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NWSL takes field first as other pro leagues chart futures

The National Women's Soccer League opens its Challenge Cup tournament Saturday and the pressure is on as it becomes the first professional team sports league to play in the U.S. amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Many of the players aren't as concerned about being first as they are eager to get back on the field.

'œWe've missed that feeling of the wins, the losses, the hard-fought battles, getting that last goal in the 90th minute,'ť Portland Thorns midfielder Lindsey Horan said. 'œIt's so sad not having that. For us players, this is our lives, this is our passion. So we all are so grateful that we have that back.'ť

The NWSL is taking the field as other professional leagues chart their immediate futures and as COVID-19 cases continue to rise across the nation.

The players and staffs of the eight teams participating in the World Cup-style tournament in Utah are being sequestered in facilities used by the Utah Royals and Major League Soccer's Real Salt Lake. Players will be subject to a rigorous testing protocol and games will be played without fans.

But the tournament has already hit some snags. The league's ninth team, the Orlando Pride, was forced to withdraw earlier this week when six players and four staff members tested positive for COVID-19. That forced the league to reshuffle the schedule, and, as a result, the remaining teams will advance to the knockout round.

Three U.S. national team players, the Reign's Megan Rapinoe, Utah's Christen Press and Portland's Tobin Heath, opted out of the tournament. The NWSL allowed players to sit out over health concerns without losing their salaries.

New NWSL Commissioner Lisa Baird acknowledged the concerns about COVID-19.

'œThe key is to be prepared and to make sure that everyone understands the importance of living by the tournament protocol, wearing your PPE, making sure that you're using the facilities and sticking in the protective environment, which we are doing and plan to do over the tournament schedule," Baird said. "So the whole key is mitigating risk, making sure that we are staying within our environment and making sure that we have the right plans in place."

The opening game is between Portland and the back-to-back defending champion North Carolina Courage, while the Chicago Red Stars play the Washington Spirit in the late game. The opener and the July 26 final will be televised nationally on CBS.

'œWe're raring to go, to be perfectly honest. We've been kicking each other for a long time now in the last month, it will be nice to kick somebody else and get on the field,'ť Courage coach Paul Riley said.

RISING CASES

Utah's COVID-19 cases have been rising.

Gov. Gary Herbert has mandated the use of masks in businesses in Salt Lake and Summit counties starting Saturday.

'œWe're monitoring daily. We're in touch with Utah public officials, I've been talking with the head of the Utah Sports Commission. They just finished a supercross event, they're in the middle of a golf event,'ť Baird said. 'œThe point is, we've got to continue to monitor the situation. We want to mitigate any risks that we possibly can.'ť

NEW SPONSORS

After struggling for big-name sponsors, the league has landed several key partnerships since Baird's arrival.

The league announced Friday that it had added Google among its national sponsors. The Challenge Cup is sponsored by Procter & Gamble and Secret. The NWSL also announced a new partnership with Verizon when it introduced the tournament last month. Budweiser came aboard as a sponsor last summer following the World Cup.

TAKING A KNEE

The NWSL announced Friday that the national anthem will be played before Challenge Cup games.

"Players are absolutely free to participate as they see fit," the league said in a statement.

One NWSL player, Washington Spirit rookie Kaiya McCullough, told the women's sports newsletter Power Plays that she plans to kneel for the anthem going forward. Rapinoe knelt during an NWSL game in 2016 in solidarity with former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who first took a knee to draw attention to racial inequity in the United States.

PRIDE RETESTS

Orlando is retesting its players following the positive tests that knocked the team out of the tournament. No matter what the results reveal, the Pride won't be able to participate because there isn't time to follow tournament protocol for high-risk contact tracing.

'œOn Thursday, Orlando Pride received test results for the second round of COVID-19 testing for the team's players and staff, which indicated inconsistencies from previous tests,'ť the team said in a statement. 'œThe club will conduct a third round of testing as soon as possible in order to come to conclusive results for all members of the team, both staff and players."

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FILE - In this Jan. 19, 2019, file photo, United States midfielder Samantha Mewis, who plays for the North Carolina Courage of the National Women's Soccer League, runs with the ball during a women's international friendly soccer match against France in Le Havre, France. The NWSL opens its Challenge Cup tournament on Saturday, June 27, 2020, and the pressure is on as the first professional team sport in the United States to play amid the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/David Vincent, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this April 15, 2017, file photo, Portland Thorns forward Christine Sinclair celebrates scoring a goal during the second half of their NWSL soccer match against the Orlando Pride in Portland, Ore. The National Women's Soccer League opens its Challenge Cup tournament on Saturday, June 27, 2020, and the pressure is on as the first professional team sport in the United States to play amid the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Don Ryan, File) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Aug. 1, 2017, file photo, then-U.S. Olympic Committee chief marketing officer Lisa Baird speaks about the Team USA WinterFest for the upcoming 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympic Games, at Yongsan Garrison, a U.S. military base in Seoul, South Korea. Baird assumed her new role as commissioner of the National Women's Soccer League on March 10. Two days later, she shut down the league because of coronavirus. It's certainly not the way she imagined her first 48 hours on the job would go. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File) The Associated Press
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