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Pros grapple with eroding women’s rights


Shortly after leading South Carolina to its first-ever NCAA women’s basketball title and becoming the No. 1 pick in the 2018 WNBA draft, hometown star A’ja Wilson was honored with a statue outside of Colonial Life Arena. 

Now a two-time MVP with the Las Vegas Aces, Wilson is still considered royalty in Columbia, S.C. — a city located in a state where abortion rights have been under heavy assault following the Supreme Court’s June 24 ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade. 

Asked if she would still attend South Carolina given the current situation, Wilson said “probably;” with her family located just 30 minutes down the road, she could have turned to them if she needed help. 

But it would be a different story for her daughter. 

“No, I would not let my child go there,” Wilson said without hesitation.

A’ja Wilson told USA TODAY Sports she would not let her daughter attend South Carolina with reproductive rights being rolled back in the state. Wilson helped the Gamecocks win their first women’s basketball championship and there is a statue of her at the school.
A’ja Wilson told USA TODAY Sports she would not let her daughter attend South Carolina with reproductive rights being rolled back in the state. Wilson helped the Gamecocks win their first women’s basketball championship and there is a statue of her at the school.
Ron Jenkins, Getty Images

Athletes, abortion & anxiety: As rights erode, fear for future of women’s sports

This ongoing series is in response to the June 24 ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court case that granted women a constitutional right to an abortion. If you are a current or former athlete, coach or athletic administrator who wants to share your abortion story, please email narmour@usatoday.com or lschnell@usatoday.com.

It is a startling admission from one of this century’s most accomplished female athletes — but Wilson views it as her responsibility to use her platform to speak out on issues that impact women, even if what she says sends shockwaves through the sports world. 

Following the Supreme Court’s decision, about 1/3 of states banned or severely restricted abortion, impacting roughly 30 million women ages 15-49, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research and policy organization. And more legislation is on the horizon. 

USA TODAY Sports spoke to more than 30 current and retired professional female athletes, coaches, agents and sports executives to gauge how they’re weighing the new reality of a country where women’s rights are being challenged or stripped away. 

The athletes spoke candidly and passionately about their fear and uncertainty of a future without abortion access, particularly if they get traded to or drafted by a team in a red state. 

“If people have to choose, I’m sure they’re not going to want to choose to go to places where they don’t have rights to their own bodies,” said Breanna Stewart, a perennial All-Star who plays for the WNBA’s Seattle Storm.

STEPH CHAMBERS, GETTY IMAGES

Women made extraordinary strides following Title IX, the landmark equity in education law, and nowhere is that more apparent than on playing fields.

Prior to Title IX’s enactment in 1972, fewer than 300,000 high school girls and 32,000 women in college played sports, according to the National High School Sports Association and NCAA, respectively. Now, more than 3.4 million girls are playing high school sports and women make up almost 40% of NCAA athletes. There are professional women’s leagues in soccer and basketball, and women are the driving force for the success of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic teams.

But the gains of Title IX would be improbable if not for the Roe decision a year later.

In an amicus brief submitted during the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case that overturned Roe, more than 500 current and former women athletes said having control of their reproductive choices allowed them to make other choices, as well. Like, going to school on an athletic scholarship. Pushing their bodies beyond what they thought possible and realizing how strong they are. Experiencing a world beyond their hometown, or home country, on trips with an athletic team.



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