USWNT

@Texicali I think your suggestion is eminently reasonable. I also imagine this is what the lawsuits will enable the women to analyze through the discovery process prior to any trial.
What you propose is sensible. The problem is that the broadcast rights are presently all bundled together- the Men, Women and MLS (!) are bundled so it's difficult to segregate who is earning what. If I am wrong on this then hopefully some one will correct me.

At first I was disappointed that the women sued. However after seeing some of the data that favor the women in the domestic market I think the women would be crazy not to sue.
 
This is unbelievable.

Honest questions, I would appreciate an honest response. For a minute, let's pretend each team was accounted for separately over a four year period of time, with each have a World Cup cycle (that we actually qualify for) in the period we will look at.

USSF can negotiate a domestic TV package for the men alone - this would include all friendlies and qualifiers. USSF can negotiate an equipment sponsorship and shirt sponsorship on behalf of the USMNT. USSF pays for business class airline tickets, 4 star hotels, meals and stipends, coaching staff salaries. USSF put the FIFA World Cup payments on the books for the men - why would this not count, they are part of the tournament like every other team. USSF continues to pay the same exact bonuses as they have in the past and keep the same gate receipts as in the past.

Now let say, USSF can negotiate a domestic TV package for the women alone - includes all friendlies and qualifiers. USSF can negotiate an equipment sponsorship and shirt sponsorship deal on behalf of the WNT. USSF pays for the exact same business class airline tickets, the exact same 4 star hotels, the exact same meals and stipends, and coaching staff salaries. USSF would put the Womens World Cup payments on the books for the women. USSF must still pay the salaries of the women that are on the team, plus the exact same bonuses as the men receive, including gate receipts.

After each 4 year period, who has the better bottom line? In your opinion, why? Total revenue - total expenses, GAAP accounting vs. MAP (misogynistic accounting).

The categories of revenue that USSF does and doesn't put into the men's and women's revenue buckets are determined solely by USSF and have nothing to do with GAAP accounting practices, as I previously stated. It is not possible for us to itemize the impact of the MNT's or WNT's impact on advertising revenue and sponsorship deals with absolute certainty of course, but many indicators suggest that the WNT is more of the driving force for the reasons I have previously stated. The fact is that USSF has chosen to attribute only some of the revenue streams to the MNT and WNT revenue buckets, and those happen to favor the men, while it has left out the biggest ones (namely the VW and Nike contracts) which probably favor the women. USSF certainly could negotiate contracts separately in order to better asses their relative contributions to USSF's biggest revenue streams. And that doesn't even do things justice, because VW and Nike contracts are pretty much pure profit, while gate receipts aren't nearly as profitable since much of that it is eaten up by expenses. Regardless, even without negotiating separately for the MNT and WNT, there are mechanisms in place to determine how to value both the MNT's and WNT's percentages of the VW and Nike contracts, but USSF doesn't. If they did, I bet we'd all find out that Alex Morgan alone sells more jerseys than the entire MNT combined. Ultimately, we'd almost certainly find out that the WNT and the Mexican NT players are far more important profit drivers than the MNT players.

If USSF isn't going to base compensation on the actual value they provide, but only on the value they provide from some of the lesser revenue streams (and the ones that favor the men), it has no legitimate basis to value the men at a higher level and pay them more. In other words, when someone earlier in this thread something about paying the WNT based on "perceived" rather than actual value, the fact is that they're paying the MNT more based on their "perceived", and not their actual overall value.
 
Hmmm...

WNT players suing over the unequal treatment and pay
MNT failing to qualify for the World Cup, and losing youth players to other countries
MLS teams threatening to leave the Boys DA
Some of the most successful clubs in major markets leaving the Girls DA (which is modeled after a failing boys DA)
The combined Copa America proposed by USA dead on arrival with CONMEBOL, so MNT stuck playing friendlies or against CONCACAF for the foreseeable future, with no Confed Cup either, and Gold Cup contract over in 2021.
On the positive side -- all of our best young players once again migrating to European clubs, so I can see them on TV every weekend, but not on the national team most games ...
..... am I missing something.

There is something rotten in US Soccer. Please no more committees, Carlos. Major change is needed now.
 
The categories of revenue that USSF does and doesn't put into the men's and women's revenue buckets are determined solely by USSF and have nothing to do with GAAP accounting practices, as I previously stated. It is not possible for us to itemize the impact of the MNT's or WNT's impact on advertising revenue and sponsorship deals with absolute certainty of course, but many indicators suggest that the WNT is more of the driving force for the reasons I have previously stated. The fact is that USSF has chosen to attribute only some of the revenue streams to the MNT and WNT revenue buckets, and those happen to favor the men, while it has left out the biggest ones (namely the VW and Nike contracts) which probably favor the women. USSF certainly could negotiate contracts separately in order to better asses their relative contributions to USSF's biggest revenue streams. And that doesn't even do things justice, because VW and Nike contracts are pretty much pure profit, while gate receipts aren't nearly as profitable since much of that it is eaten up by expenses. Regardless, even without negotiating separately for the MNT and WNT, there are mechanisms in place to determine how to value both the MNT's and WNT's percentages of the VW and Nike contracts, but USSF doesn't. If they did, I bet we'd all find out that Alex Morgan alone sells more jerseys than the entire MNT combined. Ultimately, we'd almost certainly find out that the WNT and the Mexican NT players are far more important profit drivers than the MNT players.

If USSF isn't going to base compensation on the actual value they provide, but only on the value they provide from some of the lesser revenue streams (and the ones that favor the men), it has no legitimate basis to value the men at a higher level and pay them more. In other words, when someone earlier in this thread something about paying the WNT based on "perceived" rather than actual value, the fact is that they're paying the MNT more based on their "perceived", and not their actual overall value.

Disagree with quite a bit of what you said, but you do a good job of conveying your point. The biggest issue I see is that your stance is entirely subjective and without any basis of facts.

Let's set aside FIFA prize money because we all know that greatly favors the men and no one will argue they bring in more from that standpoint. Let's set aside gate receipts, because you are correct, this is peanuts compared to what we are really talking about.

The reason I disagree - the TV deal is a huge driving factor in generating income, and the facts have been put out that the USMNT significantly draws more viewers than the USWNT. This isn't a 10%, 50% type of figure it is a multiple figure, especially in major tournaments. Given these numbers are published, it would be fair to assume that TV revenue would favor the USMNT somewhere in the 70%-80% range. If there were a mythical $100M TV deal, the men's ledger would show 70%-80% of that. That is a huge gap in revenue generation.

Now let's look at Nike sponsorship. I don't doubt at all that Alex Morgan sells more jerseys than the entire USMNT, but I haven't seen any figures to corroborate that. That said, that isn't how kit deals are structured. An equipment manufacture will look at current and potential future sales during the deals term to determine the annual $ figure they are willing to pay. They will also take into account the number of eyeballs that see these teams in their gear - we know that greatly favors the men. My guess the number of young boys and grown men that have purchased USMNT kits is far greater than the number of USWNT kits that are sold - but again, that is just my guess based on no factual evidence. These equipment deals are not structured on a "kick-back" type of agreement, where USSF would get x% of proceeds from jersey sales.

The VW sponsorship deal would be similar to Nike, except they are really just paying for the number of eyeballs that see their logo on the jerseys, very similar to a commercial. Again, this drastically favors the men.

I will agree with you that the USWNT, at this moment, may have a bigger power to grow the game. But they need to do that first and then it should be reflected in the next sponsorship deals. What I don't see is a top line or bottom line figure that puts the WNT anywhere close to the MNT.

I would actually argue the opposite of your take on USSF's negotiating tactics. I think they negotiate these deals together so they can provide the WNT with the salaries and payments, which are the best in the world, to match their on field performance. In a way, I think it is done to avoid conflict with the men's team, much more so than to hide anything from the women. Most USSF revenue generating actions come down to how many consumers are touched, whether it be buying jerseys, selling tickets or watching on TV. The fact of the matter is, the MNT provides more eyeballs (multiples of) than the WNT does.

Given the facts we have and using some subjectivity, if USSF's budget was $6 of every $10 generated toward their NT's - the men should receive $4.20 - $4.80 of that budgetary spend. When adding prize money to the mix the gap widens even more.

Very interesting conversation.
 
Here you go...the data below include the World Cup years for both the Men and the Women so the data are full cycle.
The sponsorship deals have to be included in the equation. The new VW deal is most likely driven by the anticipation that the USWNT will do well in the upcoming WWC.


Revenues FY2017
FY2018 FY2019(E) FY2020(E) 2017-2020
MNT Events: $10.80 $10.80 $14.50 $20.40 = > > $ 56.50
WNT Events: $14.60 $12.00 $10.30 $23.00 = >> $ 59.90
Sponsorship: $46.10 $48.90 $ 48.10 $ 52.70 =>> $195.8

*all data in millions
Source is the 2019 Book of Reports for the USSF
 
Part of the problem looking at this through a small (4 year) lens, is the results of the men are not typical of what we see during World Cup years and don't take into account the Collective Bargaining cycles. Its rare that the men don't advance out of CONCACAF. More importantly, we all need to appreciate that both the men and women have different types of collective bargaining agreements. The men have bargained for a pay structure that is fundamentally different and riskier because its based solely on participation in USMNT games. The women bargained for a pay structure that is "salary" like and includes payment for playing in the NWSL for the top women players. We can't ignore this.

Why is this? First, the men in the US Soccer pool know that a market exists for their services outside of the USMNT. They are employed by European clubs and the semi-professional league in the US (I think its called the MLS ... need to google that). They have salaries that pay them based on their market rates as top players. When US Soccer calls the men into "camp" the men are often making less than they would if they stayed put with their clubs. While MLS salaries are low compared to the rest of the world, the men making the USMNT and getting called into all the camps and games would make another $100k. When some of our players are making millions per year, its a nice tip, but not why they are playing.

The women don't have a league that pays them salaries that rise to the level of a living wage. The market for their services outside of the USWNT is low. US Soccer and the USWNT players collectively bargained for a different deal. We can't lose sight of the fact that US Soccer is also trying to fund Youth programs and other initiates with the money make from the marketing and broadcast dollars as well. As it stands now, the 2017 collective bargaining agreement the USWNT agreed too righted a number of wrongs, but didn't give them everything they wanted, this lawsuit aims to do that but it will be an uphill battle given the structural difference between the men and women's collective bargaining agreements.
 
MWN would you at least concede that times have changed and that perhaps the pay should be adjusted UP for the women?

Looks that way to me. Why ??? The Nike deal and the VW deal seem to be game changers.

In the razor-razor blade model we sell the razor at cost and make all of our profit from selling replacement blades to the consumer at high margins. Similarly, the teams are becoming the razor to the razor blade of advertising deals. May I suggest that the USWNT and their relative success has a lot to do with the growth in sponsorships, the increased sales in razor blades as it were...Viewed in that way they can rightly demand "Show me the money!" But perhaps you and others disagree. Please note that I am not as hung up on whether they make more than the men but that they should make more than they have so far...the US Men help put things in perspective in my opinion.

I read that the VW deal is over $10 million but I do not know over how long or if that is annually...that would also make a giant difference in the analysis.
 
Regarding the argument that the USSF pays for NWLS, I only see an expenditure for $795,000 in the financials, which is not a lot of money in the grand scheme of this enterprise. Perhaps other NWLS expenses are buried in other line items but they are not called out in the published financials. To put the "paltry" sum spent on NWLS in perspective, USSF spends $15 million on Administration, $6million on DA, $18 million on Development Programs, $5 million on Sports Medicine, $5 million on National Team Administration, and $ 10 million on Coaching Programs.
 
MWN would you at least concede that times have changed and that perhaps the pay should be adjusted UP for the women?

Looks that way to me. Why ??? The Nike deal and the VW deal seem to be game changers.

In the razor-razor blade model we sell the razor at cost and make all of our profit from selling replacement blades to the consumer at high margins. Similarly, the teams are becoming to razor to the razor blade of advertising deals. May I suggest that the USWNT and their relative success has a lot to do with the growth in sponsorships, the increased sales in razor blades as it were...Viewed in that way they can rightly demand "Show me the money!" But perhaps you and others disagree. Please note that I am not as hung up on whether they make more than the men but that they should make more than they have so far...the US Men help put things in perspective in my opinion.

I read that the VW deal is over $10 million but I do not know over how long or if that is annually...that would also make a giant difference in the analysis.

Fundamentally, I don't have a problem paying the USWNT their "perceived value." I also don't have a problem paying the women their "actual value." Where I have a problem is paying any player, man or women a rate not in line with their "fair market value." I also have a problem with the notion that the USWNT's World Cup path is equal to that of the men. Its not and much easier for a women's team to make the world cup than it is for a men's team. To qualify for the Women's World Cup, the USWNT plays 5 games over a two week period. The USMNT play 16 games over a 2 year period. Its simply not "Equal Work" and the roster bonuses paid to the men should be much higher given the greater risk.

I have a fundamental problem with the claims being made by the USWNT that they are being treated unequally, thus, illegally. That's B.S. They are treated unequally, because they bargained for a fundamentally different deal than the men. Their current claims (I read the lawsuit) don't mention the fact that the core group is salaried employees of US Soccer and the men are independent contractors that only get paid for training camps and games. From an employer perspective, its like my marketing department (WNT) complaining that the commissioned sales people (MNT) are paid more. Damn straight, because the marketing people are not on commission and can earn substantially less or substantially more, the marketing people have a less risk adverse deal. The USMNT players take the risk, the women don't take nearly the same risk.

Moreover, the salary structure in place for the USWNT is going to bite the US in the butt, because it create a barrier to bringing in new blood.

Regarding the argument that the USSF pays for NWLS, I only see an expenditure for $795,000 in the financials, which is not a lot of money in the grand scheme of this enterprise. Perhaps other NWLS expenses are buried in other line items but they are not called out in the published financials. To put the "paltry" sum spent on NWLS in perspective, USSF spends $15 million on Administration, $6million on DA, $18 million on Development Programs, $5 million on Sports Medicine, $5 million on National Team Administration, and $ 10 million on Coaching Programs.

The salaries paid to the USWNT for NWSL are reflected in the USWNT expense line item. The additional money paid to the NWSL is to help support this insolvent league, not to pay USWNT salaries.
 
I hear you. I suppose I look at it with a different framework. To my way of thinking if you make a movie with live actors or a cartoon and the box office receipts are equal then the compensation for the talent is going to be similar. I also deal with salaried people versus commissioned salespeople and yes the ones with the higher upside are also exposed to much greater downside. It will be interesting to see how this plays out in the courts, if it ever gets to trial.
 
I have a fundamental problem with the claims being made by the USWNT that they are being treated unequally, thus, illegally. That's B.S. They are treated unequally, because they bargained for a fundamentally different deal than the men. Their current claims (I read the lawsuit) don't mention the fact that the core group is salaried employees of US Soccer and the men are independent contractors that only get paid for training camps and games. From an employer perspective, its like my marketing department (WNT) complaining that the commissioned sales people (MNT) are paid more. Damn straight, because the marketing people are not on commission and can earn substantially less or substantially more, the marketing people have a less risk adverse deal. The USMNT players take the risk, the women don't take nearly the same risk.

Great, blame the victim. It's not the women's fault they had to agree to a worse deal because USSF would not pay them equally, leaving them with two bad options, either less pay or no pay.

Your hypothetical is a horrible one because it wrongly assumes the WNT (like the marketing department) deserve less opportunity than the MNT (sales department) without actually accounting for their real value. Why, exactly, isn't the MNT the less desirable marking department in your example anyway? The fact is, a job title is not a "protected class", but women are, so you can't pay them less because you deem their work to be less valuable. In other words, you can't just make the women work in the marketing department because you assume they're less valuable than men.

If you want a more accurate hypothetical, I'll give you one. You have a man and a woman in your sales department (since they do the exact same job, just like the MNT and WNT players). The male employee sucks and is borderline incompetent (just like the MNT) and you know he can't close the two biggest potential deals in company history (coincidentally with VW and Nike, go figure). Because you and the male sales guy are part of the good old boy network, though, you create a commission structure that intentionally excludes the VW and Nike contracts from commission eligibility and then make the woman do all the hard work to seal the two biggest deals in company history. Then you blame the woman for pointing out that your commission plan intentionally discriminates against women, and tell her it's her fault because she knew the whole time the company's commission structure that you created discriminates against women but she agreed to work here anyway.
 
EOL, do you know how much the VW deal is worth and how long it is for? I have only read that it was an 8 figure deal.
Ok I see the VW deal is 8 figures annually for 4 years and less than the Nike deal whose details are shown in the Book of Reports. If I assume the VW deal is $10-$15 million per year through 2022 then that will add $40-$60 million of almost pure profit to the pot.

If you look at the total revenues from Fiscal 2014-2020(E) it breaks down as follows:
USMNT*: $120 million
USWNT*: $105 million
Sponsorship: $300 million


* 2014-2020(E) includes 2 world cup cycles for both teams. I have slightly adjusted up the USSF forecast for the USWWC revenue since the USSF estimate was too conservative for the last WWC. Main source is the USSF Book of Reports

Based upon the data you can make the case that players should be paid equally as soccer players period.

With regard to expenses, the USSF pays about twice as much for the male youth teams as they pay for the women's youth teams. Also, USSF excludes coaching expenses from the expense line items for the US teams. Jill Ellis, the USWNT head coach, was paid slightly LESS then the men's U20 coach according to tax filings. Treatment and segregation of these expense items favors the men unfairly. Both teams lose money on the WC's but only if you exclude sponsorship which would be illogical to ignore.

The new deal takes sponsorship to record levels due arguably to the success of the USWNT given the timing and circumstances of the USMNT failing to qualify for the Olympics twice and then failing to qualify for the World Cup in 2018.

I can't speak to whether the USSF management (mainly men but that's irrelevant to me) are sexist, parsimonious, incompetent, greedy, or making an honest mistake. But it is clear to me the pay situation between the men and the women should be rectified.
 
Great, blame the victim. It's not the women's fault they had to agree to a worse deal because USSF would not pay them equally, leaving them with two bad options, either less pay or no pay.

Your hypothetical is a horrible one because it wrongly assumes the WNT (like the marketing department) deserve less opportunity than the MNT (sales department) without actually accounting for their real value. Why, exactly, isn't the MNT the less desirable marking department in your example anyway? The fact is, a job title is not a "protected class", but women are, so you can't pay them less because you deem their work to be less valuable. In other words, you can't just make the women work in the marketing department because you assume they're less valuable than men.

If you want a more accurate hypothetical, I'll give you one. You have a man and a woman in your sales department (since they do the exact same job, just like the MNT and WNT players). The male employee sucks and is borderline incompetent (just like the MNT) and you know he can't close the two biggest potential deals in company history (coincidentally with VW and Nike, go figure). Because you and the male sales guy are part of the good old boy network, though, you create a commission structure that intentionally excludes the VW and Nike contracts from commission eligibility and then make the woman do all the hard work to seal the two biggest deals in company history. Then you blame the woman for pointing out that your commission plan intentionally discriminates against women, and tell her it's her fault because she knew the whole time the company's commission structure that you created discriminates against women but she agreed to work here anyway.
What about the Paralympic team? They are a protected class also. Should they be paid the same?
 
Great, blame the victim. It's not the women's fault they had to agree to a worse deal because USSF would not pay them equally, leaving them with two bad options, either less pay or no pay.

Your hypothetical is a horrible one because it wrongly assumes the WNT (like the marketing department) deserve less opportunity than the MNT (sales department) without actually accounting for their real value. Why, exactly, isn't the MNT the less desirable marking department in your example anyway? The fact is, a job title is not a "protected class", but women are, so you can't pay them less because you deem their work to be less valuable. In other words, you can't just make the women work in the marketing department because you assume they're less valuable than men.

If you want a more accurate hypothetical, I'll give you one. You have a man and a woman in your sales department (since they do the exact same job, just like the MNT and WNT players). The male employee sucks and is borderline incompetent (just like the MNT) and you know he can't close the two biggest potential deals in company history (coincidentally with VW and Nike, go figure). Because you and the male sales guy are part of the good old boy network, though, you create a commission structure that intentionally excludes the VW and Nike contracts from commission eligibility and then make the woman do all the hard work to seal the two biggest deals in company history. Then you blame the woman for pointing out that your commission plan intentionally discriminates against women, and tell her it's her fault because she knew the whole time the company's commission structure that you created discriminates against women but she agreed to work here anyway.

My hypothetical is on point. We have two different contracts that were negotiated, with the women fully aware of men's terms, so nobody was hiding any balls or keeping secrets. The men negotiated a riskier deal that pays them for only their participation on the USMNT; the Women negotiated a salary that pays them for participating in the NWSL and USWNT. Now the women are saying "Wait a second ... not fair." We want to keep our NWSL bonuses (that the men don't get) and also get paid the same per game as the men. Sorry, but your hypothetical ignores/attempts to rewrite this important fact. 2 years ago (2017), the women renegotiated their collective bargaining agreement that was purposely different to meet the realities of the market. We also cannot forget that at the time there were pending claims by 5 players alleging pay discrimination, the 2017 deal addressed many of the complaints, and gave back pay for some items and equalized many of the items (travel, per diem, etc.), but kept the salary structure in place because the players could not make a living wage playing on the NWSL salary, they needed US Soccer to "help out," which it did.

US Soccer currently subsidizes the NWSL directly to the tune of $750k per year PLUS it pays millions to the top USWNT to play in the NWSL under the collective bargaining agreement, which is something the men don't get because ... they have a different deal.

If the parties want to renegotiate their deal, there is a time and place for it ... at the next collective bargaining cycle.
 
My hypothetical is on point. We have two different contracts that were negotiated, with the women fully aware of men's terms, so nobody was hiding any balls or keeping secrets. The men negotiated a riskier deal that pays them for only their participation on the USMNT; the Women negotiated a salary that pays them for participating in the NWSL and USWNT. Now the women are saying "Wait a second ... not fair." We want to keep our NWSL bonuses (that the men don't get) and also get paid the same per game as the men. Sorry, but your hypothetical ignores/attempts to rewrite this important fact. 2 years ago (2017), the women renegotiated their collective bargaining agreement that was purposely different to meet the realities of the market. We also cannot forget that at the time there were pending claims by 5 players alleging pay discrimination, the 2017 deal addressed many of the complaints, and gave back pay for some items and equalized many of the items (travel, per diem, etc.), but kept the salary structure in place because the players could not make a living wage playing on the NWSL salary, they needed US Soccer to "help out," which it did.

US Soccer currently subsidizes the NWSL directly to the tune of $750k per year PLUS it pays millions to the top USWNT to play in the NWSL under the collective bargaining agreement, which is something the men don't get because ... they have a different deal.

If the parties want to renegotiate their deal, there is a time and place for it ... at the next collective bargaining cycle.

Sounds like the WNT decided the time and place for a new deal is right now in federal court.

Going forward, I recommend that you run personnel decisions through legal counsel first. Just a suggestion.
 
U.S. Soccer still doesn’t get it as it prepares to fight against equal pay
https://sports.yahoo.com/us-soccer-...res-to-fight-against-equal-pay-060521786.html


The federation’s persistence with this self-inflicted public relations nightmare is baffling. It willingly frames itself as the penny-pinching overlord pitted against one of the nation’s most popular teams, just months before it begins its World Cup title defense in France.

U.S. Soccer’s lesser-used argument that the reason for the disparity in pay in most years is a function of different pay structures — the women are essentially full-time employees with benefits, while the men are paid entirely in bonuses — isn’t without merit. And the federation can also point to the collective bargaining agreement, paying them less than the men, that the women willingly and knowingly signed just over two years ago, well after this standoff began.

Instead, U.S. Soccer continues to focus on revenue. And that’s where its argument falls flat.

Because as a non-profit, the federation really has no standing to reduce a moral quandary to money. The point of non-profits is that, exempt from income taxes and fiduciary obligations to shareholders, they can do the work that needs to be done, rather than pursue profit.

So while pointing to a discrepancy in revenue between the men’s and women’s programs — if you accept that it exists — is, at face value, not entirely unreasonable, it rings hollow in a non-profit setting. It is, besides, far outweighed by the overwhelming and broadly held sense that paying the men and women the same, however that redounds to the bottom line, is simply the right thing to do. Even if they don’t bring in the same amount of money, which remains disputed.

That’s what non-profits exist for: to serve the greater good.

It would take only a few million dollars a year to bridge the pay gap between men and women. To make things right. That’s easily covered by the surpluses the federation is running, undermining any case that the money somehow isn’t there.

isn’t a business no longer holds up. Maybe U.S. Soccer should start paying taxes on its operating profits — almost $11 million in 2017 and more than $46 million in 2016, according to the federation’s most recent Form 990 — or indeed the nine-figure reserves and investments it reportedly sits on.

And this is a corner U.S. Soccer has backed itself into by forcing the team into a debate on revenue, rather than just equality. Because this is a losing issue.

In its defense filed on Monday, the federation essentially argued that the women’s team isn’t entitled to equal pay because it isn’t doing equal work. It reckons this is true because the teams exist in separate frameworks.

The document calls the two programs “physically and functionally separate organizations that perform services for U.S. Soccer in physically separate spaces and compete in different competitions, venues and countries at different times; have different coaches, staff and leadership; have separate collective bargaining agreements; and have separate budgets that take into account the different revenue that the teams generate.”

There’s that revenue argument again. Which is a thin defense when you consider that sponsorship and broadcast rights, the largest sources of income by far, are bundled with the men’s national team — and in the case of the TV rights even with Major League Soccer. So who is to say, exactly, how much the women’s share is even worth?

But then U.S. Soccer somehow also alleges that the pay gap has nothing to do with gender, according to Miki Turner, a Washington lawyer who broke down the defense on Twitter.

This not only contradicts the idea that revenues must be compared — while competition, performance and compensation somehow can’t — but also denigrates the women’s game, and indeed the USA’s decades-long dominance of it. Read one way, it implies that the Americans are only dominating because the women’s game is weaker. Read another, the World Cup-winning women’s enormous success doesn’t count as heavily as success from the World Cup-missing men might.

Perhaps that’s an unfair interpretation of the legalese, but then that’s the sort of criticism the federation exposed itself to. By fighting this unjustifiable fight, all U.S. Soccer does is raise questions about why, exactly, it remains hell-bent on denying its best team the equality it is morally, and perhaps legally, entitled to.

The federation prides itself on being a pioneer in its investment in the women’s program, and rightly so. Guaranteed equal pay is the natural extension of that. But instead of taking another victory lap for its success in a promising Women’s World Cup year, U.S. Soccer prepares to face the stars and media darlings it created in a courtroom, in spite of the desperately bad optics.

And all in the service of an argument that misses the point.

This was never about revenue. It’s about doing the right thing.
 
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