Breakthroughs come on, off field in 2020 for women’s sports

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It was a milestone year for women in sports, starting with Katie Sowers becoming the first woman to coach
in the Super Bowl and ending with Becky Hammon serving as an NBA head coach.
In between was a series of breakthroughs for women who just wanted a chance — and got it.
Sarah Fuller became the first woman to score in a major college football game and Kim Ng became the first
to be hired as a general manager for a major league team.
WNBA players achieved a higher level of financial security and professional women’s hockey got a boost in
exposure. International soccer saw an unprecedented transfer fee paid for a woman to move from one team
to another, and the U.S. women’s national soccer team took a step toward its goal of equitable
treatment.
"2020 was certainly a tumultuous and challenging year," the Women’s Sports Foundation said in a
statement to The Associated Press on Thursday. "It was also transformational, with many exciting,
history-making firsts for women’s sports, athletes, coaches and leaders. Sports is a connector, a
unifier and a microcosm of society. As we reflect on the power of women athletes and teams who spoke up,
challenged the norms, shattered glass ceilings and showed girls, boys and everyone the limitless
potential one can achieve, it gives us all hope for 2021 and beyond."
Sowers had been working as a San Francisco 49ers offensive assistant since 2017 but wasn’t widely known
until she was featured in a Microsoft television commercial that began running in January.
When the 49ers played the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl, she became the first female assistant and
first openly gay coach to take the sideline in pro football’s biggest game.
Hammon became the first female coach to take charge of a team during an NBA game, taking over the San
Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night against the Los Angeles Lakers following Gregg Popovich’s ejection in
the second quarter.
"I look forward to the day where none of this is news, just people accomplishing things and
everybody having a chance and everybody having a shot at the same thing," said the Spurs’ Rudy Gay,
who is close with Hammon.
Hammon, a star player in the college and pro ranks, already was the first full-time female assistant
coach in league history. Hammon acknowledged it was "a substantial moment" but said she was
more interested in winning the game.
"Becky Hammon is an enormously talented coach and it was outstanding to see her reach such a truly
significant milestone," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. "She continues to be an inspiration
to so many people, especially countless young women and girls."
Fuller was the goalkeeper on Vanderbilt’s Southeastern Conference championship soccer team before she
rose to national prominence in November when she became the first woman to play in a Power Five
conference game. She was on the field once that day, driving a low kickoff to open the second half as
the Commodores got shut out at Missouri.
Two weeks later, Fuller kicked two extra points in a loss to Tennessee, with the second ball she put
through the uprights sent to the College Football Hall of Fame.
In November, the Miami Marlins made Ng the first female GM in baseball, a feat accomplished after she was
turned down for a similar job by at least five other teams over the past 15 years.
Ng started her baseball career as a Chicago White Sox intern in 1990 and for the past nine years was a
senior vice president for MLB. Her hiring came 10 months after Alyssa Nakken became the first female
coach on a major league staff when she was named an assistant for the San Francisco Giants.
On the business side, there were several notable strides made in 2020.
The WNBA and its union announced a eight-year labor deal allowing top players to earn more than $500,000
and raising the average annual salary to $130,000 a year. The agreement also guarantees full salaries
for players who are on maternity leave and provides enhanced family benefits.
National Women’s Hockey League games will be televised live in the United States for the first time when
NBC Sports Network airs playoff games in early February.
In international soccer, Chelsea signed Denmark captain Pernille Harder from Wolfsburg after paying what
the German club said was "a record transfer fee for the women’s game." The clubs did not
disclose the fee — the amount paid when a team sells a player to another team, with a portion typically
going to the player — but media reports said it was about 300,000 euros ($355,000).
In the United States, the women’s national team players and the U.S. Soccer Federation settled their
long-running lawsuit over inequitable working conditions compared with the men’s team. The deal with the
world champion American women calls for charter flights, hotel accommodations, venue selection and
professional staff support equitable to that of the men’s team.
The women’s dispute over pay remains unsettled.
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AP Basketball Writer Tim Reynolds, AP Sports Writers Dave Skretta, Steven Wine, Teresa M. Walker, Doug
Feinberg, Stephen Whyno, Anne M. Peterson and Ronald Blum and AP freelance writer Raul Dominguez
contributed.

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