Mystiska knäskadan vilar som en förbannelse över damernas toppfotboll

Mystiska knäskadan vilar som en förbannelse över damernas toppfotboll

Det är ingen som verkar veta riktigt varför, men kvinnliga fotbollsspelare löper minst två till tre gånger större risk att drabbas av en främre korsbandsskada (ACL) än deras manliga motsvarigheter. I ett djupgående artikel har The New York Times har dykt ned i ACL-mysteriet. Varför tycks problemet bara växa sig större inom damfotbollen, och vad kan ligga bakom det? The World Cup is missing some of the sport’s biggest stars because of a knee injury epidemic. No one can say for sure why it’s happening, or how to fix it. By Rory Smith 19 July, 2023 The third time around, Megan Rapinoe’s reaction to a potentially career-ending knee injury went no further than an eye roll. She had torn her anterior cruciate ligament. She could reel off the recovery schedule from the top of her head. She could see, crystal clear, the next nine to 12 months spooling out in front of her. The surgery, the painstaking rehab, the grueling weeks in the gym, the anxious first steps on the turf, the slow journey back to what she had once been. As she considered it in 2015, she felt something closer to exasperation than to despair. “I was like, ‘I don’t have time for this,’” she said. The first time had been different. She had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee at age 21, when she was a breakout star in her sophomore year at the University of Portland. At that time, she felt what she called “the fear” — the worry that it might all be over before it had begun. A year later, she had done it again: same ligament, same knee, same arduous road back. It did not stop her from doing all that she had dreamed of doing. She turned pro. She was named to an all-star team. She represented her country. She won a gold medal at the Olympics. She moved to France. She played in two World Cups. She won one of them. And then, during a training session in Hawaii in December 2015, months after her 30th birthday, it happened again. This time, it was the right knee, and this time, her reaction was different. “It changed for me as I got older,” she said. “That one was like an eye roll. ‘This is annoying. I know what it is going to take to come back’. But generally, I think there’s this fear. Is this going to be the end? Am I going to come back from this? Am I going to have pain forever?” Over the last year or so, that fear — and the searching questions it prompts — has coursed through women’s soccer. The sport has at times seemed to be in the grip of an epidemic of A.C.L. injuries, one so widespread that at one point it had sidelined a quarter of the nominees for last year’s Ballon d’Or. Alexia Putellas, the Spain midfielder who won that award and the consensus pick as the best player of her generation, has recovered in time to grace the World Cup, the sport’s showpiece event. But countless other stars have not. They will, instead, spend their summer at home, nursing their injuries, cursing their luck. The list is a long one. Catarina Macario, the U.S. forward, tore the A.C.L. in her left knee last year and could not regain her fitness in time. She will not be present in Australia and New Zealand. Nor will two of the stars of the England team that is hoping to dethrone the United States: The team’s captain, Leah Williamson, and its most productive goal-scorer, Beth Mead, both fell victim to A.C.L. injuries this season. The Olympic champion, Canada, has lost Janine Beckie. France has not been able to call upon Marie-Antoinette Katoto or Delphine Cascarino. The Netherlands, a finalist in 2019, is without striker Vivianne Miedema. But these are just the famous names, the familiar faces, the notable absentees. The problem has become so acute that, at times, it has strained tensions between national teams and the clubs that employ the players from which their rosters are drawn, with at least one high profile European coach suggesting that too much was being asked of the athletes. Miedema herself pointed out that, this season alone, almost 60 players in Europe’s five major leagues had torn their A.C.L.s. “It is ridiculous,” she said earlier this year. “Something needs to be done.” Working out precisely what that might be, though, is more complicated than anyone would like. There is fear, of course, for players who are enduring those long weeks of recovery, but it is not the only type of fear. In Europe particularly, over the last 12 months, the sheer scale of the issue — the numbers of players being struck down by torn A.C.L.s — set off a psychological contagion. A number of national associations, as well as local offices of FIFPro, the global players’ union, reported inquiries from active players — those who had seen teammates or opponents or friends condemned to months on the sideline — seeking reassurance, solace or even just basic information. “The players are asking for research,” said Alex Culvin, FIFPro's head of strategy and research in women’s soccer. “We’ve had a lot of feedback from players saying they feel unsafe. You saw it last season — at times, players were not going in for tackles as they normally would because they were worried about injury.” The problem, Culvin said, is there is not enough research available for anyone to give the players clear answers. European soccer’s governing body, UEFA, has been running an injury surveillance study on men’s soccer, for example, for more than two decades. The women’s equivalent has been operating for only five years. “That lack of knowledge creates fear,” Culvin said. It is established fact that women are more at risk of suffering an A.C.L. injury than men. Quite how much more at risk is a little murkier. Martin Hagglund, a professor of physiotherapy at the University of Linkoping in Sweden, puts the risk at “two to three times greater, based on a systematic review of studies.” Culvin goes a little higher: Some studies, she said, suggest the risk for women could be “six or seven” times as great as that for men. “There is a real range,” she said. The issue of why that might be is more contested still. Traditionally, much of the research has focused on biology. “There are obvious anatomical differences” between men’s and women’s knees, Hagglund said. Not just the knees, in fact — the whole leg. Some studies have suggested that women’s A.C.L.s are smaller. There are differences in the hips, the pelvis, the engineering of the foot. Increasingly, too, there is a body of evidence to suggest there is a link between hormonal fluctuations and susceptibility to injuries in general, and A.C.L. injuries in particular. Chelsea, one of the leading clubs in England’s Women’s Super League, now tailors players’ training loads at specific phases of the menstrual cycle in a bid to mitigate the impact. As a paper published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine in September 2021 pointed out, though, the instinct to focus purely on physiological explanations is both rooted in and serves to reinforce the misogynistic stereotype that “women’s sport participation is dangerous predominantly due to female biology.” It also runs the risk, in Hagglund’s mind, of turning a blind eye to the host of other issues that may have played a part in depriving the World Cup of so many of its brightest lights this month. “The focus on anatomical differences means we have left out the other parts, the extrinsic factors,” he said. It just so happens that those are the ones that might, feasibly, be addressed. It is perhaps natural that for the players themselves, the cause of the run of A.C.L. tears is obvious. “We keep adding games left, right and center,” said Miedema, one of four players at Arsenal alone who have sustained the injury this season. “Instead of 30 games a season, we now play 60. But we don’t have the time and investment that is needed to keep players fit.” Kristie Mewis, a U.S. midfielder, contended that the “intensity” with which women’s soccer is now played had compounded that effect. It is not just that there are more games, she said. It is that they are exponentially faster, more physical and more demanding than ever before. “As the game is growing, it’s getting more competitive,” she said. “Maybe stress has something to do with it.” Rapinoe would endorse both ideas — “the load and intensity are different,” she said — and would add that while women’s soccer has professionalized on the field at breakneck speed, it has not always matched that pace off it. “We don’t generally charter; we don’t fly private,” she said. “We don’t have the resources. So with recovery, you’re being asked to produce a bigger load than you ever have but with less resources than you really need to do that.” To Hagglund, that is only the start of a long list of possible structural, cultural factors that might be at play. “Women’s soccer does not have the same organizational support as men’s,” he said. That applies not just to travel, but to the number and the quality of medical staff members, physiotherapists, nutritionists. Likewise, young female players, until relatively recently, did not have the benefits of the same sort of specialized strength and conditioning training that is commonplace in boys’ academies. Women’s teams have what he called smaller “competitive” squads — they rely heavily on a handful of high-profile players, ones who cannot afford to be rested. “That means they are more exposed to fixture congestion, there is less rotation, they are more likely to play with an injury,” he said. And then there are the environmental problems. Women’s teams do not play on the same perfectly manicured lawns that top men’s teams do. “In Scandinavia, certainly, it is still quite common for teams to play on artificial turf,” he said. The players must do so, often, while wearing shoes designed with men’s feet, rather than women’s, in mind. As diffuse as all of those problems are, they come down to much the same thing in Culvin’s mind. “It is a question of value,” she said. “What value do we place on an athlete? The players might be professional, but the conditions around them are not always suitable for professional athletes. There is not equity in the workplace until we value them properly in all components — the fields, the stadiums, the support staff around them.” Laura Youngson is always surprised, even now, by the number of players she encounters who have convinced themselves that soccer cleats are designed to be uncomfortable. “That’s the perception,” she said. “That they’re supposed to feel like that, and that women, in particular, are just supposed to put up with it. They’re really not meant to be like that.” Still, the belief is widespread. Earlier this year, an in-depth study conducted by the European Club Association and St. Mary’s University, London, found that 82 percent of elite female players experienced “pain or discomfort” from the footwear they wore while playing. The reason for that is simple. In contrast to running, say, where major footwear brands realized long ago that women and men required — and would buy — different types of shoes, the soccer versions sold to women are, largely, not actually designed for them. The abiding market principle has effectively been, as Youngson put it, “that women are just small men.” For a long time, like everyone else, Youngson just accepted that her soccer shoes never seemed to fit quite right. Then, after organizing a charity game on Mount Kilimanjaro in 2017, she realized that she was not alone. Even the professional players on the trip had the same complaint. She saw an opportunity — both a business one and a moral one — to put it right. Since then, the company she founded, Ida Sports, has conducted extensive research to produce the first custom-made women’s soccer cleats. They found that women tended to have narrower heels, wider toe areas and higher arches. (They are also more likely to change than men’s are, particularly during and after pregnancy.) That means they “interact differently with the ground,” something that Ida Sports has tried to remedy by redesigning the sole of the shoes she makes. There is also enough evidence to suggest that the shape and structure of women’s feet may make them more susceptible to injuries, both chronic and acute, including A.C.L. tears. Youngson does not claim to have a silver bullet for the knee injury epidemic, nor does she believe that wearing better-fitting shoes will end the problem on its own. “But there is definitely an opportunity for further research,” she said. “People are doing great work studying hormones and behavior and other things. We know boots and surfaces. There are definitely recommendations that we would make. The issue is, how do we keep more players on the pitch? Even if it is for a 1 percent gain, it is worth it.” Like Rapinoe, the former England international Claire Rafferty endured three A.C.L. injuries in her career. As with Rapinoe, her reaction changed over time. After her first, in her left knee, she felt “invincible,” as if she had gotten her bad luck out of the way early. She was only 16. It would, she assumed, be smooth sailing from there. She did not know then that the single greatest risk factor for sustaining an A.C.L. injury is having experienced one. Research suggests that 40 percent of players who have torn a cruciate ligament will do so again — in either knee — within five years. It is closer, in other words, to the flip of a coin than a roll of the dice. Rafferty learned that the hard way. In 2011, she tore the A.C.L. in her right knee. That time, she recalls being “in shock.” She did what she could to mitigate the risk. Despite her entreaties, her coach at Chelsea, Emma Hayes, regularly refused to allow her to play on artificial surfaces. Two years later, Rafferty tore the A.C.L. in her right knee again. “Nobody thought you could come back from three A.C.L.s then,” she said. Rafferty did. Physically, at least. Mentally, the scars did not heal. “I wasn’t calm,” she said. “I thought every game could be my last. I was playing with a lot of fear. I had quite a lot of anxiety. I couldn’t play like I did before. “I remember hearing people ask, ‘What’s happened to Claire Rafferty?’ I wanted to tell them that I couldn’t run properly because I was so afraid. I didn’t enjoy playing football. I started to resent it.” That fear, the one felt by the players missing this year’s World Cup, the one shared by all those who now feel unsafe on the field, had overwhelmed and inhibited her. She knew what she had to do. Long before her career should have ended, she walked away. She was 30. For women’s soccer, the real risk of its A.C.L. epidemic, the one rooted in lack of knowledge and a historical lack of care, is that she will not be the last. © 2023 The New York Times Company. Read the original article at The New York Times.

Rapinoes sista match: "Vet att jag har betytt mycket"

Rapinoes sista match: "Vet att jag har betytt mycket"

Fotbollslegendaren Megan Rapinoe har spelat sin sista landskamp för USA. I matchen mot Sydafrika spelade hon 54 minuter och fick hyllades sedan på storbildsskärmen. ”Jag vet att jag är en omtyckt spelare och jag vet att jag har betytt mycket för sporten”, sa hon enligt AP. 38-åriga Megan Rapinoe är en av de främsta fotbollsspelarna från USA någonsin. Vid VM i Frankrike 2019 gjorde hon fler mål än någon annan och utsågs till turneringens bästa spelare, skriver TT.

Donald Trumps attack: "Flera av spelarna är direkt fientliga mot USA"

Donald Trumps attack: "Flera av spelarna är direkt fientliga mot USA"

Flera av fotbollsspelarna i det amerikanska damlandslaget har sedan innan varit öppna motståndare mot Donald Trump. Nu går ex-presidenten Donald Trump till attack och sågar laget efter att de åkte ut mot Sverige i en dramatisk åttondelsfinal i VM. Trump i bråk med Rapinoe USA vann fotbolls-VM 2019. Redan då hamnade Donald Trump i ett verbalt bråk med lagets stjärna Megan Rapinoe, som är öppet homosexuell. Hon hade vägrat sjunga med i nationalsången och sade att hon inte hade för intention att åka till det ”där jävla Vita Huset” för att visa upp bucklan. – Trumps politik exkluderar såna som mig, sade då Magen Rapinoe i en intervju efter turneringen. Sågar insatsen Under söndagen stod Sverige som vinnare mot USA efter ett rafflande straffavgörande. Megan Rapinoe, som gjorde sin sista VM-match i karriären, sköt sin straff över ribban. Något som inte gick Donald Trump obemärkt förbi. ”Snygg straff, Megan”, skrev han då på sin egen sociala medier-plattform Truth Social. ”Åt helvete” Ex-presidenten sparade inte på krutet. ”Den ’chockerande och totalt oväntade’ förlusten mot Sverige är en symbol för vad som håller på att hända med vårt land under skurken Joe Biden”, skrev han vidare och fortsatte: ”Woke är lika med misslyckande. USA är på väg åt helvete!”

Donald Trumps raseri efter USA:s VM-uttåg: "Är på väg åt helvete"

Donald Trumps raseri efter USA:s VM-uttåg: "Är på väg åt helvete"

Det amerikanska landslaget i fotboll på damsidan är rankade som det bästa landslaget i världen, enligt FIFA. Genom åren har de vunnit otaliga mästerskap så som VM och OS.  Efter att ha lottats mot ett starkt Sverige i åttondelsfinalen av världsmästerskapet i fotboll tog dock framgången slut, åtminstone för den här gången. Detta efter att Sverige avgjort mot det favorittippade USA i straffläggning, där Lina Hurtig blev Sveriges stora hjälte.   Donald Trump kritiserar USA:s landslag Efter förlusten kritiserades det amerikanska laget av flera, då förväntningarna var betydligt högre än att åka ur turneringen i åttondelsfinal. En av dem som rasade över förlusten var USA:s före detta president, Donald Trump. På den egna sociala medieplattform "Truth Social" riktar han skarp kritik mot laget, bland annat mot stjärnan Megan Rapinoe, som för ovanlighetens skulle missade sin straff. Efter att storstjärnan tidigare varit kritisk mot Trump och hans politik skickade han en syrlig passning tillbaka mot Rapinoe:  "Snygg straff, Megan" Vidare påpekade ex-presidenten att landets fotbollsutveckling är på väg åt helt fel håll. ”Woke är lika med misslyckande. USA är på väg åt helvete!”

Trump sågar landslaget: Fientliga mot USA

Trump sågar landslaget: Fientliga mot USA

USA:s tidigare president Donald Trump går till attack mot det amerikanska damlandslaget efter förlusten mot Sverige, skriver Sportbladet. På Truth Social skriver han att ”flera av spelarna är direkt fientliga mot USA”, och hånar Megan Rapinoe som missade en straff mot Sverige under åttondelsfinalen som Sverige vann. Ex-presidenten och spelare i det amerikanska damlandslaget har sedan länge haft en öppen ordkonflikt. Efter matchen sa den öppet homosexuella Megan Rapinoe i en intervju att Trumps politik ”exkluderar såna som mig”. Matchen mot Sverige blev Rapinoes sista i VM-sammanhang efter 17 långa år i landslaget. Tidigare har Rapinoe sagt på X, tidigare Twitter, att det här blir hennes sista säsong som professionell fotbollspelare.

Megan Rapinoe på YouTube

🇺🇸 Megan Rapinoe | FIFA Women's World Cup Goals

The star of the FIFA Women's World Cup France 2019. Enjoy all of Megan Rapinoe's Women's World Cup goals for USWNT.

FIFA på YouTube

Piers Morgan slams Megan Rapinoe: 'She's the world's most annoying sports star'

Sky News Australia host Piers Morgan has taken aim at American soccer player Megan Rapinoe –declaring she is the "world's ...

Sky News Australia på YouTube

Megan Rapinoe - Best skills & goals

Megan Rapinoe - Best skills & goals #Megan Rapinoe #skills #goals #usa Nếu thấy video hay thì bạn hãy like và nhấn đăng ký ...

JM Football på YouTube

Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe Talk About Attending the Paris Olympics as Fans

Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe talk about their experiences being spectators at the US Open and Paris Olympics and how nice it is ...

Late Night with Seth Meyers på YouTube

Megan Rapinoe i poddar

"Megan Rapinoe"

Megan Rapinoe (professional soccer player / international warrior) kicks-off the week on another wonderful pod with the fellas, and a final toast to 2020. Cheers to a beautiful new year, fam. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Megan Rapinoe: Goaling for Gold

[This episode originally aired June 2022.] Megan Rapinoe is a world class athlete and activist. Together with the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team, Megan has won World Cups and Olympic medals. She is a fierce advocate for the LGBTQ+ community, equal rights and social justice.  This story is from the new Rebel Girls app! You can listen to more stories like this, PLUS sleepy stories, soundscapes, and all the podcast episodes you know and love. Just go to go.rebelgirls.com/dream-on to download and listen for free! This podcast is a production of Rebel Girls. It’s based on the book series Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls. This episode was produced by Camille Stennis and Haley Dapkus. Sound design and mixing by Bianca Salinas. It was written by Meghan Pochebit and voiced by Aida Reluzco. A special thanks to the whole Rebel Girls team, who make this podcast possible!

227. MEGAN RAPINOE: A Legend Says Goodbye to the Game

Laser-focused on her final World Cup, MEGAN RAPINOE chooses our podcast to go *deep* on her bittersweet decision to retire from her iconic soccer career: Why she is excited – and ready – to say goodbye to soccer;  Why representing America is so important to her in this moment;  Why she doesn’t believe in sacrificing herself for the team;  How dissociation helped her on the field – and hurt her in life – and how she’s working to give it up.  Plus, Megan explores the question: Does greatness have to cost you your humanity? About Megan:  Two-time World Cup Champion and Olympic Gold Medalist, Megan Rapinoe is a fan favorite and one of the team’s most technical and craftiest players. A vocal leader on and off the pitch, Megan helped lead the USWNT to the 2019 Women’s World Cup Championship scoring some of the biggest goals of the tournament. Megan took home the tournament’s two top honors – the Golden Boot for top scorer, and the Golden Ball for the best player in the tournament. A New York Times’ Best-Selling author, Time100’s Most Influential People and recent Presidential Medal of Freedom award recipient, Megan is an advocate for equality for all and has been able to intersect her passion for humanity and authenticity. At the end of 2022, Megan and fiancé Sue Bird launched “A Touch More”, a new production company focused on promoting narratives around revolutionaries who move culture forward. The company will amplify stories focused on identity, activism, and underrepresented groups. TW: @mPinoe IG: @mrapinoe To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

72. Double Date with Megan Rapinoe & Sue Bird!

For their first (of hopefully many) podcast double dates, Abby and Glennon sit down with the icons, activists, and Olympians Megan Rapinoe and Sue Bird. In this honest and hilarious conversation, we find out: 1. The delightfully awkward moment Megan and Sue first met; 2. What’s hard for each of them right now; 3. The boundaries they’re working on together; 4. How they communicate and deal with jealousy; and  5. How they help each other show up in the world as champions for change.   About Sue:  Regarded as the world’s premier point guard, Sue Bird is the WNBA’s All-Time Leader in Assists and known for being selfless, driven, encouraging, funny and smart. Bird is a seasoned veteran and a born leader who has dominated at every level. She is one of only seven women to win an Olympic Gold Medal (she’s won five), a World Championship Gold Medal (she’s won four) an NCAA Championship (she’s won two), and a WNBA Championship (she’s won four – the last just weeks before her 40th birthday). Sue is also a five-time Euroleague Champion, a twelve- time WNBA All-Star, was voted by the fans as one of the WNBA’s Top 15 Players of All Time. Off the court, Sue spends time as a basketball analyst for ESPN and as an outspoken and visible activist advocating for Black Lives, equality, health and wellness and expanding opportunities for girls and all marginalized people.   TW: @S10Bird IG: @suebird10 About Megan:  Two-time World Cup Champion and Olympic Gold Medalist, Megan Rapinoe is a fan favorite and one of the team’s most technical and craftiest players. A vocal leader on and off the pitch, Megan helped lead the USWNT to the 2019 Women’s World Cup Championship scoring some of the biggest goals of the tournament. Megan took home the tournament’s two top honors – the Golden Boot for top scorer, and the Golden Ball for the best player in the tournament. Megan is an advocate for equality for all and has been able to intersect her passion for humanity and authenticity.    TW: @mPinoe IG: @mrapinoe To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Megan Rapinoe Claims Representing America Is WORST JOB EVER ??

Megan Rapinoe was included in a recent Netflix documentary...which chronicled the 2023 USWNT quest for a three-peat in the World Cup. During the documentary...Megan Rapinoe claimed that playing for the USWNT was the "worst job in the world". We react to these comments from Megan Rapinoe. We explain why this is yet another attempt for Megan Rapinoe...to disrespect the country that made her a multi-millionaire. We also react to recent news...regarding the relationship of Megan Rapinoe and Sue Bird. USE PROMO CODE BTLFANS30 TO SAVE 30% OFF YOUR FIRST PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE WITH ALL STROKES MATTER: https://allstrokesmatter.com

Megan Rapinoe's career and legacy

Meg joins Sophie Penney to talk about Megan Rapinoe's final professional game and the legacy she leaves behind. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Megan Rapinoe

Megan Rapinoe

Ep 123: MEGAN RAPINOE - Grinding All My Life

Soccer star and activist Megan Rapinoe joins Jemele to discuss her new memoir, “One Life.” Megan also discusses how she became passionate about social justice issues and how it inspired her to make the controversial decision to kneel during the national anthem in support of Colin Kaepernick in 2016. She also shares some details about her engagement to WNBA superstar Sue Bird. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Megan Rapinoe Is the MOST DESPISED Soccer Player in America ??

Megan Rapinoe competed in her final World Cup with the USWNT this past summer. Although Megan Rapinoe failed to win another World Cup...she did manage to become the most despised player on the team. FIBA released a report that highlighted unpopular players based on social media activity. We reveal and react to this report from FIBA. Although FIBA refused to identify Megan Rapinoe...we explain why the unnamed player is Megan Rapinoe by referencing information in the report. We also discuss the recent silence of Megan Rapinoe since retiring from the NWSL...and question her next move. USE PROMO CODE BEHIND20 TO SAVE 20% OFF YOUR FIRST ORDER WITH HARDY SOAP: https://hardysoap.com

Megan Rapinoe Answers the Critics

Megan Rapinoe speaks with Atlantic staff writer Frank Foer. The retiring soccer star discusses her detractors, the U.S. team’s role in the global game, and taking penalty kicks. Also: If you have any comments or suggestions about the show, submit feedback at theatlantic.com/listener-survey. We'd love to hear from you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Black and White Network Podcast Episode 56 - Barack Obama's chef found DEAD near Obama's $12 MILLION estate! Megan Rapinoe is a HERO??! Cam Newton Acts Like A FOOL!

Black and White Network Podcast Episode 56 - Barack Obama's chef found DEAD near Obama's $12 MILLION estate! Megan Rapinoe is a HERO??! Cam Newton Acts Like A FOOL! Live show on Rumble Monday-Thursday 10am CST. Member stream at 10am CST every Friday UNCENSORED! Become a monthly subscriber to the podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/blackandwhitenetwork/subscribe Become a member: www.blackandwhitenetwork.com Follow us on Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/BlackandWhiteNews Support us on Locals: https://blackandwhitenetwork.locals.com/support Become a member: https://blackandwhitenetwork.com/category/member

slimFATZZ Podcast Episode Two Hundred And Ninety One

The guys get together to discuss topics such as former American soccer player Megan Rapinoe's controversial statement about religion, Mexican American actor and television host Mario Lopez being questioned on his ethnicity and the ever soaring prices at the Goodwill and second hand stores and much more on this highly entertaining episode that you do not want to miss and make sure to tune in!

Jorge Masvidal DESTROYS Megan Rapinoe for being Anti-American and pushing the TRANS agenda in sports

Jorge Masvidal DESTROYS Megan Rapinoe for being Anti-American and pushing the TRANS agenda in sports

Hour 2 - Sean Callahan + Megan Rapinoe Hated Her Job |

On3 Husker Online, Sean Callahan joins Chad and Kelly to discuss Matt Rhule's 1st season, the latest on Dylan Raiola and Nebraska tackling the transfer portal. And Megan Rapinoe hated playing for the USWNT...Chad and Kelly discuss. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Megan Rapinoe on Social Media and Mental Health

Soccer star Megan Rapinoe talks to Jon about the toll social media takes on professional athletes, what it’s like to become an online Resistance hero and a right-wing villain, and whether she will ever run for office.

Megan Rapinoe admits it! She HATED representing the United States! Says USWNT WORST job in the world

Megan Rapinoe admits it! She HATED representing the United States! Says USWNT WORST job in the world

Episode 41: Megan Rapinoe

Two-time World Cup champion and Olympic gold medalist Megan Rapinoe joins Laughter Permitted to talk about hosting the ESPYS, her unrelenting commitment to fight for equality and social justice, the 2019 World Cup and how she made the most of quarantine. Also find out where Megan is most at peace and what the future holds.

Men in Blazers 06/10/19: American Legend Series, Megan Rapinoe

Rog talks with USWNT hero Megan Rapinoe about playing in her third World Cup, her leadership style and her mission to change the world. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.