Culture
Gotham FC will be the first NWSL team to visit the White House for championship celebration
Gotham FC, the reigning NWSL champion, will be the first NWSL team to visit the White House for a championship celebration. President Joe Biden will welcome the team on Monday, reuniting most of last season’s squad — including Ali Krieger, who retired at the end of the year.
“This is such a monumental moment for the NWSL,” Krieger told The Athletic. “I’m so excited the NWSL is getting recognition at the White House and that we’re the very first NWSL championship team to celebrate. This is going to be such a great moment for the team and for us as a whole.”
While the White House has previously honored the U.S. women’s national team for winning the World Cup, only one women’s professional soccer team has been honored by the White House with a celebration: Sky Blue FC in 2010 for their 2009 championship win during former President Barack Obama’s first term. While it was in a different professional league — Women’s Professional Soccer, which ran from 2009 to 2011 — the same franchise will earn the same honor 14 years later.
Krieger and Gotham investor Carolyn Tisch Blodgett referenced the team’s worst-to-first storyline and the way Gotham barely made it into the 2023 playoffs, needing the final day of the regular season.
“We’re really thinking of this as a moment to recognize the work that went into winning that championship,” Tisch Blodgett said. She also said the team does not view their visit as a political statement. “We were invited by the White House. We were invited by President Biden to celebrate this team.”
GO DEEPER
The Athletic’s American soccer team of 2023: NJ/NY Gotham FC
But Krieger and Tisch Blodgett also view the White House invite as something much larger — not just an image of an NWSL team next to the President, but a moment that could help put the NWSL into the same conversation as other major sports leagues such as the NFL, MLB and WNBA. Last week, Biden hosted the undefeated South Carolina women’s basketball program, led by head coach Dawn Staley, for their NCAA March Madness win.
“It is a broader statement, though. This should be the standard,” Tisch Blodgett said. “First of all, I hope it’s us winning the championship again. If it’s not, I hope whoever is winning the championship, this is part of what they do because we’ve now set the standard. This is the treatment our players deserve when they win a championship as the best athletes in the world.”
Krieger said Monday will be historic for the NWSL, but she also wants to balance her excitement with taking full advantage of this platform.
“I want to acknowledge the lack of historical coverage of women’s sports while we’re there and just mention, ‘Thank you for your support, and continue to highlight women’s sports,’” she said, noting that there was still plenty of work to be done.
“This is just going to be a really great platform to elevate the team and the players, and women’s sports in general,” Krieger said. “The coverage of this day is also going to mean a lot. I think there’s a balance of saying, ‘Thank you, we appreciate it,’ and ‘The work isn’t done.’ We need your help to continue and we need your support.”
Krieger retired after the 2023 season (Ben Nichols / Getty Images)
In February, the Biden-Harris administration announced that the NWSL and the NWSL Players Association would partner with the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition to leverage community events to promote healthy eating and physical activity. But Gotham front office’s efforts to coordinate a championship celebration predated that agreement, having been in contact with the relevant people from the White House since winning the final in November 2023.
Gotham FC is also staring down a hectic period in the calendar as they juggle fighting for playoff positioning (they just moved into third place this week) and qualifying for the new FIFA Club World Cup.
“This was not like we woke up in September and were like, ‘We have nothing to do in September, let’s go to the White House!’” Tisch Blodgett joked. “Obviously, the President’s schedule is very busy and fluid. Our schedule is very busy.”
The team played in Seattle against the Reign on Monday and flew back after the win that same night. On Thursday, they’ll host C.F. Monterrey Femenil as part of CONCACAF W Champions Cup, then have to quickly turn back to regular season action, hosting the Utah Royals on Sunday at 1 p.m. at Red Bull Arena in New Jersey, before the 2023 members of the team head to Washington, D.C., for Monday’s event.
“It would have been easier to say no and to say we’re focused on 2024, we’re focused on winning the championship again and move on,” Tisch Blodgett said. “But we all collectively felt like this was really important.”
Krieger can’t wait to reunite with her teammates and relive the 2023 win — one she said she’s still enjoying all these months later. While Krieger has been a part of a White House celebration before with the USWNT following their 2015 World Cup victory, she couldn’t help but laugh when asked if she was dispensing advice on what to expect.
“Listen, I only went once and we were all geeking out,” she said. “I don’t even know if I was in my body.”
(Top photo: Robyn Beck / Getty Images)
Culture
Finding Wisdom in a Poem by Wendy Cope
Where do you turn when you need advice? A chatbot? A life coach? A wise and trusted friend?
How about a poet? Poets may not be famous for making the best life choices, but because they subject the mess of human existence to the discipline of language, they can be as helpful as any therapist or mentor.
Good poets know the rules and when to break them, which is something they can teach the rest of us.
To wit:
Giving advice is a peculiar literary undertaking. It flourishes in certain popular genres — graduation speeches, newspaper columns, country and western songs and poems like this one — but what, in these contexts, is it really for?
I’m thinking of situations when you don’t urgently need help but nonetheless enjoy reading answers to questions you may not have thought to ask. What interests you isn’t the content of the advice — you could get all the life hacks you want from A.I. — so much as the voice of the person dispensing it.
Wendy Cope is an English poet, born in 1945, who has been a fixture of her country’s literary scene since the 1980s. More recently, her short, buoyant poem “The Orange” has been widely memed online, bringing her to the attention of new readers beyond Britain.
Cope favors rhyme, meter, brisk jokes and tart aperçus. She addresses romance, friendship and the petty absurdities of modern life with disarming good humor. The last line of “The Orange” is “I love you. I’m glad I exist.” Somehow she makes it the opposite of cringe.
This isn’t the kind of poetry you would describe as “confessional.” And yet …
Question 1/7
Stop, if the car is going “clunk”
Or if the sun has made you blind.
Don’t answer e–mails when you’re drunk.
Tap a word above to fill in the highlighted blank.Want to learn this poem by heart? We’ll help.
Fill in the missing words below. You can always refer to the reading by A.O. Scott and full
text above.Let’s start with the first stanza.
Culture
Can You Match the Places These Authors Lived With Settings in Their Books?
A strong sense of place can deeply influence a story, and in some cases, the setting can even feel like a character itself. This week’s literary geography quiz highlights places where authors were born (or lived) that later became locations in their books. To play, just make your selection in the multiple-choice list and the correct answer will be revealed. At the end of the quiz, you’ll find links to the works if you’d like to do further reading.
Culture
Book Review: ‘America, U.S.A.,’ by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
AMERICA, U.S.A.: How Race Shadows the Nation’s Anniversaries, by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
For those of us in the national memory-keeping business, anniversaries hold near-totemic power. Satisfyingly round units of time, ideally bearing fancy, Latin-derived names, serve as the overburdened pegs on which to hang think pieces and museum exhibits, revisionist documentaries and maudlin public ceremonies. The arbitrary nature of such occasions is precisely what gives them their charge, inviting us to set aside complacency and submit to a comprehensive check-in.
In his new book, “America, U.S.A.,” Eddie S. Glaude Jr. presents an intriguing variation on the genre, seeing the country’s 250th birthday as an anniversary of anniversaries: 50 years since the malaise-ridden, schlock-heavy Bicentennial. A century since the subdued Prohibition-era Sesquicentennial. A century and a half since telegraphed reports of George Armstrong Custer’s defeat by the Lakota and Cheyenne at Little Bighorn rudely interrupted the Gilded Age Republic’s 100th birthday party.
If an anniversary offers a snapshot of a moment, the core of Glaude’s book is an old-timey photo album, a collection of notable episodes from earlier national reckonings, long-ago glances in the mirror. An estimable scholar of Black history, politics and religion at Princeton — best known for “Begin Again,” his 2020 meditation on James Baldwin’s relevance for our times — Glaude focuses, as his subtitle puts it, on “how race shadows the nation’s anniversaries.”
Such celebrations, he contends, have never really been the moments for honest self-reflection they are often advertised to be. Instead, the nation usually shatters the mirror, refusing to accept what it prefers not to see. “American anniversaries are often moments to turn a blind eye to the evils of the past and the present,” Glaude writes, “to suppress the fact of America’s divided soul.”
It’s a clever concept, and, needless to say, perfectly timed. Last year, Glaude notes, the Trump administration executed a hostile takeover of the government’s studiously bipartisan 250th anniversary planning. It is now preparing a program that is certain to conceal more than it reveals about the country ostensibly being celebrated.
Glaude, in no mood for celebration, argues that such omissions and evasions also defined commemorations in the past. In 1875, Frederick Douglass predicted “one grand Centennial hosannah of peace and good will to all the white race of this country.” He was right: The nation reached 100 years old at a crucial moment in the post-Civil War fight over racial equality, with white Northerners ready to give up on Southern Reconstruction. The occasion would help the once-warring sections to reunite around a shared commitment to white supremacy. On May 10, 1876, at the opening of the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, the police tried to bar Douglass from the grandstand, until a white politician vouched for him.
The 150th anniversary came soon after a resurgent Ku Klux Klan successfully pushed for a restrictive immigration law aimed at keeping America a “Nordic” nation. At the lavishly funded, lightly attended celebrations in Philadelphia, Black veterans of World War I were excluded from marching in the opening parade. A writer with The Associated Negro Press wondered “what was in the breast of those black men who fought to make America safe for Democracy and on Monday stood on the sidelines, forgotten, as the Nordic strode by in all his vain pride.”
By 1976, when the nation marked its Bicentennial, the violence of the ’60s had destroyed any semblance of consensus. Vietnam and Watergate had eroded trust in the government. The commission initially tasked with organizing the anniversary was disbanded amid reports of corruption. Corporations filled the vacuum, Glaude explains, with “star-spangled whoopee cushions; patriotic toilet seats; Liberty hamburgers; red, white and blue beer cans.” The author, around 8 years old at the time, dimly remembers donning a pair of tricolor trousers.
A half-century later, Glaude is refreshingly honest about the depths of his despair. “I do not love America, and never have, especially now,” he writes in one of the more startling opening sentences I’ve read in some time. He dismisses this year’s Semiquincentennial as reaching back “to a storybook America that requires either the banishment of Black people from view or the reduction of our role in the country’s history, so as to affirm America’s ongoing quest to be a more perfect union.”
Undoubtedly true. But Trump doesn’t own the country, at least not yet, nor the 250th anniversary of one of the most radically liberatory and confusingly contradictory events in world history — an inspiration, as Glaude shows, even to critical observers of the American experiment, like Douglass. Far from the revanchist MAGA-palooza in Washington, I suspect this summer’s unasked-for invitation to national soul-searching may surprise us yet.
Despite his despair, Glaude concludes that “the past still offers resources for us to freedom-dream.” So, too, does this book.
AMERICA, U.S.A.: How Race Shadows the Nation’s Anniversaries | By Eddie S. Glaude Jr. | Crown | 270 pp. | $31
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