Key USWNT players missing from the 2023 World Cup roster

Don’t expect to see these USWNT stars play in the World Cup this year.

The 2023 World Cup is set to begin this week, as the United States Women’s National Team prepares for its tournament debut against Vietnam on July 21.

However, there will be some key members of previous USWNT teams not present in New Zealand for this year’s World Cup. A lot of names you probably recognize if you’re a casual soccer fan.

A good number of the women on this list are struggling with various ailments, while one all-time talent retired in 2021.

Before you spend too much time wondering where somebody is, let’s run down some of athletes who won’t be competing in the World Cup this year for the United States.

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Sauerbrunn coped with World Cup heartbreak by ripping shots of Jameson with a stranger

“Some random person came up to us at the bar and was like crying for me. So I was almost crying”

Becky Sauerbrunn has been going through it.

The U.S. women’s national captain announced last week that she would not recover from a foot injury in time to make the World Cup roster, a devastating blow to player and team.

Sauerbrunn’s teammates reacted to the news on Wednesday after the 23-player roster was announced, and all four USWNT players who spoke to the press used the word “heartbroken” to describe the loss of the veteran center back.

Never one to shy away from her commitments, Sauerbrunn still fulfilled a scheduled appearance on the “Snacks” podcast with teammates Sam Mewis and Lynn Williams, and the defender opened up on how she’s been handling the disappointment of not playing in a fourth World Cup.

“It sucks, like, it’s such a bummer,” she said. “I really thought that I was going to get back in time. Had a setback, you know, we gave them timelines where I could feasibly have played minutes at the World Cup. But the variability of it was, they just didn’t want to have to deal with that.

“And you don’t want somebody, a center back in particular, that can only play 15 minutes later on in the tournament. So I totally understood. I kind of hoped I was going to squeak in maybe as just a presence, as a leader that could just keep the locker room hopefully in a really positive good vibe state.”

With her Portland Thorns teammates on a long road trip, Sauerbrunn said she’s been back in Portland spending time with the players who didn’t travel. After the news of her absence dropped, she and her teammates decided they needed to go out and blow off some steam.

“I’ve just been with the non-traveling crew and they’ve been unbelievable friends. We went out after the games this weekend for a few drinks and it was like, I needed the outlet, they needed the outlet,” Sauerbrunn said.

“Some random person came up to us at the bar and was like crying for me. So I was almost crying. And then we just wound up taking a couple shots of Jameson. So that’s basically what it’s been like.”

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USWNT injuries: The key players who will miss the 2023 World Cup

The USWNT has admirable depth in its roster, but these are still some major losses

If the U.S. women’s national team wants to win a third straight World Cup, it will have to do so without several of its top players.

Like so many other teams at the 2023 World Cup, the USWNT has been forced to omit some big names from its roster due to injuries.

USWNT head coach Vlatko Andonovski has a team full of world-class talent to choose from, but the losses his team has suffered will undoubtedly hurt.

These aren’t depth players. They are the team’s top scorer this year, its captain and defensive anchor, and an up-and-coming global star, among others.

There was at least some good news when Andonovski revealed his squad on Wednesday, as Megan Rapinoe and Rose Lavelle — both questionable due to injury — were named to the 23-player roster.

Here are the biggest injury absences for the USWNT at this summer’s World Cup.

‘Gutted’ USWNT players open up on World Cup without Becky Sauerbrunn

USWNT players agree that they’re “heartbroken” over Sauerbrunn’s absence

The U.S. women’s national team may be locked in on next month’s World Cup, but Becky Sauerbrunn’s absence from the roster is still weighing heavily on the group.

Sauerbrunn has battled a nagging foot injury that has persisted since late April. Facing a recovery timeline with too many variables, the USWNT captain announced last week that she would not be on a fourth straight World Cup roster.

The mood around that news understandably tempered the normal positivity surrounding the official start of a USWNT World Cup hype cycle. Sauerbrunn’s absence is clearly on the minds of everyone involved with the team.

U.S. Soccer made four players available to media on Wednesday shortly after the roster was released, and every single one of them used the word “heartbroken” when Sauerbrunn came up. The only person to not do so was head coach Vlatko Andonovski, but only because he used a different synonym.

“First, I want to say we’re all gutted for Becky,” said Andonovski in his very first words to media after the 23-player roster came out. “It’s no question that we’re gonna miss Becky. We’re gonna miss her on the field, we’re gonna miss her off the field. If there is someone that has a relationship, a connection, and someone that wanted Becky on this roster, that’s me.”

Andonovski coached Sauerbrunn for four years with FC Kansas City, winning two NWSL championships in 2014 and 2015, and like his predecessor Jill Ellis, made the defender a foundational element within the team’s structure.

“Becky will always be our captain. That’s how we feel, the staff, that’s how the team feels, that’s how everybody feels. I mean, Becky is U.S. women’s national team captain,” added Andonovski, who said he would reveal the team’s replacement captain publicly once he has a chance to gather the squad together and announce the choice internally.

USWNT ‘heartbroken’ for Sauerbrunn

Andonovski’s opinion was clearly shared by USWNT players, whether they be veterans like Crystal Dunn and Alex Morgan, or World Cup first-timers like Naomi Girma and Sophia Smith.

“Becky is not only just a huge presence on the field, and leader on the field, but she’s a person who holds people accountable. She raises the level of standards on every team she’s on,” explained Morgan, presumably one of the top candidates to captain the team in New Zealand and Australia. “Having played with her now for over 12, 13 years, I just have immense respect for her.”

“I don’t think that there’s a bad thing that has come out of a teammate’s mouth [on] Becky, ever in her career,” added Morgan. “That’s a testament to her as a leader, a person, a player, and it’s just terrible news to have right before a World Cup.”

Crystal Dunn, who plays alongside Sauerbrunn with the Portland Thorns and has spent the last few years positioned next to her on the USWNT back line, made no bones about the news being a blow to the group’s hopes this summer.

“Losing her is bigger than just her play on the field,” said Dunn. “Her ability to gather the group and really lead us in the right direction at all times, I think, is something that we are going to greatly miss.”

“I checked in with her, we’ve had a lot of communication back and forth,” added Dunn, who called Sauerbrunn “one of my really great friends.”

“You know, it hurts,” said Dunn. “She’s doing okay. The leader that she is, and she’s always thinking about the team first, and I kind of had to tell her, ‘it’s okay to think about your situation and not only care about the team at this moment.'”

Looking ahead, the USWNT’s solution to winning a third straight World Cup without such a pivotal leader is to call on one of its greatest historic strengths: a belief that the group will fill the void through collective strength and individuals stepping up.

“Not having Becky there, it’s going to be different. It’s going to be a challenge,” said Smith. “It’s going to require a lot of players to step up. I think that’s a [task] that we can accomplish if we stick together.”

“We’re ready to take on that role while she’s not there,” added a confident Naomi Girma, who will likely shift over into Sauerbrunn’s left-center back position with the veteran missing out.

For Dunn, Sauerbrunn has left the team a blueprint on how every player in the squad can take on some of the leadership burden.

“I think everything that I’ve learned from Becky is really all about just being the best player showing up possible,” said Dunn. “That means not just on the field, but that means encouraging your teammates. That means giving words of advice when you see fit, and overall, just being the best version of yourself in that environment. So that is something that I’ve always learned from Becky, and I’ll hope to try to do my best obviously in leading the group in this World Cup.”

Andonovski — who has seen so many key players miss crucial time with the USWNT for a variety of reasons — conceded that the situation is “a part of sports,” but added that the group as assembled still has his backing to go accomplish the mission at hand.

“We’re very, very confident in the team that we have,” declared Andonovski. “We’re very confident in the abilities of the players that we have on our team that will be able to overcome the deficiencies that may occur with Becky’s absence.”

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‘Heartbroken’ USWNT captain Sauerbrunn to miss World Cup with foot injury

A gut punch for the USWNT before the roster drops

The U.S. women’s national team has received more terrible news on the injury front.

USWNT captain Becky Sauerbrunn announced that she will not be a part of the team’s 2023 World Cup roster due to a foot injury.

“Heartbroken isn’t even the half of it,” wrote Sauerbrunn in a post on social media Friday night. “But that’s sports for you and that’s life, really.”

The Athletic first reported that Sauerbrunn would not be on a fourth consecutive World Cup squad, with the 38-year-old confirming the news with further detail on Friday night.

“I had hoped and worked and hoped some more to make it back in time to help lead the team at this World Cup, but after lots of discussion, unfortunately, there’s just too much variability in my return to play timeline.”

“It’s been an honor to work and play alongside this incredible group of athletes,” added Sauerbrunn, lending her backing to a team she has captained for years.

“They have my unwavering support. And, more importantly, they have my unyielding belief. This program has always been about the collective and I have no doubt that the players on the final roster have everything they need—in their feet, their heads and their hearts—to bring our fifth trophy home.”

“To my teammates, I love you. Please, take a minute to enjoy this moment and appreciate everything that brought you here—every second of hard work and every bit of good luck—and then get back to work and go win the whole f—ing thing!”

April foot injury keeps Sauerbrunn out

Sauerbrunn started the first four games of the Portland Thorns’ NWSL regular season, but took herself out of a 2-0 win over Racing Louisville in the 57th minute with an apparent foot issue.

Sauerbrunn battled the injury for over a month before coming off of Portland’s availability report ahead of their June 3 clash with OL Reign. The center back entered that game in the 67th minute and played through full time, but was back on the availability report for last weekend’s matches.

Sauerbrunn is not the only key USWNT player set to miss the tournament. Catarina Macario previously confirmed that her recovery timeline from a torn ACL will run too long for her to be in contention for a spot on Vlatko Andonovski’s final 23-player roster. Mallory Swanson never publicly conceded that a torn patellar tendon suffered in April would keep her out of this World Cup, but her injury is generally one that carries a multi-month rehab process.

Meanwhile, Christen Press recently kept the door open to a return and has progressed enough from her own torn ACL to strike a ball, but a call-up without a single second of competitive play since her injury seems highly unlikely at this stage.

Andonovski has other possible worries as well. Rose Lavelle suffered what was supposedly “a little knock” during an April friendly against the Republic of Ireland, but since then has yet to play for the Reign or USWNT.

Megan Rapinoe departed the Reign’s most recent match with an apparent calf issue, though in her case head coach Laura Harvey said the choice was precautionary specifically due to the looming World Cup.

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USWNT beats Ireland 1-0, but has plenty of unanswered questions

Heavy rotation didn’t necessarily lead to answers for the USWNT

The U.S. women’s national team’s final match before naming their 2023 World Cup roster ended in a win, but may have left them with more questions than answers.

A 1-0 win over Ireland, courtesy of a 50-plus yard Alana Cook service floating into the back of the net, saw the USWNT keep goalkeeper Casey Murphy unbothered, but also saw them create few chances against a dogged opponent.

Vlatko Andonovski made six changes to the side that won the first meeting between the sides on Saturday, including a first-ever USWNT start for 18-year-old Alyssa Thompson (who was called in to replace the injured Mallory Swanson).

In its first appearance at the newly-opened CityPark, U.S. Soccer held a ceremony honoring St. Louis native Becky Sauerbrunn for passing the 200-cap milestone in 2022. Clearly they had more than that on their minds, as an early corner kick routine saw the veteran center back — who has never scored a USWNT goal — flashed into the area from nowhere.

Her free header had goalkeeper Courtney Brosnan beat, but it clipped the crossbar, allowing Ireland to escape.

From there, a half of few chances took hold, with Ireland playing the USWNT evenly. Thompson had the best moment to score, but opted to pass instead, with Sophia Smith ending up putting the ball into the stands.

However, the famed luck of the Irish completely vanished as the USWNT took the lead on an utterly bizarre 43rd minute goal. Cook looked to recycle the ball after a set piece, and she opted to float a long ball in for Lindsey Horan.

Cook over-hit her service, but it ended up being a perfect mistake: it eluded Horan, and Brosnan, and gave the OL Reign defender her first-ever USWNT goal (and on her birthday, no less).

Thompson nearly added a second as the USWNT got a rare moment to attack in transition, but Brosnan snagged the ball off her feet after some inspiration from Trinity Rodman and Ashley Sanchez opened the game up. Generally though, Ireland’s discipline playing out of a 5-4-1 formation again gave the U.S. plenty of difficult questions.

Ashley Hatch showed some strength in the 79th minute, holding a defender and attempting to scoop a shot on the turn over Bronson, but her effort landed on the roof of the net.

Ireland nearly sneaked a late equalizer not long afterward, with Kyra Carusa running onto Denise O’Sullivan’s through ball and poking a shot past Tierna Davidson that skipped a foot or so wide of Casey Murphy’s goal.

The USWNT got to simulate some game-specific moves they may well use at the World Cup, including a late-game move into a 5-4-1 of their own, but the lack of genuine chances left them needing to buckle down to secure the win, instead of already having the game in hand.

The USWNT will name its 23-player World Cup roster shortly before a July 9 send-off match in San Jose, where they’ll face Wales.

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U.S. Soccer apologizes for calling Becky Sauerbrunn ‘Becky with the good hair’

That’s a yikes!

As it turns out, comparing Becky Sauerbrunn to Jay-Z’s mistress is not the best way to honor the U.S. women’s national team captain for reaching 200 caps.

U.S. Soccer send out a marketing email on Tuesday morning with the cringeworthy subject line: “Celebrate Becky With The Good Hair!”

As anyone with even a cursory knowledge of pop culture will tell you, being called “Becky with the good hair” is not a compliment, no matter how nice their hair may or may not be.

“Becky with the good hair” is, of course, the mysterious woman Beyoncé hinted was Jay-Z’s mistress on her landmark 2016 album “Lemonade.”

Hours after their first email, U.S. Soccer sent a follow-up email apologizing.

“U.S. Soccer apologizes for the subject line of our email sent this morning to celebrate Becky Sauerbrunn’s 200th cap,” it read. “It was insensitive and should not have been sent. We have connected with Becky and apologized. We have also reviewed our approval process for external marketing communications, and are committed to being more thoughtful in the future.”

Sauerbrunn was honored in her hometown of St. Louis prior to Tuesday’s game against Ireland, which actually was her 216th cap.

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EA Sports reveals 10 highest-rated NWSL players in FIFA 23

The NWSL is set to be part of the hugely popular video game for the first time

EA Sports has revealed the 10 highest rated NWSL players in FIFA 23, as the league’s teams are available in the game for the first time ever.

San Diego Wave star Alex Morgan leads the list with a rating of 90, while Debinha — who signed with the Kansas City Current in a huge free agent deal this offseason — is next up, rated 88 overall.

U.S. women’s national team starters Sophia Smith (Portland Thorns), Mallory Swanson (Chicago Red Stars), and Rose Lavelle (OL Reign) are next on the list, all given an 87 rating.

EA Sports has announced all of the player ratings across the NWSL, which can be found along with their ratings for women’s players in the Women’s Super League, Division 1 Féminine, and prominent national teams like Spain and Germany. The full list of women’s player ratings can be found here.

Following a landmark partnership between the league, the NWSL Players’ Association, and EA Sports, FIFA 23 will include NWSL players starting on March 15 in the following modes:

  • Kick Off
  • Tournament Mode
  • Head to Head season
  • Co-op Seasons
  • Online Friendlies

FIFA 23 will also include four NWSL stadiums, authentic kit renderings, and celebrations.

Here are the top 10 — or really 11, due to a three-way tie for ninth place — NWSL players in FIFA 23.

How the Portland Thorns handled the Kansas City Current en route to an NWSL championship

A masterclass in control gave the Thorns their third NWSL title

The NWSL championship game ended up being a fairly decisive 2-0 win for the Portland Thorns. A tumultuous season off the field didn’t manifest at all in the final, where they pounced on an early mistake to get a lead over the Kansas City Current, and never looked back.

It was an impressive, imperious kind of performance, and one built around a perfect blend of individuals stepping up, good management, and calm leadership. The clash of styles went decisively in their favor from minute one, leading to celebrations at Audi Field heading towards the Rose City Riveters on the north side of the stadium rather than to the Blue Crew behind the opposite goal.

Here are four major factors that explain how the Thorns earned their third star:

Experience pays off

There were aspects of Saturday’s final that recall the 2019 NWSL championship, in which the North Carolina Courage jumped all over the Chicago Red Stars and effectively put the game to bed in the first half-hour.

To be clear, Kansas City certainly had a better day in DC than Chicago did in Cary. For one thing, it has to be said that the Red Stars were very much not a model club at the time, while Current players are glad to tell anyone that asks how the investment in them has brought them to a better place mentally. When the going gets tough — and it did in the first half of this game — Kansas City has a mental toughness that hasn’t been depleted by their own coach or ownership. It matters on the field.

Still, there were some broad similarities that gave a hefty edge to the traditional power in this game. The Thorns have a roster full of players with championships, and a larger staff of people who have operated through the strange barrage of requests and activities that come with a championship weekend. Kansas City, an organization with barely two years of existence in their current form, can hardly be blamed for being a little behind Portland on this front. They’re doing amazing things, but some gaps can only be filled out with time.

This also hits on the field, where the Thorns have a squad full of players who were indisputably leaders for title-winning teams in the past: Becky Sauerbrunn, Christine Sinclair, and Meghan Klingenberg all started, and Crystal Dunn came in off the bench. Emily Menges and Tegan McGrady were on the bench as well. That’s a group that has collectively been in the starting lineup for eight NWSL championship wins.

Kansas City’s players had alluded to the value of the experience AD Franch and Kristen Hamilton brought when they came in via trades last year, but when it comes to appearing in and winning an NWSL final, they were the list for the Current. Desiree Scott mentioned more than once that despite having seemingly been through everything one can go through in women’s soccer, she’d never played in an NWSL final before. There’s experience, and experience in this particular maelstrom.

All of which is a long build-up to the most decisive factor in this game: the Current showed some nerves. Their defenders seemed to be less instinctive and certain than normal, and the entire group’s first touch was not up to the regular standards they’ve set over the year. Portland’s structured, counter-pressing approach took advantage of the apprehension in the ranks time and again.

Thinking long-term, Kansas City will benefit immensely from going through this experience, and it would be foolish to bet that this group — after such a rapid turnaround this year — caught lightning in a bottle. They’ll be back, and be better when they make their return.

On Saturday, however, the difference in experience showed.

Unsung heroes

Smith’s powerhouse performance, summed up with the perfect celebration for the moment, got deserved plaudits, as did Franch for making numerous saves to keep KC in the match.

However, it would be remiss to not mention that Sauerbrunn’s vaunted organizational ability was on full display. The Current’s nebulous, improvisational shape going forward can be a nightmare to sort out, especially given the speed found throughout their team. And yet, Portland always seemed to know exactly what was being cooked up, and Sauerbrunn was at the heart of those solutions for 90 minutes.

Natalia Kuikka also has to be recognized for a quietly superb performance at right back. The Finnish international had a bit of a mid-season lull this year, but rounded into form and stood out against a KC attack that skewed pretty heavily towards attacking her side. The Current really tried to find a way through, attempting 10 dribbles out towards the touchline in Portland’s half, and only one from Kizer worked out positively.

Those red triangles are all where Kansas City dribbles didn’t pan out. There were also no key passes (those are the yellow squares above) from Kuikka’s flank, and only two successful crosses, one of which came deep enough that it’s more of a midfielder’s job anyway.

Sauerbrunn looked at ease, but only because she was putting on a masterful show in terms of thinking the game and denying Kansas City by superior positioning. Kuikka, meanwhile, had a ton of more tangible work to do, winning tackles and individual battles. If you want to know how Bella Bixby ended up without having to make a single save on a night where the game state and attack-minded opposition should have meant a lot of work, look no further than these two (very different) performances.

Adjustment analysis, part one

Both coaches made interesting moves, with Portland making their big change before kickoff and Kansas City opting for a major shift as the game was going on.

For the Thorns, Rhian Wilkinson elected to make an enormously difficult choice, keeping Hina Sugita — a sleeper Best XI candidate after a thoroughly impressive first year in the league — on the bench in favor of Sinclair.

Asked post-game from a crowded Audi Field media room about that change, Wilkinson said it was “a huge decision, and it was a really hard decision,” before adding that for the challenge of Kansas City, she wanted a more clear structure. “I played a really distinct six, eight and 10 in the midfield, and Hina for me, she’s an eight or a winger,” explained Wilkinson. “I think Rocky (Rodríguez)’s been flying the last few games, so she just sort of started ahead of her.”

The Thorns had deployed a 4-3-3 for their semifinal against the San Diego Wave, with Sugita and Rodríguez both operating as attack-minded No. 8s having the freedom to go forward. Wilkinson said that against the Wave, she wanted her team to focus on playing through lines more, whereas she shifted her side into more of a 4-4-2, with Sinclair being available for passes to feet rather than in behind.

“I wanted to play with the front two, and Sincy’s one of the best in the world at reading that front-two position and being alongside Sophie and feeding her,” said Wilkinson. “It wasn’t a breaking the lines type of game like in San Diego, where we played two eights-tens.”

It’s the kind of gambit that could have blown up in Wilkinson’s face, but in the end, the team she put on the field created a Portland Thorns kind of game. That’s no mean feat against a Kansas City team that has thrived at forcing just about everyone into a style that favors the Current.

Adjustment analysis, part two

Matt Potter had no surprises in his starting lineup, with the exact same 11 that started the semifinal being picked for the final. He did make a shift, though, pushing Lo’eau LaBonta higher and playing with Scott and Alex Loera as a double-pivot as opposed to Scott being the lone holding presence.

That change didn’t really come off, though Potter said post-game he saw moments where their play through the middle went as planned until it came time to play the final ball.

Where things were really going awry was along the back line. Sophia Smith told Pro Soccer Wire on Thursday that she felt like she’d find more space against a back three, and it turns out the forward knows what she’s talking about. Kansas City was struggling to protect its defenders from being isolated, with support arriving late or not at all, and for the first 30 minutes, they had to make plenty of emergency blocks at full stretch just to keep the score at 1-0.

Potter’s answer ended up being to convert Kate Del Fava from a right wingback to a true right back, staying home to support Addisyn Merrick and shifting Kansas City into a back four. Further forward, the domino effect saw LaBonta and Hamilton have to trade shifts providing width on the right, while most of the Current’s attacking thrust ended up centered on Hailie Mace on the left.

Potter wasn’t thinking purely about stopping the bleeding, though, and said he made the change in part to take advantage of the spaces Portland’s more rigid structure left open.

“Well, I think they were attacking well in wide areas, but when they create the structure that they do, it creates pockets of space in the midfield that we wanted to try and take advantage of,” Potter told reporters after the match. “By keeping Kate home a little bit for a period of time, the hope was to get Kristin Hamilton and Cece (Kizer) on the ball in central areas a little bit more.”

“You’ve got to give up things to get things and there’s a risk/reward factor in the game,” added Potter. “The identity of this team’s lived all year is to have no fear, and to try and take the game to the opponent. Why would we change that because we’re here? We are what we are, they deserved that opportunity to go express themselves again, and you know with a little bit of a ball bouncing one way or another, then maybe we are talking about a different game.”

As much as Portland managed this game in incredibly efficient fashion, Potter’s not off-base by saying that the Current just needed a bounce. Specifically, the bounce that cost them the second goal is one that could have easily played out with the ball nestling into Franch’s gloves, or not skipping so hard off the grass that Addisyn Merrick could have cleared it away before it got over the line. While the first half was triage for Kansas City, the second half saw them gain some footing, only for that goal to put things out of reach.

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Amid painful backdrop, USWNT vs. England is a north star for women’s soccer

The duality of women’s soccer has rarely been laid out more plainly

Friday’s game between the U.S. women’s national team and England should be a wonderful occasion.

The defending World Cup champions and most decorated team in women’s soccer, playing the winners of Euro 2022, at a sold-out Wembley? Star players on both teams firing on all cylinders? As far as friendlies go, this should be as good as it gets.

And yet, this USWNT vs. England match — through no fault of the players that will play it — juxtaposes the wonderful heights the sport has reached against the hellish lows revealed in the findings of Sally Yates’ investigation into systemic abuse in the NWSL.

“The players are not doing well. We are horrified, and heartbroken, and frustrated, and exhausted, and really, really angry,” Sauerbrunn told reporters on Wednesday, before later adding a sad fact of life for USWNT players.

“Well, unfortunately, I would say that a lot of us have been navigating these sorts of things for a very long time,” said the veteran center back, who has seen the USWNT come through battles over playing conditions and equal pay. She’s also speaking from the perspective of someone who has truly been through it in NWSL, starting out with an FC Kansas City team that was moved over issues with both poor infrastructure and disgusting emails from an owner.

That team moved west and became the Utah Royals, who ceased to exist after owner Dell Loy Hansen walked away under intense pressure after reports of racist language and demeaning treatment of women players (something that came up again in the Yates report). Sauerbrunn moved to Portland, only to find a Thorns club that is undergoing a seismic shift after the investigation’s findings concerning their handling of Paul Riley.

It’s a theme that came up with every USWNT player who spoke in a press conference format heading into Friday’s showcase game. OL Reign defender Alana Cook, whose club hired Farid Benstiti even after he had been publicly accused of body shaming at Paris Saint-Germain, struck a similar chord to Sauerbrunn.

“I think as women, personally as a minority, this isn’t new,” said Cook. “I think these hostile conditions are kind of now being unearthed and properly revealed, but it’s things that we’ve been dealing with for the entirety of our careers.”

Megan Rapinoe, who also plays for the Reign, ruefully laughed while praising the USWNT’s ability to cope and still play at a high level.

“As sick as this sounds, I feel like we’re used to having to take on so much more than gameplan, tactics,” said Rapinoe. “I feel like we have an incredible ability to shoulder so much.”

Still, Rapinoe on multiple occasions circled back to the positive of the current circumstances. Wembley, one of the world’s genuine soccer shrines, is going to be packed with fans to watch two of the brightest lights in the game. It’s rare, and it has incredible value, and it’s what these players actually deserve.

(AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

“This is an incredible game, an incredible moment that actually, I think, sits kind of nicely with this horrific thing,” explained Rapinoe. “The players have pushed (women’s soccer) to this point, where it’s a sellout, 90,000-plus at Wembley. Off another team fighting for respect in their country and fighting for the right treatment, having an incredible run and being able to galvanize their fans in the country behind them, and feeling like this is a special moment for us to all come together and celebrate women’s football for all of the good that it is.”

Women’s soccer has seemingly always been in a balancing act, carrying amazing feats in one hand and damaging, unfair treatment in the other. The last NWSL champions pushed through a run for the ages while also successfully demanding ownership change at the Washington Spirit, and rather than being a one-off, it feels like the history of women’s soccer played out by one team as a metaphor.

This friendly is a glimpse at what women’s soccer could be all the time, in so many more places. It’s a north star shining through some extraordinarily bleak circumstances, and hopefully it can help guide the sport to better times. If people with authority could simply bring themselves to care about providing a safe, fair environment, this kind of occasion wouldn’t be such a rarity.

“There’s a reason that we’re at Wembley right now, there’s a reason that there’s 90,000 people coming, there’s a reason that these two particular teams have stretched way past the field and done something really special,” said Rapinoe. “I feel like this is a really special moment in women’s football. I know it’s just a friendly, but it does mean more than that.”

All of that is true, and Rapinoe is right to remain defiant when it comes to protecting that joy and that sense of accomplishment. It just also lives in the same space as the trauma that hovers over seemingly every team, no matter how successful they are.

Cook put it very succinctly on Wednesday. “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 in the NWSL for the last 10 years.”

Let’s hope these massive days don’t keep being marred by the kinds of people that have brought so much pain to women’s soccer.

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