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‘It’s a cover-up’: Inside the fallout of racist event at HS soccer game

(Courtesy of @ridehardsportsphotography)

On March 11, the Buchanan girls’ soccer team basked in the Central California sun.

The Bears had gathered in the circle of their home turf for a pizza lunch, in an attempt by coach Jasara Gillette to brighten the mood after one of the darkest weekends in program history.

Seated among her teammates, wearing a white hoodie and black leggings, was Ciara Wilson, Buchanan’s star senior forward and the TRAC conference Player of the Year. Wilson had not attended school all week. This was the first time she’d seen her teammates in six days, when she had become the center of attention at the Division I Northern California championship game for reasons out of her control.

On March 5, Buchanan (Clovis), the first school in its section to earn a spot in the title game since 2009, played host Oak Ridge (El Dorado Hills) to a 2-2 draw through two overtimes, sending the game to penalty kicks. With the shootout knotted at 1, Wilson, a Fresno State commit, stepped to the line.

The referee blew his whistle, and Wilson approached the ball. And then:

“Oo-Oo-Ah-Ah!”

The intonation was undeniable. It was, per multiple videos of the incident reviewed by Just Women’s Sports, a mock monkey sound coming from the Oak Ridge stands directed at Wilson, who is Black. Wilson converted the kick and then immediately pointed to the Oak Ridge student section.

The referee ambled to the Oak Ridge sideline and met with coach Rino Chimienti. After a couple of minutes of discussion, Gillette ran across the field to plead her case.

“This game cannot continue,” Gillette said to the official, and later recalled to JWS. “You have racist comments coming from the stands.”

Instead, after Chimienti was given a yellow card — which prompted a bemused smile from the coach — the game did continue, and Oak Ridge won the shootout, 4-2. Oak Ridge players and coaches celebrated on the field and took pictures to post to social media.

More than three weeks later, Buchanan players, parents and coaches are still searching for answers: Why was the game not stopped? Why was the offending student not reprimanded on the spot? And why did the adults in charge not seem to care?

Their concerns were hardly assuaged last week when the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) announced its sanctions against Oak Ridge:

  1. Oak Ridge High School is on probation for the remainder of the 2021-2022 school year and through the 2023-24 school year.
  2. During the term of the probationary period, any home site post-season girls varsity soccer match, including Section, Regional, or State levels between Oak Ridge High School and Buchanan High School will be hosted by Buchanan High School.
  3. Completion of an annual sportsmanship workshop/training during the probationary period (to include a component of racial/cultural sensitivity training such as the NFHS Implicit Bias Course) for all Oak Ridge High School administrators, athletic director(s), coaches, and students.
  4. Prior to the start of the spring 2022 CIF Sac-Joaquin Section Championships, Oak Ridge High School administrators and athletic director(s) will complete game management training.
  5. The administration of Oak Ridge High School is strongly encouraged to engage with the administration at Buchanan High School to begin the process of developing a positive relationship between the two school communities.
  6. By August 1, 2022, or sooner, Oak Ridge High School shall submit an action plan to the State CIF outlining not only how it will comply with sanctions 3 through 5 above, but also what other strategies, if any, that it chooses to implement to avoid the repetition of the type of conduct that led to the implementation of these sanctions.

“I’m really upset and disappointed by the sanctions,” Wilson told JWS over text. “They haven’t held anyone responsible for what happened. As the victim I feel like they are acting as if Oak Ridge is the victim. They completely ignored the fact that it happened to me and did the bare minimum. I’m still waiting for real action to happen.”

“I’ve said from the beginning, there was a failure to understand the severity of what happened and how it affected the child,” Gillette said. “It’s a cover-up.”

The CIF declined to comment beyond the contents of its statement. Chimienti and Oak Ridge principal Aaron Palm did not respond to multiple requests for comment. When asked to expand upon the meaning of the “probationary period,” the CIF wrote back:

“If during the probationary period, conduct of a racial or discriminatory act occurs and is verified…the sanctions may be increased and may include additional penalties.”

In the meantime, Gillette, Wilson and the Buchanan girls’ soccer community continue to search for answers and reparations.

‘Why are people so dumb?’

This is not the first time Oak Ridge has been in the news for racist comments at a sporting event.

In 2016, the parent of a student at nearby McClatchy (Sacramento) told the Sacramento Bee that Asian players at a girls’ basketball game had been subjected to racist chants from the Oak Ridge student section, including “soy sauce” and “go back to Fiji,” and references to “small eyes.”

El Dorado Hills is a different place than Clovis. Wilson’s father, Brian, couldn’t help but notice the massive homes in the area on the drive to the game, and the racial demographics point to the differences: El Dorado Hills is 77.6 percent white and 1.7 percent Black, according to data gathered by the U.S. Census Bureau. Clovis is 67.1 percent white, 32.7 percent Hispanic or Latino, 10.9 percent Asian and 2.7 percent Black, per the U.S. Census Bureau.

On March 5, Buchanan players smiled for a photo before hopping on a bus for the three-hour drive north, where they hoped to add to what had already been one of the most successful seasons in program history. The Bears had won conference and section championships, with Wilson leading the way.

The commute home had a different tenor. The players sat quietly on the bus with empty expressions on their faces. After the game, the Oak Hill players had briefly apologized to the Bears before continuing their celebration.

Chimienti waxed poetic about his players to local media, taking on the familiar tone of a coach gushing about his championship-winning team. The incident in the stands did not appear to have dampened his mood.

“Four of these girls, I’ve been with since their freshman year,” Chimienti told the Mountain Democrat. “We came in together, nd I think that was special, one being my daughter Olivia, (and) Emily (Lieber), Iman (Mustafa) and Grace (Goins). There’s no better way to go out.”

Buchanan players glumly accepted their red-ribboned second-place medals and headed home. They stopped at a Chick-fil-A for dinner, at which point Gillette briefly spoke to Wilson.

“She was like, ‘I wish that didn’t happen. I wish that wasn’t the last moment of my career,’” Gillette said.

Wilson was dropped off at a friend’s house, where her father picked her up after midnight. She was mostly quiet on the drive home, Brian said. She did have one question for her father.

“Why,” she asked, “are people so dumb?”

‘The adults are at fault’

After video of the incident — which also appeared to include Wilson’s Hispanic teammate, Daisy Torres, being serenaded by dog-barking sounds before her penalty kick — hit social media and prompted an uproar, Oak Ridge adopted a stiffer public stance.

Chimienti later told the Sacramento Bee he was “disgusted” by the events, as did Palm, the Oak Ridge principal. Following an Oak Ridge investigation, the offending student was identified and disciplined later in the week. But it was too little, too late, Brian said.

There is significant modern precedent for hecklers being thrown out of professional and college games in arenas of thousands of people. A fan at a Jan. 18 men’s basketball game between Wisconsin and Northwestern was ejected after he was seen making the so-called “Asian eye gesture” toward other fans. On Jan. 27, a fan was ejected from the Los Angeles Lakers-Philadelphia 76ers game after repeatedly calling Lakers forward Carmelo Anthony “boy.”

But there was no such intervention at the high school soccer game attended by a fraction of the people, despite the presence of Oak Ridge parents, coaches and administrators.

“Nobody cared to address the crowd at any point in time,” Brian said. “There’s no way you can’t find someone in the crowd. They never attempted to find out because they didn’t care.

“I’m not going to say the kid is at fault. The adults are at fault.”

Gillette has collected her players’ medals and plans to send them back to the CIF, along with their wooden second-place plaque. The team instead will make custom sweatshirts commemorating the season, emblazoned with their various accomplishments and a quote from the entrepreneur and author Timi Nadela:

“Don’t be afraid to shine, the world needs your light.”

It’s a sentiment that applies to the whole team, Gillette said, but Wilson especially. She’s returned to the field for her travel team, the Clovis Crossfire, and is looking forward to college. She’s starting to heal, but something is missing.

The Monday after the incident, Palm called Brian and promised to send a handwritten letter of apology to his daughter. As of this publication, according to Brian, the letter had not been received.

Josh Needelman is the High School Sports Editor at Just Women’s Sports. Follow him on Twitter @JoshNeedelman.

Caitlin Clark dunks on Michael Che in surprise SNL appearance

(Julia Hansen/Iowa City Press-Citizen / USA TODAY NETWORK)

Caitlin Clark made a surprise appearance on “Saturday Night Live” over the weekend, which quickly went viral.

The Iowa star showed up on the show’s Weekend Update segment to playfully call out Michael Che’s history of making jabs at women’s sports.

It started when Che joked that Iowa should replace Clark’s retired No. 22 “with an apron.” 

When Clark entered, Che said that he was a fan. But Clark wasn’t convinced – especially not when co-host Colin Jost brought the receipts of Che’s jabs.

“Really, Michael? Because I heard that little apron joke you did,” she said, before making him read some jokes of her own in retaliation. Clark finished her segment by shouting out the WNBA greats that came before her. She then got in one final dig – bringing Che a signed apron as a souvenir. 

When Che promised to give it to his girlfriend, Clark delivered her last playful dig of the night.

“You don’t have a girlfriend, Michael,” she said.

Afterward, SNL castmember Bowen Yang told People that the 22-year-old and teammates Gabbie Marshall, Kate Martin and Jada Gyamfi – who joined her at Studio 8H – “were so cool.”

“She's so charming and witty,” Yang said. “They were just the most stunning, noble people.

“Athletes just have this air about them. They know they're amazing. I mean, these are people who have numeric attachments and values to their performance. That's something that comedians never have.”

Portland Thorns, in uncharted territory, start NWSL season winless

Portland has started the season winless through four games for the first time. (Rob Kinnan-USA TODAY Sports)

The Portland Thorns continue to struggle to start the NWSL season, falling 2-0 to the North Carolina Courage over the weekend to remain winless through their first four games. 

It’s uncharted territory for Portland, who has never started the NWSL regular season without a win in four games before.

Following the loss, defender Becky Sauerbrunn voiced her frustrations with the start. 

“It’s hard to find a lot of encouraging things, but what I find encouraging is that people are frustrated,” she said. “People are pissed off that we’re not doing well. We care, and I think that’s really important.” 

She also added that while the team will reflect individually, “there’s going to be no finger pointing.”

“We’re going to look at ourselves and figure out what we should have done, or I should have done better,” she said. “There is a list of things that I could have done better, and I’m going to make sure I know every single thing and watch this game back.”

The Thorns currently sit at the bottom of the league table with just one point, having allowed 10 goals – tied for the worst in the league. They’ve yet to lead in a match. And as questions grow, attention turns to head coach Mike Norris. 

Norris is in his second year as head coach of the club after leading the team to a second-place finish in the regular season last year. When asked about the possibility of pressure growing after the unprecedented start, Norris said that the pressure has been there “from day one.”

“I cannot be driven by my day-to-day and the longer vision of the pressure of the job,” he said. “We’ve got a belief in how we want to play, how we operate. We’ve got to stick with the process of that. While we do it, we have to review and see what is working, what’s not working.

“I’ll be showing up for the team and being there for what they need from me as we approach getting back together as a group next week.”

Maria Sanchez reportedly requests trade from Houston Dash

Mar 23, 2024; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Dash forward Maria Sanchez (7) warms up before the match between Racing Louisville and Houston Dash at Shell Energy Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports

Maria Sanchez, who signed one of the biggest deals in NWSL history just four months ago, has reportedly requested a trade from the Houston Dash. 

ESPN was the first to report the news, which was confirmed by multiple sources.

In a statement to ESPN, the team said: “​​Maria Sanchez is under contract, a choice she made in free agency at the end of 2023." 

In December, Sanchez signed a new three-year contract with the Dash worth $1.5 million including bonuses and an option year. At the time, it was the largest contract in NWSL history – something that was eclipsed by multiple contracts in the following months. 

The winger was a restricted free agent in the offseason, meaning that Houston could match any offer from another team and retain her rights. Should the team trade Sanchez, her contract would remain as it has been signed with the league. That limits the number of teams that could take on her contract. 

In three starts with the Dash this season, Sanchez has zero goals and an assist. The Dash are 1-2-1 through four games and have allowed a league-worst 10 goals.

The team hired a new coach, Fran Alonso, in December. Earlier this year, former goalkeeper coach Matt Lampson was fired for violating the league’s Coach Code of Conduct and Anti-Fraternization policy. 

Both the NWSL trade window and transfer window close at midnight ET on Friday.

Canada beats U.S. Hockey 6-5 in thrilling World Championship win

UTICA, NEW YORK - APRIL 14: Team Canada raises the Championship Trophy after winning The Gold by defeating The United States in OT during the 2024 IIHF Women's World Championship Gold Medal game at Adirondack Bank Center on April 14, 2024 in Utica, New York. (Photo by Troy Parla/Getty Images)

Canada got its revenge on Sunday, winning the 2024 IIHF Women’s World Championship and taking down the U.S. in a 6-5 overtime classic.

Marie-Philip Poulin, a longtime star for Canada, got her first two goals of the tournament, while Danielle Serdachny had the game-winner. 

"I hate to say you're not trying to rely on it, expect it, but I know I've grown to expect it," Canada coach Troy Ryan said of Philip-Poulin. "Tonight was just a whole other level. I could see in her eyes every time we called her name that she was ready to go. It's just special."

The win came after Canada lost 1-0 to the U.S. in the group stage of the tournament. On Sunday, the two teams met for the 22nd time in 23 tournaments in the gold medal game – and the action between the two teams delivered. 

Among those scoring for the U.S. were Megan Keller, Alex Carpenter, Hilary Knight, Laila Edwards and Caroline Harvey. Julia Gosling, Emily Clark and Erin Ambrose had the other three goals for Canada, giving them their 13th World title after falling to the U.S. in last year’s title game in Toronto. 

This year’s game was held in New York, and it was the second-highest scoring final between the two teams. The U.S. won a world championship 7-5 in 2015. 

"Oh man, that feels good to win it on U.S. soil," Canada goalie Ann-Renee Desbiens said after the game. "We owed it to them and owed it to ourselves to win that one."

Canada also denied Knight a record 10th World Championship win, although she did become the most decorated player in women’s world championship history with 14 medals. After the game, Poulin gave Knight a hug on the ice. 

"We just said 'that was unbelievable,'" Poulin said.

U.S. coach John Wroblewski echoed the sentiment that it was an outstanding game after being asked about ending the game on a power-play after leaving too many players on the ice. 

"Instead of talking about the isolated events of tonight's game, I think that normally that's an interesting storyline,” he said. “But I think the entity of an amazing 6-5 game is an amazing hockey game that took place."

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