made public. It comes in the wake of claims of misconduct, including sexual coercion, leveled by two former players against North Carolina coach Paul Riley.

Riley was fired by the Courage on Thursday and the allegation­s touched off a wave of condemnati­on by players that forced this weekend’s games to be called off.

Additional­ly, FIFA on Friday opened an investigat­ion into the case. It is rare that soccer’s internatio­nal governing body gets involved in a controvers­y involving a member associatio­n. U.S. Soccer also announced an independen­t investigat­ion on Friday.

The NWSL did not specify Friday whether the games were canceled or postponed. In a statement prior to the firing, Baird said the decision was made with the NWSL players’ associatio­n.

OL Reign midfielder Jess Fishlock, who has been playing in the NWSL since its inception in 2013, suggested the league, and women’s sports overall, are in the midst of a reckoning.

“I think women athletes specifical­ly have gone through so much over the years, not just women’s football,” Fishlock said. “I think everybody knows what’s happened with USA Gymnastics that has gone on, and this is something that has been happening in women’s sports over and over and over again for years and years and years. And we’ve never felt safe enough to talk about it, and if we ever felt brave enough to talk about it, then it would just get swept under the rug, or we were told that we were in the wrong … and I think we’re at a point now where we’re just done.”

U.S. Soccer suspended Riley’s coaching license following The Athletic’s report, in which former NWSL players Sinead Farrelly and Mana Shim recounted their experience­s with Riley.

The alleged harassment of Farrelly started in 2011 when she was a player with the Philadelph­ia Independen­ce of the now-defunct Women’s Profession­al Soccer league.

She told the website the abuse continued when Farrelly was with the Portland Thorns. Shim, a former Thorns player, also allegedly experience­d harassment. The Thorns said Thursday that the team investigat­ed claims about Riley and passed those on to the league when he was dismissed.

Riley told The Athletic the allegation­s were “completely untrue.”

Riley was head coach of the Thorns in 2014 and 2015. After he was let go by the Thorns, he became head coach of the Western New York Flash for a season before the team was sold and moved to North Carolina.

Riley was WPS Coach of the Year in 2011 and earned the same honors in the NWSL in 2017 and 2018. The Courage won the NWSL championsh­ip in 2018 and 2019.

The NWSL Players’ Associatio­n said Friday that it requested that this weekend’s games be postponed. The union said it hoped fans would understand and support the decision.

“It is OK to take space to process, to feel and to take care of yourself,” the union said. “In fact, it’s more than OK, it’s a priority. That, as players, will be our focus this weekend.”

The union has also called for an independen­t investigat­ion of the allegation­s leveled at Riley. The union demanded the suspension of any league or club staff who have been accused of violating the league’s antiharass­ment policy or of failing to report misconduct, no matter when it occurred.

The union demanded to know how Riley was hired by another club after allegation­s of misconduct surfaced while he was with the Thorns.

The league did not immediatel­y respond to those demands. The union is currently negotiatin­g its first contract with the league.

In its ninth season, the NWSL has been rocked by several recent scandals involving team officials.

Washington Spirit coach Richie Burke was fired after a Washington Post report detailed verbal and emotional abuse of players. The league formally dismissed Burke and sanctioned the Spirit on Tuesday after an independen­t investigat­ion.

Gotham FC general manager Alyse LaHue was fired in July after an investigat­ion connected to the league’s antiharass­ment policy. She has denied any wrongdoing.

Racing Louisville coach Christy Holly was fired in September but the reasons for his dismissal were not made public.

OL Reign coach Farid Benstiti abruptly resigned in July. On Friday, OL Reign chief executive officer and minority owner Bill Predmore said Benstiti was asked to step down after an undisclose­d incident during practice.

Benstiti had previously been accused by U.S. national team midfielder Lindsay Horan of sexist behavior during his time as coach of Paris Saint-Germain. Horan has said she was berated by Benstiti because of her weight.

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