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Megan Rapinoe: the world’s best player in every sense of the word

By the time Megan Rapinoe stood in Stade de Lyon after July’s World Cup final, arms outstretched like a statue one might find at the Musée d’Orsay, it was obvious she had arrived at an apex few of us can ever hope to reach. The heart of a World Cup-winning USA team that will go down as the greatest ever, Rapinoe was the worthy recipient of Fifa’s The Best award on Monday in the women’s player category.

But a few years ago, it was almost inconceivable that Rapinoe would be standing under the bright lights, hailed as a hero. It appeared Rapinoe’s career was winding down and her best days were behind her – struggles that, in retrospect, propelled her to the stage at Fifa’s awards gala.

There was the disappointment of the 2016 Olympics, of course, where Rapinoe’s US team were knocked out in the quarter-finals – the earliest exit for the Americans in any major tournament. Rapinoe made her return during the Rio Games after 252 days without playing competitive football and, in her rushed return from an ACL injury, she failed to make the impact coach Jill Ellis had hoped for.

There were also the off-field diversions. Rapinoe joined Colin Kaepernick’s protest against racial injustice by kneeling during the national anthem for both club and US team games. In response, the US Soccer Federation passed a new bylaw stating that any player who didn’t stand for the anthem would face punishment, something that threatened her place on the team.

All the while, Ellis vowed to upend her roster before the 2019 World Cup and veteran players soon found themselves out in the cold. Call-ups and starts that used to belong to Rapinoe had gone to young up-and-comers such has Mallory Pugh, a winger 13 years Rapinoe’s junior.

It was a year that Rapinoe later admitted was a difficult one but she insisted it also rejuvenated her. On the pitch, she was resurgent, fitter and stronger than ever. Away from the game, she became more committed to speaking out, even if it meant being labeled as a “controversial” athlete.

“It really only solidifies who I am as a person and the things that I stand for,” she said in 2017. “Often times you stand up [for something] and people clap, and sometimes you do and they don’t. It only strengthened my resolve and my ethos of standing up for what I believe in.”

Her comeback from one of the most tumultuous years in her career laid the groundwork for her eventual breakout in 2019. At this summer’s World Cup, Donald Trump tweeted criticism of Rapinoe, chastising her for not respecting “our Country … or our Flag” after she had said she did not want to visit the White House. Rapinoe promptly scored twice in her next game, a marquee match-up between the US and France. For good measure, Rapinoe scored again in the World Cup final, which the US won, and left with a literal armful of trophies. Criticize her at your peril.

Edward Hardy
(@EdwardTHardy)

Donald Trump: “Megan should win first before she talks”

Megan Rapinoe: pic.twitter.com/0P9RXzxPeW

July 7, 2019

Rapinoe, to be sure, is a dazzling player to watch. A crafty and audacious winger, her enthusiasm is spellbinding – she plays like she’s having the time of her life, even when it seems like everyone wants to bring her down. She’ll dribble a defender into circles, find a seam for a pass out of nowhere, or score an impossible curler and make it look routine. But her sensational 2019 was buoyed by something more than that – something beyond what she could do with the ball at her feet. Her authenticity and self-belief set her apart in the most rigorous edition of the Women’s World Cup ever played.

She used routine press conferences to talk about the inequities in women’s football and, even as a Fifa media officer sat close by, she didn’t hold back in her criticism of football’s governing body. Fifa hadn’t shown it cared about the women’s game and offered lip service but not enough resources, she calmly argued.

Rapinoe and her teammates have sued the US Soccer Federation over allegations of gender discrimination, and she didn’t demur as the topic came up in France. By the time she and her teammates lifted the World Cup trophy, the crowd in Lyon erupted into a rousing chant: “Equal pay! Equal pay!” If the USA’s biggest star in the tournament had been someone else – someone less inclined to speak so openly about inequality – it’s worth wondering if that chant would have happened.

It was only fitting that on the night she was being honored as Fifa’s top player of the year, she again made the platform bigger than herself, calling on everyone to combat racism, sexism and other ugly elements of football.

“I ask everyone here: lend your platform to other people,” she told the crowd in Milan. “Lift other people up. Share your success. We have a unique opportunity in football, different to any other sport in the world, to use this beautiful game to actually change the world for better. That’s my charge to everyone. I hope you take that to heart and just do something. Do anything.”

How to define the word “best” may vary depending who you ask, and it becomes all the more complicated when trying to untangle a player’s individual success in a team sport. But if “best” can be defined as the player who made the greatest impact with the most poise at the highest level, there is little doubt that Rapinoe was the best 2019 had to offer.

Her performance has been transcendent, not just within the white lines on the grass, but at podiums and in front of crowds. Awarding the top individual honor to any other player simply wasn’t an option.

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