
Before their match on Sunday, the U.S. Womenâs Soccer Team decided to stand for the playing of the national anthem, with several players claiming that past kneeling was just one phase in their plan to âcontinuously fight for change.â
This was a departure from the past several years, where most of the team kneeled while the anthem was played. Just days earlier, some players had knelt before another match.
Kneeling for the anthem began in 2016 when San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Colin Kaepernick made the move fashionable to, as he claimed, protest police brutality against African-Americans.
The practice quickly spread throughout the NFL and eventually the NBA. After the death of George Floyd, athletes in other sports â indeed in other countries â began kneeling before games.
The Womenâs Soccer Team, and their firebrand political activist Megan Rapinoe, has apparently decided their kneeling days are behind them.
The US Womenâs soccer team, which fought to change rules to allow them to kneel for the national anthem, has now decided that kneeling is no longer a cool form of protest and will stand for the anthem again. https://t.co/svHw1BNEoT
â Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) February 22, 2021
RELATED: Bidenâs Expansion Of Asylum Rule Would Cause Border Chaos
Players Explains Their Decision
U.S. Defender Crystal Dunn told ESPN on Sunday said that the team was âready to move on to a new chapter of their advocacy.â
Support Conservative Voices!
Sign up to receive the latest political news, insight, and commentary delivered directly to your inbox.
âI think those that were collectively kneeling felt like we were kneeling to bring about attention to police brutality and systemic racism,â Dunn said.
âI think we decided that moving forward we no longer feel the need to kneel because we are doing the work behind the scenes. We are combating systemic racism.â
The team wore shirts that said âBlack Lives Matterâ before the game, but then changed into team jerseys.
Dunn explained her experience as a black athlete herself, ââ¦who has often felt like Iâve not been heard or not been seen, and many Black people feel the same way. Weâve had those initial discussions and I feel better about where this team is, but I do think moving forward, weâre prepared to just continue working off the field and continuously having these conversations.â
Transcript of Crystal Dunnâs remarks on standing during the national anthem: pic.twitter.com/atGDwjbanM
â Jonathan Tannenwald (@thegoalkeeper) February 21, 2021
RELATED: Nearly 50% Of Trump Voters Say They Will Follow Him To Another Party And Abandon The GOP
What Changed?
So why the change of heart? Crystal Dunn says that, âwe were never going to kneel forever. There was always going to be a time that we felt it was time to stand.â
The entire team was not always unified on this issue.
In a report from Goal.com, starting in November, all but two players knelt during the anthem. That would not last. In the teamâs two subsequent matches, four players stood, three stood in the following matches.
One of those that stood, Carli Lloyd, talked about team members supporting each other regardless of their views.
One of the most outspoken members, Megan Rapinoe, would not abandon her fellow team members who stood, but she made the assumption that her view was the âcorrectâ one when she made the suggestion that, âFor players that are standing I would say, continue to educate yourself.â
Both the womenâs and menâs soccer teams pressured the governing body, U.S. Soccer to rescind a ban on kneeling and got their wish last summer, complete with an apology.
So what changed between 2016 and now? Indeed, what changed between last Thursdayâs match, where players knelt, and Sundayâs match, where all stood?
Is kneeling no longer cool? Not that soccer is a sport in the U.S. that earns the revenue or viewership that the NFL, NBA, NHL, or MLB do, but it is a business, could the root of it been that soccer was suffering the same fate as football and basketball in terms of revenue?
The U.S. Soccer Board of Directors voted yesterday to repeal Policy 604-1, which required our players to stand during the national anthem.
Black Lives Matter.
We can do more and we will. pic.twitter.com/wtyfkVZmsBâ U.S. Soccer (@ussoccer) June 11, 2020
RELATED: Biden Budget Pick Neera Tanden In Jeopardy After Romney, Collins Join Opposition
The Bottom Line Is What Matters
What happened after not just Kaepernick, but the rest of the NFL began to kneel, or even stay in the locker room during the anthem?
What fans saw was not social justice warriors. What they saw was a bunch of horribly overpaid, pampered multimillionaires who became that way in the only country on earth where they could have achieved that much wealth and success.
In 2016, shortly after Colin Kaepernick began his on field protests, Forbes reported on a poll in âThe Sporting Newsâ that nearly one third of viewers said they were less likely to watch football on TV because of protests.
Why?
The reason is simple. Most sports fans view their favorite sport as an escape. We now have a 24-hour news cycle in which we can turn on all manner of protest, demonstration, and political battle at all hours of the day and night.
There is a constant barrage of people who want to persuade us to think this way or that, have this opinion on âx-y-zâ or that. We turn on sports because we want to watch talented athletes do things we cannot do ourselves.
For just a few hours, we get to live vicariously through them. It is just some good clean fun.
In the case of the Womensâ National Team, perhaps the bottom line is not financial but political. Megan Rapinoe has a history of exchanging words with former President Donald Trump.
In 2019, she stated that if the team retained their title, she was not going to the White House.
This sudden change of heart in regards to doing the heavy social justice lifting of kneeling has come conveniently after Joe Biden has become president. Is it the date on the calendar, January 20, that made the decision to no longer kneel a bit easier?
Maybe Dunn is telling the truth, and the players just got tired of kneeling one Sunday.
But the optics seem to say that the âbad orange man is goneâ from my point of view. Perhaps making a scene is no longer needed.
A tweet by someone named âWoodyâ seemed to say what many Americans think.
ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸
Guess what ?
We donât care about politics !
Just shut up with your hatred !
Play the game with no kneeling !
Respect the game !
Megan Rapinoe says ânot many, if anyâ US womenâs soccer players would attend White Househttps://t.co/WbAnnQNWV0
â â ðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸ WOODYðºð¸ðºð¸ðºð¸â (@Woody35771540) July 6, 2019





