Taylor Swift made headlines Sunday when she cheered on Travis Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium. But this is far from her first foray into sports.
The 12-time Grammy-winning superstar is a well-established fan and friend of the U.S. women’s national team, in particular veteran forward Alex Morgan. She hosted the 2015 World Cup-winning team on stage at her 1989 World Tour, and she announced Morgan’s place on the 2023 World Cup roster.
So in honor of Swift’s continued world domination, Just Women’s Sports has paired her albums with women’s soccer kits from the 2023 World Cup, the Women’s Super League and the NWSL.
Fearless (Taylor’s Version)
Australian superstar Sam Kerr and the Matildas’ bright World Cup kits drag us headfirst into the rankings. Does it get better than this?
Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)
World Cup champion Spain enchanted the crowd at the 2023 tournament with these coral reef-inspired kits.


Red (Taylor’s Version)
Arsenal crashed out of the Women’s Champions League in the qualifying round. Yet despite their run ending so suddenly, they have the whole Women’s Super League season ahead in their classic red kits. So: Begin again?
1989 (Taylor’s Version)
England isn’t out of the woods yet. Despite winning the 2022 Euro title, the Lionesses are still seeking their first World Cup championship after falling to Spain in the 2023 final. But their light blue kits for the tournament will never go out of style.


Reputation
Are you ready for it? This is the only album on the list not owned by Swift, who is in the process of re-recording her first six albums so she has control of her music. But pairing the edgy “Reputation” with the Thorns’ tattoo-inspired 2023 jerseys proved too tempting to pass up.
Lover
USWNT midfielder Sam Mewis is in her Lover era, she shared on the “Snacks” podcast in April. Don’t roll your eyes, but Angel City FC are in their Lover era too with their 2022 pink-accented kits.


Folklore
The Football Ferns’ World Cup kits pull from nature, as does Swift’s woodsy “folklore.” While July and August slipped away like a bottle of wine, the memories of the tournament Down Under (and of New Zealand’s first-ever World Cup win) will stick with us.
Evermore
Swift has spoken about the autumnal vibes of “evermore,” and while there are no flannels to be found on the soccer field, the Netherlands’ signature orange kits bring to mind the colors of the season.


Midnights
The USWNT did not have the 2023 World Cup run they wanted, but they still looked bejeweled in these Nike kits. Ahead of the tournament, Morgan attended Swift’s record-setting Eras Tour, which features “Midnights” tracks as its grand finale, and she had high praise for her uber-famous friend.
“She is so supportive,” Morgan said. “She’s all about women empowerment. We both share our favorite number, number 13, born the same year, in 1989. We’ve just been really supportive of each other’s careers.”


If there was one bright spot for the U.S. women’s national team at the 2023 World Cup, it was Naomi Girma.
In the absence of Becky Sauerbrunn, Girma stepped up in tandem with veteran Julie Ertz to lock down the backline. Their teamwork at center-back resulted in three shutouts and just one goal allowed, which came against the Netherlands in the group stage.
While Girma’s impact could be seen on the field, it also was felt off it. On the latest episode of Just Women’s Sports‘ “Snacks” podcast, USWNT forward Lynn Williams described how the young defender helped lift her teammates.
“I think that is one of the hardest things to do is to almost forget about everything in that last game,” Williams said. “[The World Cup] didn’t go how we wanted it to, but you were such a bright spot on the team, I think on the field but also off the field. I feel like you just always brought, like, a positivity to the environment.”
The 2023 World Cup served as Girma’s first major tournament, and at 23 years old, she already is stepping into a leadership role with the USWNT and gaining wisdom that will help her in the years to come.
“I think it’s hard and it’s so fun to see you do it so young, to speak up in meetings, even if it’s something as simple as a question, because you don’t want to sound silly,” Williams continued. “I just felt like, even if you were nervous, you did it with so much grace and you were just like, ‘What do we feel about this?’ And it was something that I don’t even think a lot of people thought about. So your attention to detail is far beyond your years.”
While Girma admitted that she was nervous to ask questions, she also said her time at Stanford helped her to feel empowered to do so. While with the Cardinal, she never had anyone shut her down when she asked questions, which helped her as she’s stepped into the NWSL with the San Diego Wave and onto the international stage with the national team.
The atmosphere on the USWNT also has helped make it easier to ask questions, Girma said.
“When you’re younger it’s a little harder, because it’s easy to default and let other people do it,” she said. “I also think in this group, like it was very much said, it doesn’t matter how old you are, it doesn’t matter how many caps you have, if you have something to say, say it.
“Without that encouragement from leaders on the team, it’s harder for younger players to feel comfortable and to not feel like, ‘Oh, like I’m gonna get shut down.’ … It’s really just like, we’re nervous and we make it up in our head. … I think that encouragement from leaders on the team was really, really helpful, too.”
The maturity Girma has shown in just two years in the NWSL and with the USWNT has shown through, as Williams pointed out.
“It’s so funny, because you talked about wanting to work on your leadership side but it’s your second year in the league,” Williams said. “It’s so crazy. I feel like when I was in my second year in the league, I was like, I got to worry about myself, good luck to everybody else. Like I only have the capacity to worry about me and that’s what’s going to help the team. I just feel like you’re so mature to recognize that you have something to give and you want to grow outside yourself.”
Following the 2023 World Cup, Julie Ertz had to deal with her anger about the U.S. women’s national team’s early exit.
The shootout loss to Sweden in the Round of 16 stands as the earliest a USWNT team had ever exited the World Cup, and it came at the hands of a devastating penalty kick that some – including U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher – still can’t believe crossed the goal line.
Following that loss, Ertz noted that it would be her last time wearing the USWNT crest, alluding to her retirement from professional soccer, which she formally announced a few weeks later. While she stepped away from her NWSL club Angel City immediately after her retirement announcement, the 31-year-old midfielder will make one final appearance for the USWNT on Thursday night.
“For someone who obviously is coming to the end, I think it’s just it took me a while to kind of get over just processing it,” she said on the Sirius XM show “Played In.” “Normally I’m pretty emotional. But I think I was just angry – and not at anyone or anything, just the tournament.
“I dream about this and fight for it. And it’s every four years and that’s why it’s so beautiful. This tournament is just so amazing in so many ways. And I had an honor to be at a couple of them.”
In the lead up to the World Cup, Ertz was a question mark. The midfielder suffered an injury at the Tokyo Olympics before giving birth to son Madden last year, which kept her out of the lineup for a significant stretch. But in April, she made a surprise return to the national team, receiving a call-up for a pair of friendlies against Ireland. She then signed with Angel City ahead of the World Cup, which helped build up her stamina.
The past year was “so wild” that she didn’t spend a lot of time looking too far ahead, Ertz said. Traveling back and forth between her home in Arizona and her NWSL club in Los Angeles was hard, and while part of it was “amazing,” the outcome of the World Cup was still disappointing.
“Obviously, I had no idea what it was gonna be like after having a child,” she said. “And my situation has always been so unique that I’ve never really got to live in the market where I got to play and to be with my family.
“Something is always sacrificed, there’s a trade off. I am so grateful for all of it. … And I’ve been so grateful to hit those milestones coming back from Madden. After the Olympics, it was just like, ‘Can I do it?’ … So that process of just getting back was crazy. It was super empowering for me. I never thought that that would happen. I just figured I’d be done after the Olympics just with having a kid.”
If there is one person that Naomi Girma leaned on the most at the 2023 World Cup, it was Kelley O’Hara.
A veteran defender with over a decade of experience and 160 international appearances under her belt, O’Hara has long been a leader for the U.S. women’s national team. But for Girma, who has just 20 caps under her belt, O’Hara was particularly instrumental in ensuring that she remained on top of her game in Australia and New Zealand.
“In the locker room, I wore No. 4 so I was next to Kelley [O’Hara], No. 5,” Girma said of how the mentorship came to be on the latest episode of Just Women’s Sports‘ “Snacks” podcast. “And I felt like I could lean on her a lot, and she was really good at boosting me up if I needed it or being like, ‘Hey, we got this, keep going,’ or like, ‘Hey, look for this ball. This is on.’”
Girma also said that O’Hara was helpful in making sure that players were pressing the reset button after each match, even if that match hadn’t gone according to plan. While they would go on to have a disappointing finish in the Round of 16, the team’s earliest-ever exit at a World Cup, O’Hara helped Girma to realize that the World Cup mindset was different from normal USWNT business.
With the World Cup serving as Girma’s first major tournament, she learned a lot about how “every game, every point is so important” but also being able to set the reset button was key, she said.
“Once you do move on or make it to the next phase like you really do have to forget about the game before so quickly, like, get your takeaways and what you can improve on as a team as an individual,” Girma said. “But then it’s really like, look to the next game, you have like four or five days to prepare.”
The team did well in looking ahead to Sweden despite the disappointing result, according to Girma. Team veterans were key in helping to implement that.
“[O’Hara was] also one of those players who was just kind of driving that like, ‘It’s a tournament, we’re through, focus on the next game,’” Girma said. “Like, that mindset I think is so different from a regular camp. … In a tournament it’s new team [every game]. You can’t really worry about how you could have broken [the previous opponent] down. It’s like how do you now beat this new team?
“So going into tournaments moving forward, I think that would be a big takeaway for me. And I think for a lot of us who experienced our first World Cup something that we can look to use going into the Olympics.”
Almost all of the players called up to the Spanish women’s national team for its September training camp agreed Wednesday to end their strike after reaching an agreement with their national federation.
More than seven hours of meetings between the players and the Spanish football federation (RFEF) ended with the RFEF saying it would make “immediate and profound” structural changes. Those meetings ended around 5 a.m. local time in Spain.
Of the 23 players selected for the September roster, 21 of them had signed a statement last week demanding action from the federation before they would return to the team. But they still received national team call-ups, and if they refused, they could have faced fines of up to €30,000 and a ban of their federation license for up to 15 years, among other possible sanctions, though officials later said they would not have imposed any sanctions.
While most of the players agreed to play for the national team in the upcoming Nations League matches after the meetings with RFEF, two — Mapi León and Patri Guijarro — decided to leave training camp. Both players were part of “Las 15,” the group of players who refused to play for the national team starting last October and missed the 2023 World Cup.
“They are working on changes. It’s a different situation for us,” Guijarro said. “It’s tough, it’s difficult. Being here, after the way everything has happened, mentally we were not ready to stay. That’s the explanation.”
While the dispute between the players and their federation stretches back to before the World Cup, Spain’s World Cup win on Aug. 20 deepened the divide. Luis Rubiales resigned as RFEF president as a result of the backlash against his forced kiss of star player Jenni Hermoso at the World Cup final, and controversial head coach Jorge Vilda has been fired. Yet those changes “are not enough for the players to feel safe, where women are respected, where there is support for women’s football and where we can maximize our potential,” players said in a statement Friday.
Victor Francos, president of Spain’s national sports council, helped mediate the meetings.
“A joint commission will be created between RFEF, CSD and players to follow up on the agreements, which will be signed tomorrow,” Francos told reporters. “The players have expressed their concern about the need for profound changes in the RFEF, which has committed to making these changes immediately.”
Amanda Gutierrez, president of global players union FUTPRO, said that the meetings are a start of a “long road” for the players and the federation.
“The players see it as a rapprochement of positions. It is the beginning of a long road ahead of us,” Gutierrez told reporters. “Once again, they have shown themselves to be coherent and the vast majority have decided to stay for the sake of this agreement.”
One of the first measures taken is to remove “female” from the women’s national team’s official brand. From this point forward, both the men’s and women’s teams will be known as the “Spanish national football team.”
“Beyond it being a symbolic step, we want it to be a change of concept, and the recognition that football is football, no matter who plays it,” RFEF president Pedro Rocha said.
Spain is set to make its debut in the Nations League against Sweden on Friday, with another match set for Sept. 26 against Switzerland.
Despite Spain players’ plans to strike, selected players have arrived at their national team camp following threats of a fine or a domestic league ban. But what does it all mean? And how did we get here?
Just Women’s Sports is breaking down the major storylines as Spain players continue to be at odds with their federation.
What has happened so far?
- Spain players reported for national team duty Tuesday despite saying Friday that they would not return to the national team until further changes were made. Nothing about that stance had changed from Friday to Monday, when Spain announced its squad for upcoming UEFA Nations League games against Sweden and Switzerland.
- Of the 23 players selected to the roster, 15 were present at the 2023 World Cup and 21 signed the statement last week demanding action from the Spanish football federation (RFEF). The team has been embroiled in controversy since its World Cup title win on Aug. 20.
- If the players refused their call-ups, they could have faced fines of up to €30,000 and a ban of their federation license for up to 15 years, among other possible sanctions. While they tried to get out of the training camp, saying the RFEF did not inform them in a timely manner per FIFA rules, they did show up Tuesday.
What have players said?
- Asked by reporters Tuesday if the players were in agreement with head coach Montse Tomé’s squad list, goalkeeper Misa Rodríguez simply said: “No.”
- Jenni Hermoso was not called up to the squad, a decision she saw as a manipulative move by the RFEF and a sign that “nothing has changed,” she said in a statement. Hermoso received a nonconsensual kiss from former RFEF president Luis Rubiales at the 2023 World Cup final, which spurred a tidal wave of backlash from Spain’s players and the global soccer community. Rubiales has since resigned.
- Mapi Léon refused a World Cup call-up as one of the original 15 players to protest the federation starting last October, but she was called up Monday. She said Tuesday: “We would have to talk at length about whether the place is safe or not safe when they are forcing us. I believe that my position has been very clear, at no time have I changed my mind.”
What comes next?
- Victor Francos, the president of the supreme council for sports in Spain, confirmed the possible sanctions for players if they did not participate in the camp and ensuing friendlies. The sports council is expected to act as a mediator between players and the federation. “If the players don’t show up, the government will do what it has to do, which is to apply the law,” Francos said. “Unfortunately, the law is the law, but I still hope that there can be a solution. I am going to talk with the players. I am going to try.”
Even after Spain’s players refused to return to their national team, World Cup stars including Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmatí received call-ups Monday for upcoming Nations League matches.
Of the 23 players selected to the roster, 15 were present at the 2023 World Cup and 21 signed a statement just last week demanding that the Spanish football federation (RFEF) make further changes before they return. Per Spanish newspaper El Periódico, the players found out about their call-ups through the televised roster announcement.
If the 21 players refuse to play for the national team, they could face serious consequences. In Spain, the rejection of a national team call-up is punishable by a financial fine of up to €30,000, by a ban of up to 15 years, as well as other possible sanctions.
In the aftermath of Spain’s World Cup win, the national team and federation have been embroiled in controversy. Luis Rubiales resigned as RFEF president as a result of the backlash against his forced kiss of star player Jenni Hermoso at the World Cup final, and controversial head coach Jorge Vilda has been fired. But those changes “are not enough for the players to feel safe, where women are respected, where there is support for women’s football and where we can maximize our potential,” they said in a statement Friday.
The dispute between the players and their federation stretches back to before the World Cup. In October 2022, 15 players refused to play for the national team, and they were left off subsequent rosters, including the World Cup team. Several of “Las 15” were included on the most recent roster, including Mapi Léon and Patri Guijarro.
“The players of the Spanish team have, at all times, been open to dialogue, seeking to convey clear and well-argued reasons that we believe are necessary to be able to carry out our work at the highest level with the respect we deserve,” the players wrote last week. “The specified changes to the RFEF are based on zero tolerance for those people who, from a position within the RFEF, have had, incited, hidden or applauded attitudes that go against the dignity of women.”
The players have called for more systemic changes in addition to the departures of Jorge Vilda and Luis Rubiales.
“We firmly believe that strong changes are required in leadership positions in the RFEF and specifically, in the area of women’s football,” the players wrote. “We want to end this statement by expressing that the players of the Spanish team are professionals, and what fills us most with pride is wearing the shirt of our national team and leading our country to the highest positions.”
Hours before Monday’s roster announcement, the Spanish federation released a statement, urging players to join them in structural change. According to Spanish outlet Relevo, national team players had not responded to RFEF’s ultimatum ahead of the announcement because they felt as though their previous statement was “clear and firm.”
“The Federation itself is aware of the need to make structural changes and has recently begun to materialize them,” the RFEF said. “Therefore, players are urged to join this change led by the Federation, understanding that the transformations that must continue must be solid and fair.”
Notably, Hermoso was not one of the 23 players selected, with head coach Montse Tomé saying Monday that the team respects her stance and stand behind her “in everything.”
“The first thing to say is that we are with Jenni in everything,” she said. “We have believed that the best way to protect her in this call is like this. We count on Jenni.”
Alex Morgan is the top player in the NWSL in the “EA Sports FC 24” ratings.
The top soccer video game released its player ratings ahead of its release on Sept. 29, and the 34-year-old star striker for the U.S. women’s national team and San Diego Wave leads all players in the U.S. league. She also ranks as the only USWNT player in the top 10 across all women’s leagues.
Among NWSL players, Morgan sits in first place with a score of 89, while Kansas City Current forward Debinha comes in a close second with a rating of 88. Sophia Smith is tied with Debinha at 88, while Rose Lavelle is in fourth at 87.
The Portland Thorns have the most players among the top 10 with three, while OL Reign and San Diego each have two players.
Across all players, Morgan sits tied for fifth and Debinha tied for ninth. Spain’s Alexia Putellas holds the top spot by herself with a score of 91. She is followed closely by her Spain teammate Aitana Bonmatí, Norway’s Caroline Graham Hansen and Australia’s Sam Kerr who all have scores of 90.
Morgan also had been the lone USWNT player in the top 10 of EA Sports’ 2023 Women’s World Cup player ratings.
EA Sports FC: International women’s player ratings
- Alexia Putellas, Spain – 91
- Aitana Bonmatí, Spain – 90
- Caroline Graham Hansen, Norway – 90
- Sam Kerr, Australia – 90
- Kadidiatou Diani, France – 89
- Ada Hegerberg, Norway – 89
- Mapi León, Spain – 89
- Alex Morgan, United States – 89
- Debinha, Brazil – 88
- Marie-Antoinette Katoto, France – 88
EA Sports FC: NWSL player ratings
- Alex Morgan, San Diego Wave FC – 89
- Debinha, Kansas City Current – 88
- Sophia Smith, Portland Thorns – 88
- Rose Lavelle, OL Reign – 87
- Mallory Swanson, Chicago Red Stars – 86
- Becky Sauerbrunn, Portland Thorns – 85
- Megan Rapinoe, OL Reign – 85
- Amandine Henry, Angel City – 85
- Kailen Sheridan, San Diego Wave FC – 85
- Crystal Dunn, Portland Thorns – 84
Jenni Hermoso, Alexia Putellas and the rest of the Spanish women’s national team will not play for their country until more changes are made within the Spanish football federation (RFEF).
Luis Rubiales resigned as RFEF president as a result of the backlash to his forced kiss of Hermoso at the 2023 World Cup final, and controversial head coach Jorge has been fired. But those changes “are not enough for the players to feel safe, where women are respected, where there is support for women’s football and where we can maximize our potential,” the players said in a statement.
The players are demanding the restructuring of the women’s football organization, the presidential cabinet and general secretary, the communications and marketing department and the ethics and integrity department.
Head coach Montse Tomé, who took over in the wake of Vilda’s firing, is set to announce her first squad Friday. The World Cup champions are set to play in Nations League games against Sweden and Switzerland on Sept. 22 and 26.
“The players of the Spanish team have, at all times, been open to dialogue, seeking to convey clear and well-argued reasons that we believe are necessary to be able to carry out our work at the highest level with the respect we deserve,” the players wrote. “The specified changes to the RFEF are based on zero tolerance for those people who, from a position within the RFEF, have had, incited, hidden or applauded attitudes that go against the dignity of women.”
Before Rubiales stepped down earlier this week, he had vowed not to resign in a meeting of the RFEF. Many in the audience at the meeting applauded Rubiales, though some have since apologized, saying that they felt pressured to do so.
At the time, players said they would not play for Spain again “if the present leadership continues.” They also asked for “real structural changes that help the national team continue to grow.” Though Vilda and Rubiales are out, the players want to see more systemic changes.
“We firmly believe that strong changes are required in leadership positions in the RFEF and specifically, in the area of women’s football,” the players wrote. “We want to end this statement by expressing that the players of the Spanish team are professionals, and what fills us most with pride is wearing the shirt of our national team and leading our country to the highest positions.
“We believe that it is time to fight to show that these situations and practices have no place in football or society, that the current structure needs changes and we do it so that the next generations can have equality in football and at the level that we all deserve.”
#SeAcabó pic.twitter.com/tV49CkOq4F
— Alexia Putellas (@alexiaputellas) September 15, 2023
Alexia Putellas and the rest of the Spain women’s national team are aiming to inspire change beyond soccer as the fallout from their World Cup controversy continues.
Luis Rubiales resigned as president of the Spanish soccer federation (RFEF) earlier this week as the result of mounting pressure from his behavior at the 2023 World Cup final. Following Spain’s 1-0 win over England, Rubiales kissed star midfielder Jenni Hermoso, a gesture which she has maintained came without her consent.
Hermoso’s teammates have stood with her in the wake of the incident, which created an international uproar and has led to multiple investigations into Rubiales.
So when FC Barcelona Femení became the first sports team to win the Medal of Honor from the Catalan parliament, Putellas used the platform to call attention to their fight for change.
“We are the first men’s or women’s team to be distinguished with this Medal of Honour — this would have been unthinkable five, 15, 20 years ago, but it has happened,” she said in her acceptance speech Wednesday. “This has not been achieved from scratch, so I would like to thank all those pioneers who, before our arrival, promoted women’s sport at Barca or in other organizations. This medal also belongs to them, we are very aware of that.”
Launched in 2000, previous winners include recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize, former presidents and soccer manager Pep Guardiola, the only previous winner related to sport.
Barcelona received the award for their success as four-time Spanish league winners and two-time Champions League winners, but also because of the impact that they have had on sport in Catalonia. Twice, the team has filled Camp Nou and broken women’s attendance records.
“At Barca, we are helping to build a fairer, more equal society with more opportunities through football. Our efforts and our victories are making us a point of reference for many children, young people and adults,” Putellas said. “Our commitment to women’s sport and society is unquestionable, but we need more help to keep growing, so that this is not just a fad. And here, if I may, I would like to demand more support for women’s football, more and better facilities, more pitches and more investment at grassroots level.”
Noting that women in sports are “here to stay,” Putellas also noted a commitment to “help those that come after us.”
“There is still a long way to go, as we are seeing these days with the serious situation we are facing with the [RFEF] and the changes we are all asking for so that no woman, inside or outside football, ever has to live a situation of disrespect or abuse,” she said.
“We need consensus, courage and leadership from the institutions. We will not stop here. Those who fought before us deserve it, we deserve it for the effort we make every day and all the girls and boys who today dream of being like us deserve it. We will not fail you.”
Putellas: "Estamos aquí para quedarnos, para ayudar a las que vendrán, porque todavía queda mucho camino por hacer. Estos días lo hemos vivido con esta grave situación. Ninguna mujer tiene que vivir nunca más faltas de respeto o abuso. No vamos a parar" https://t.co/pcmOsXnuls pic.twitter.com/WcAxrfxhQo
— EL PAÍS (@el_pais) September 14, 2023