Quantcast

WNBA champions Seattle Storm honored by President Biden

Associated Press | 8/26/2021, 6 p.m.
President Biden honored the 2020 WNBA champions Seattle Storm on Monday, celebrating their success on the court and hailing the …
President Joe Biden, left, poses Monday for a photo with Seattle Storm’s Jewell Lloyd, center, and Breanna Stewart, right, during an event in the East Room of the White House to celebrate their 2020 WNBA Championship. Photo by Susan Walsh/Associated Press

WASHINGTON - President Biden honored the 2020 WNBA champions Seattle Storm on Monday, celebrating their success on the court and hailing the four-time title holders for changing lives with their activism.

The visit marked the first time that an NBA or WNBA team has visited the White House since the Cleveland Cavaliers were feted by former President Obama in 2016.

Presidents typically host college and major league sports champions for a White House ceremony. But the two big basketball leagues skipped such celebrations during former President Trump’s administration as several prominent players and coaches were outspoken about their opposition to President Trump’s rhetoric and policies.

President Biden marveled at the team and its feats on the court. The team includes three players who won gold medals as part of Team USA’s women’s basketball team at this summer’s Olympic games — Sue Bird, Jewell Lloyd and Breanna Stewart. The three presented President Biden with a souvenir Storm jersey.

President Biden also took a moment to note team members’ efforts to spotlight the issue of police brutality in Black communities, promote voter registration, speak out about violence against transgendered people and encourage Americans to get vaccinated.

“What makes this team remarkable is they don’t just win games, they change lives,” the president said. “That’s what winners do. They shine the light and lift people up.

They’re a force for change. That’s the Seattle Storm, that’s the WNBA.”

Storm co-owner Ginny Gilder also praised the team’s activism and noted WNBA players’ efforts last year on behalf of Democrats the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Os- soff in their winning U.S. Senate campaigns in Georgia.

Sen. Warnock defeated Republican Sen. Kelly Loef- fler, co-owner of the Atlanta Dream. Ms. Loeffler, an ally of President Trump, came under criticism from WNBA players for attacks on the Black Lives Matter movement. Ms. Loeffler and her fellow owners sold the team this year.

“It feels good to be back in this place and have our achievements celebrated in this way,” Ms. Stewart said in brief remarks at the ceremony.

Before the visit, Ms. Bird said that with President Trump out of office, she was happy to visit the White House “now that it’s back in a place where it’s considered an honor.”

Many WNBA players, including Ms. Bird, have been outspoken in their embrace of social justice movements such as Black Lives Matter, which President Trump characterized as a violent, radical ideology. He also was critical of Ms. Bird’s fiancée, U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe.

“I think for a very long time, up until 2016, going to the White House was an honor — it wasn’t necessarily political,” Ms. Bird said before the visit. “It was to meet the president of the United

States. The person who holds that office acknowledging your team’s success.”

During his campaigns and presidency, President Trump got in several public spats with prominent athletes and coaches who have sought to use their celebrity to spotlight social justice and other issues. He lashed out at Stephen Curry and his Golden State Warrior teammates in 2017 after they declined the customary White House invitation. The Republi- can also has repeatedly feuded with Lakers’ star LeBron James, who was an outspoken critic of President Trump and endorsed Hillary Clinton’s and President Biden’s White House runs.