
Midfielder Lo'eau LaBonta highlights USWNT roster for upcoming matches
The 32-year-old LaBonta plays for the Kansas City Current in the National Women's Soccer League and has three goals this season. Joining her in earning a first call-up with the United States is Orlando Pride defender Kerry Abello.
Coach Emma Hayes announced the roster on Tuesday. The United States plays China at Allianz Field in St. Paul, Minnesota, on May 31,
then faces Jamaica at
Energizer Park in St. Louis on June 3.
Should LaBonta play in either game, she'll become the oldest player to make a debut appearance with the national team.
The latest roster looks a lot different from the squad that won
Olympic gold last year in France.
Mallory Swanson and Sophia Wilson announced pregnancies, while fellow 'Triple Espresso' forward Trinity Rodman is out with a lingering back injury.
Back on the squad is defender Naomi Girma, who had not played for the United States this year because of injury. Now healthy, Girma recently concluded the season with
Women's Super League champion Chelsea.
'Everyone always earns their call-ups but there are some much-deserved call-ups in this camp for players who have shown consistency in league play,' Hayes said in a statement. 'We have two different types of opponents ahead of us, so we'll have to be creative in breaking down those teams in different ways. Now that everyone has settled into a rhythm with their clubs, or is coming right off their European seasons, our players are at a good level.'
Seventeen members on the 24-player roster are currently in the NWSL, while seven play in Europe.
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Roster:
Goalkeepers: Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign), Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United)
Defenders: Kerry Abello (Orlando Pride), Crystal Dunn (Paris Saint-Germain), Emily Fox (Arsenal), Naomi Girma (Chelsea), Tara McKeown (Washington Spirit), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride), Emily Sonnett (Gotham)
Midfielders: Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns), Lindsey Heaps (Lyon), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Current), Lo'eau LaBonta (Kansas City Current), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns), Lily Yohannes (Ajax)
Forwards: Lynn Biyendolo (Seattle Reign), Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current), Catarina Macario (Chelsea), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville), Ally Sentnor (Utah Royals), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City), Gisele Thompson (Angel City)
___
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'The league aims to play matches as scheduled whenever safely possible. While forecasts guide planning, we primarily rely on real-time, on-site weather data to make informed decisions in accordance with our inclement weather policies and protocols. Based on those inputs, the league made the decision to delay Saturday's match,' the statement said. The same wording was shared with The Athletic on Saturday. Kansas City Current also declined to comment. According to NWSL's 2025 competition rules and regulations, one of the scenarios that requires the league's front office to evaluate whether to postpone a match is 'unfavorable weather and/or adverse conditions beyond the control of the participating teams that would make playing the game impractical or dangerous for players, other participants, or spectators.' The league's procedure for extreme heat-related delays requires a reading of Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) — a heat index that accounts for air temperature, humidity, wind, sun and cloud cover — one hour before kickoff if the day's temperature is expected to reach or exceed 90 degrees Fahrenheit. If the WGBT recording is at or above 92.3 degrees Fahrenheit, the home team must alert the league. In the days leading up to the match, the National Weather Service issued an extreme heat warning for the area. Burke told The Athletic in an exclusive interview on Wednesday that a postponement was an 'obvious decision' that could have been made well before this weekend. 'We are grateful to the Kansas City and Orlando medical staff for doing exactly what they are supposed to do in an extreme heat situation: prioritize safety,' Burke told The Athletic. 'A 3 p.m. CT August kickoff in Kansas City was predictably too hot to play when the draft schedule first came out in January.' Advertisement On game day, the WBGT averaged 91.8 degrees Fahrenheit, just below the threshold before the warmups, though the maximum reading hit 92.8 degrees Fahrenheit, which is above the limit, sources said. Both teams' medical staff and match officials raised concerns, but the league instructed them to proceed with warmups, citing its policy that required the next check after warmups. Shortly after 2 p.m., an hour before the scheduled kickoff, the Current's medical staff contacted NWSL chief medical officer Dr. Cindy Chang for clarification regarding the heat policy. Per the league competition guidelines, only the league office can postpone play. In accordance with league competition guidelines, the fourth official took a reading 15 minutes prior to the start of the game. At 2:45 p.m. the WBGT was 93.9 degrees Fahrenheit, exceeding the threshold temperature and officially delaying the match. League policy states that the WBGT should be checked every 30 minutes following the initial delay; however, sources said it was checked every 15 minutes, per the league's request. We are all at the mercy of this device… 93.5 degrees of the last reading.. next reading is at 3:47 p.m. [image or embed] — PJ Green (@ August 16, 2025 at 9:35 PM At 3:47 p.m., about 45 minutes after the originally scheduled kickoff, officials conducted a WBGT reading of 91.8 degrees Fahrenheit, though sources at the stadium thought the drop in temperature was likely the result of a cloud passing overhead. They were confident that the temperature would rise again after the cloud passed. The Current's medical staff conveyed this to the league's medical staff and advocated for another reading 15 minutes later, at 4:02 p.m. A medical officer acknowledged the request was not in line with league policy, but emphasized the fleeting nature of the temperature drop and reiterated their obligation to protect players. Dr. Chang and the teams agreed to take a second reading. 'This is a model of why we need competent medical staff. They did their jobs here. I wouldn't change anything about how they did their jobs,' Burke said. 'If anything, what I would change is that the league needs to respect their discretion.' Advertisement As expected by those at the stadium, the WBGT spiked to 95.6 degrees Fahrenheit, triggering another delay under league rules. This is when Berman contacted Kansas City owners, warning the club that it had broken protocol and would be fined an unspecified amount, sources said. At this time, the broadcast window, which ran from 4 to 6 p.m. ET for the national time slot, had officially expired while WBGT readings remained well above the threshold. By the time 7:30 p.m. ET came around, CBS switched to regional programming. In 2023, the league signed a $240 million domestic media rights deal with CBS, ESPN, Amazon's Prime Video, and Scripps' Ion network. The four-year agreement runs from 2024 through 2027 and will deliver an average of $60 million annually, a fortyfold jump from the league's previous contract. Saturday's matchup between the Current and the Pride was the seventh of 11 regular-season matches CBS was set to broadcast, but the delay ultimately led the network to move the game over to a CBS stream online and its app. Danielle Russell, vice president of the KC Blue Crew supporters group, told The Athletic she spent roughly eight hours at the stadium on Saturday. Fans at Blue Crew's usual 'teal-gates' spent their pregame hydrating with water and electrolytes to prepare for the heat forecast during the match, Russell said. Typically, fans would walk 30 minutes to get to the stadium, but for this game, they made alternate plans because of the heat. Once inside the venue, the day was like any other at CPKC Stadium, Russell said, until the 15-minute incremental delays began. 'As it was becoming obvious that it wasn't going to start soon, the communication wasn't done quite as well as it could have,' Russell said. 'Nobody really knew what was happening.' During the delays, fans sat on sidewalks searching for shade and were scattered throughout the concourse. The supporters' section had Liquid IV, a brand of electrolyte powder, and the group's team liaison brought packs of Gatorade sports drinks. The Current also added extra water stations and ice, and offered free non-alcoholic drinks to prevent dehydration. 'It comes down to not sacrificing safety over a TV slot,' Russell said. 'Everyone knew, as soon as the schedule came out, we circled that game. We were like, 'This is going to be bad. This is going to be dangerous.'' At least 16 people required medical attention for heat-related ailments and were treated at the stadium, according to the University of Kansas Health System event report. A spokesperson for the Kansas City Fire Department told The Athletic that one fan was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital to be treated for heat-related illness. Advertisement Eventually, the Current's operations staff coordinated with officials to push the kickoff to 6:28 p.m., which was after CBS's broadcast window closed. Temperatures finally dropped to around 90 degrees Fahrenheit by 5:55 p.m. and the match went ahead once the WGBT also dropped below the necessary threshold. Pride head coach Seb Hines told reporters after the match he was 'disappointed' with how the delay unfolded. 'It was too hot to play, and we would have liked that decision to have been made earlier on, before warm-up, so they can probably prep a little bit better,' Hines said. 'It was a lot of waiting around: 'We're going to test the wet bulb, ' 'Another 15 minutes,' and there's a lot of confusion and lack of communication as well on what the next steps were.' Hines added, though, that he was 'pleased' the team eventually got on the pitch once conditions were deemed safe. 'Overall, I was disappointed with the decision-making before the six o'clock kickoff, but once we got there, that was in the best interest of the players and everyone here, and even the fans as well,' Hines said. 'It's brutal, three o'clock, sun's beaming. We have to have the best interest for everyone who's involved here at the stadium.' Burke said the lack of clear communication from the league put players in 'dangerous conditions.' 'The decision to engage in 15-minute incremental delays speaks to one or both of two things: fantastical thinking that the August heat in Kansas City was going to cool off rather than rise before 6 p.m., or NWSL was looking for a non-medical basis on which to resume the game in dangerous conditions,' Burke said. In its 2024 negotiation with the league to establish the current collective bargaining agreement (CBA), the NWSLPA negotiated for the WBGT threshold of 92.3 degrees Fahrenheit, Burke said. Advertisement Previously, that metric was higher, but there was an incident in the summer of 2021 when a player in the New York area had to be treated for heat-related illness, Burke said. The incident was not shared publicly, but the union worked behind the scenes to prevent it from happening again. 'We were very concerned that the WBGT and extreme heat measures had not been triggered by the heat on the field when that player had to be treated for heat-related illness, and so we, as a union, decided to collectively bargain over a WBGT that aligned with FIFA standards,' Burke said. In its guidance for extreme heat, FIFPro, the union representing global soccer players, recommends that a WGBT between 82.4 degrees Fahrenheit and 89.6 degrees Fahrenheit should trigger the need for a pair of cooling breaks during a match around the 30th and 75th minutes. When there is a WGBT of more than 89.6 degrees Fahrenheit, the global players' union recommends that training and matches should be rescheduled. 'We would have loved for it to be lower, frankly, because FIFPro's recommendation is lower than what's in our CBA,' Burke said, 'but we convinced the league to lower it from what it was to the FIFA standard. And that was simply a player safety measure.' Burke also pointed to the league's partnership with Lifetime, which ran between 2017 and 2019, before Berman's tenure, when some July matches in Houston would kick off around 4 p.m. ET. 'We've been here before,' Burke said, 'and the frustrating thing is that we're still having this conversation.' Saturday's match also comes three months after the league office came under fire for its decision to resume a game after Angel City's Savy King collapsed on a pitch midgame. 'Clearly, there was pressure to play this game in a major broadcast slot,' Burke said, referring to the match in Kansas City this past weekend. 'As we analyze what happened on Saturday, we find ourselves saying the same thing here that we said in May regarding the decision to resume play after one of our own was tended to with lifesaving measures. While the medical response demonstrated the highest level of competence and care, the pressure from NWSL to play demonstrated how player safety is actually weighed and operationalized in real time.' Advertisement Approving a delay between the Current and Pride before the weekend would have allowed players the opportunity to better prepare, Burke said. Instead, players were asked to warm up and cool off several times over the hours-long delay. 'The medical teams did their jobs here, and they did an excellent job and that's exactly why we negotiated in two CBAs for investments in medical staff and technical staff, in competent people who are qualified to do this job,' Burke said. 'This is a medical decision. This should not be a union decision or a legal decision. It's a medical issue, and the medical experts need to make that call, so we're grateful to them for doing their jobs.' As of Thursday morning, the league had not reached out to the union about the delay. 'I have real questions about why it doesn't occur to them to contact a union whose paramount priority is player safety, when a decision is made like the one they made Saturday afternoon,' she said. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


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