When men lose, we don't pat them on the back and say, 'We're so proud.' We do with women -- and that's an insult.
They blew it. Can we show a little respect for women’s sports and for the U.S. World Cup soccer team by being honest, and not treating them like darlings?
“Couldn’t be prouder of the women of the #USWNT after a hard-fought game,” President Obama wrote.
Prouder? They were 22-0-3 against Japan all-time, and had gone 3-0 against them this year alone. They had the lead twice on Sunday in the World Cup Final. They were sloppy. They melted down in the shootout, with one kick going over the net entirely.
They choked.
Don’t pat them on the head for it. That’s an insult. It’s condescending. It’s what you’d say to a 7-year old because you don’t really expect much and don’t want to hurt feelings.
Well, these women deserve more. They worked hard. They are serious athletes and they deserve serious criticism. But there are an awful lot of cowards out there in the media and in the public who just don’t quite have the nerve to take the same shots at a women’s team that they would at a men’s team.
This team was supposed to win, then lost to Japan by 3-1 on penalty kicks, after blowing the lead twice for a 2-2 draw.
When the U.S. men’s basketball team loses in the Olympics, we don’t send them messages about how proud we are that they just tried really, really hard. We wonder what the heck is the matter with these people, what’s wrong with American basketball and the sport’s mentality.
And until we can say that about women’s teams, there will always be a major gap to close.
So this is about how we look at women’s sports in general in this country. We get all worked up and excited to see them for a few minutes every few years. People gathered in Times Square on Sunday to watch. And then we love these teams briefly, and go back to our normal lives. These things are like sparks that can’t quite get the fire started.
The WNBA, the women’s pro soccer league, the women’s pro softball league. Be honest, they don’t really catch on. UConn women’s basketball has its moments. But the only women’s sport that has sort of broken through in the U.S. is tennis, and — being honest again, a lot of that has to do with sex appeal — and domination by the Williams sisters.
This could have been one of the biggest moments in U.S. women’s sports history.
According to ESPN, the final game had an 8.6 overnight rating, reportedly ESPN’s most-watched women’s sporting event. It’s higher than the U.S. men’s first-round World Cup game against England, though not nearly as high as the women’s final game in 1999, which was on ABC.
Still, this team caught U.S. attention again. I’m not going to pretend to be a soccer expert, but am also not a soccer-hater. Instead, it always seems like a great party that I’m missing, seeing from across the street at a neighbor’s house. This game got that sports-excitement going and served as the invitation to soccer’s party.
Then, the team absolutely threw away a chance for this thing to take off, especially when so much focus is on NFL and NBA labor issues. Add that to the tough times of a terrible economy, and you find that people are looking for something to cheer for.
If this team had won, they would have been corporate favorites, the early buildup to the London Olympics, which are 12 months away. They could have been in commercials, on cereal boxes and God knows where for an entire year. And Olympic gold would have prolonged their popularity.
Instead, they won’t last till Tuesday.
A few hours after the game, Darren Rovell, CNBC’s sports business reporter, had already said on Twitter that he knew of three companies that were going to take a shot at using U.S. women’s soccer players as endorsers.
“Now they say they are out,” he Tweeted. “Good as your last goal.”
Twitter announced that at one point during the game, a tweet record had been broken: The game had led to 7,196 tweets per second. By contrast, the Green Bay Packers’ Super Bowl victory over Pittsburgh led to a high of 4,064 per second. News of Osama bin Laden’s death hit 5,106.
Of course, those soccer tweets weren’t all in the U.S. But plenty surely were. And the game crushed the British Open in U.S. TV ratings.
There will be more moments for women’s sports in the U.S., more sparks. But for now, unfortunately, it’s just a missed moment and a pat on the head.
Show them some respect for their hard work, and just say it: They whiffed.
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The comments are good^. Women don't seem to agree with this sort of talk. I think guys do. Whatever - Mars and Venus.
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