Yuma Sun

US players ‘horrified’ by report of abuse in women’s soccer

- BY ANNE M. PETERSON

As the United States was preparing for its game Friday against England at Wembley Stadium, players were trying to process an investigat­ion that found emotional abuse and sexual misconduct are systemic in women’s soccer.

“We are horrified and heartbroke­n and frustrated and exhausted and really, really angry,” said defender Becky Sauerbrunn.

Former acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Q. Yates and the law firm of King & Spaulding released a report Monday after being retained by U.S. Soccer to investigat­e allegation­s of abuse in the National Women’s Soccer League following a series of scandals last year.

The NWSL and its players associatio­n are conducting another investigat­ion.

Five of 10 NWSL coaches either were fired or stepped down last season amid allegation­s of misconduct. Among them was North Carolina Courage coach Paul Riley, who was dismissed after two former players, Mana Shim and Sinead Farrelly, accused him of sexual coercion and harassment dating back a decade. Riley denied the allegation­s.

Yates’ report focused on three former coaches, including Riley. Not only did the investigat­ion find misconduct by all three, it also said their teams did not fully cooperate.

“I think for so long this has fallen on the players to demand change. That is because the people in authority and decision-making positions have repeatedly failed to protect us and they have failed to hold themselves and each other accountabl­e. Who are you actually protecting and what values are you upholding? You have failed in your

stewardshi­p,” Sauerbrunn said. “And it’s my opinion that every owner and executive and U.S. Soccer official who has repeatedly failed the players and failed to protect the players, who have hidden behind legalities and have not participat­ed fully in these investigat­ions, should be gone.”

As Sauerbrunn was speaking in London, her NWSL team, the Portland Thorns, announced owner Merritt Paulson, general manager Gavin Wilkinson and executive Mike Golub would immediatel­y withdraw from any Thorns-related decision-making until the league investigat­ion is complete.

Farrelly and Shim played for the Thorns when Riley was coach from 2014-15. At the time, the Thorns conducted an internal investigat­ion of the allegation­s and decided not to renew Riley’s contract. But no reason for the decision was made public and Riley went on to coach elsewhere in the league.

Sauerbrunn was asked about increasing pressure

on Paulson to sell the team. She said it was her belief the NWSL’s joint investigat­ion would make its own recommenda­tion as far as discipline.

“I don’t know if anything is going to come out in this other report that’s going to make any sort of difference. And so at the end of the day, if people continue to fail the players and they don’t comply to anything that gets asked of them or gets implemente­d because of these reports, then they need to be gone,” Sauerbrunn said.

Some of the details in Yates’ report were disturbing.

“I think we’re all reckoning with the things that were said in the report. Still kind of working through that, in all the ways that we individual­ly do,” said defender Alana Cook, who plays for OL Reign. “I think we have such a momentous occasion on Friday playing at a sold out Wembley Stadium, and it’s marred by this report, and it’s marred by the atrocities that have been condoned and tolerated and allowed to go on.”

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? IN THIS AUG. 29, 2019 PHOTO, UNITED STATES’ BECKY SAUERBRUNN IS SHOWN during an internatio­nal friendly match against Portugal in Philadelph­ia. Players on the U.S. women’s national soccer team are trying to process an investigat­ion that found emotional abuse and sexual misconduct are systemic in women’s soccer. U.S. defender Becky Sauerbrunn says she is horrified by the report.
MATT SLOCUM/AP IN THIS AUG. 29, 2019 PHOTO, UNITED STATES’ BECKY SAUERBRUNN IS SHOWN during an internatio­nal friendly match against Portugal in Philadelph­ia. Players on the U.S. women’s national soccer team are trying to process an investigat­ion that found emotional abuse and sexual misconduct are systemic in women’s soccer. U.S. defender Becky Sauerbrunn says she is horrified by the report.

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