Hope Solo: USWNT equal pay settlement heartbreaking and infuriating – Insider

  • The US women’s national soccer team reached a settlement in its longstanding equal pay lawsuit.
  • USSF agreed to give players $22 million in back pay and committed to equal pay going forward.
  • Ex-USWNT goalie Hope Solo expressed skepticism of the deal in a fiery social media post.

Players of the US Women’s National Team settled their longstanding equal pay lawsuit against the US Soccer Federation on Tuesday.

The agreement was lauded by players, fans, and media alike, but one former superstar was far less than satisfied with the end of the years-long litigation.

Legendary USWNT goalkeeper Hope Solo slammed the players’ $22 million settlement with USSF in a lengthy, strongly-worded statement posted to Twitter and Instagram on Wednesday. The two-time Olympic gold medalist and 2015 World Cup champion questioned whether Tuesday’s deal had truly guaranteed equal pay for the women’s team and blasted some of her former teammates in the process.

“This settlement is not a ‘huge win,'” Solo wrote. “It’s heartbreaking and infuriating.”

Hope Solo.

Solo.

AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez


The four-time IFFHS Goalkeeper of the Year expressed skepticism regarding US Soccer’s “promise” to provide identical compensation to the men’s and women’s national teams going forward. The settlement announced Tuesday will not be ratified until both sides reach terms on the USWNT’s upcoming collective bargaining agreement, in which US Soccer says it will commit “to providing an equal rate of pay going forward for the Women’s and Men’s National Teams in all friendlies and tournaments, including the World Cup.”

Tuesday’s joint release from the players and federation goes on to note that “the details [of equal pay] will be established by the new CBA between US Soccer and the USWNT.” But Solo argues that, until the CBA is actually ratified, US Soccer’s “promise” means nothing.

“A ‘promise’ of equal pay from the Federation and backpay for a select group of players isn’t equal pay and it’s not what this fight was about,” Solo wrote. “Read the fine print. ‘Contingent upon the negotiation of a new collective bargaining agreement.’ It doesn’t exist yet and isn’t guaranteed.”

USWNT players wear their warm-up jerseys inside out to hide the US Soccer crest in protest of the Federation.

USWNT players wear their warm-up jerseys inside out ahead of a March 2020 match to hide the US Soccer crest in protest of the Federation.

AP Photo/Jeffrey McWhorter


“If the players had ever been successful in negotiating an equal CBA [collective bargaining agreement], there would’ve been no reason to sue the Federation in the first place,” she added.

Solo also criticized former USWNT teammates Alex Morgan and Megan Rapinoe — who have been the faces of the players’ fight for equal pay — by name. She claimed that the pair of strikers have long been “the two most agreeable with USSF and to this day, continue to accept terms that are nowhere near what we set out to do.”

“They both know this is not a win,” Solo said, referring to Morgan and Rapinoe. “They know it’s an easy out of a fight they were never really in.”

She added that the deal “guarantees nothing to the next generation” of USWNT stars and that those players “who set this fight in motion will not benefit from the selfishness and inequality of this settlement.”

megan rapinoe alex morgan

Alex Morgan (right) and Megan Rapinoe.

AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino


At present, the players and federation are operating under a memorandum of understanding, which extends the players’ previous CBA through the end of March 2022. US Soccer and the USWNT players have until then to reach terms on the new agreement and solidify Tuesday’s settlement.

“Are we close? It depends on your definition of close,” USSF President and former USWNT player Cindy Parlow Cone said of CBA negotiations on a media call Tuesday. “Are we going in the right direction? Yes.”

She then added that “equalizing” FIFA prize money — essential to guarantee equal pay for the men’s and women’s teams — is a “sticking point” in negotiations.

Check out Solo’s full statement below: