USA Women’s football team do tea drinking celebration in New York

Who do they drink they are? US World Cup winner Alex Morgan repeats her Brit-baiting tea-sipping celebration before captain Megan Rapinoe declares ‘I deserve this’ in victory parade around New York

  • USA women’s football team paraded through the streets of New York today to mark their World Cup victory 
  • But players were slammed again for ‘obnoxious’ celebrations and ‘cruel’ tea-sipping in nod to England defeat
  • Captain Megan Rapinoe was seen drinking champagne and shouting ‘I deserve this’ at someone filming 
  • Team mate Alex Morgan pretended to drink from a tea cup in another joke at the expense of the Lionesses  

The US women’s football team infuriated the rest of the world with their notorious ‘tea-drinking’ celebration today as they paraded through the streets of New York to mark their World Cup victory.

Captain Megan Rapinoe was filmed drinking champagne and shouting ‘I deserve this!’ at the camera, while her team mate Alex Morgan appeared to ridicule the Lionesses with another show of her cruel ‘tea-sipping’ jibe. 

The US team was branded ‘smug’, ‘cocky’, and ‘distasteful’ after they pretended to sip cups of tea after knocking England out of the tournament at the semi-finals in Lyon.  

Social media erupted with fresh fury over the US team’s behaviour today, with critic Piers Morgan claiming the players were ‘unbearable’, while England fans and others around the world branded them ‘disgraceful’, ‘classless’ and ‘arrogant’. 

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US player Alex Morgan celebrates her team’s world cup victory with their notorious ‘tea drinking’ celebration, to the great annoyance of the England team and the rest of the world, as they parade through New York City today 

Players Megan Rapinoe (left) and Alex Morgan (second right) are pictured doing the ‘tea drinking celebration’ at their victory ceremony at New York’s City Hall 

Alex Morgan mimes sipping some tea – a reference to a goal celebration she made during the semifinal win over England 


 




Their victory rally turned political this afternoon as the players used their podiums to demand equal pay with their male counterparts. 

Rapinoe – one of the players involved in the ongoing wage discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation – became so overwhelmed with the support she and her teammates received, the 34-year-old cried out: ‘New York City, you’re the mother***ing best!’

Moments earlier, she refused to sing the national anthem along with her teammates or place her hand over her heart. 

The 34-year-old star had refused to do either during the World Cup and in previous years, she knelt during the anthem in solidarity with former NFL quarterback-turned social activist Colin Kaepernick, who first started the protests in 2016 to address inequality and racist police brutality. 

Megan Rapinoe, center, and Alex Morgan, right, celebrate amid a flurry of confetti falling down on City Hall 

Rapinoe and her teammates were also heard chanting ‘USA, equal pay!’ on one of the parade buses as fans held signs supporting their effort. 

The U.S. women will get bonuses about five times less from the U.S.S.F. – $250,000 per player – than the men would have earned for winning the World Cup. And according to a recent Wall Street Journal report, the U.S. women’s team generated more revenue in the three years immediately following its 2015 victory than the men’s team did.  The case is currently in mediation.

The team won its fourth World Cup by beating the Netherlands, 2-0, in Sunday’s final in Lyon, France. And for the win, the players split $4 million in bonus money from FIFA compared to the $38 million the French men split for winning the 2018 World CUP. 

Sunday’s victory only amplified demands to pay women’s team players equally with the U.S. men, as both Mayor Bill de Blasio and Governor Andrew Cuomo offered solutions to the problem.   

The U.S. women’s soccer team celebrates at City Hall after a ticker tape parade, Wednesday

Wednesday’s ticker tape parade had to make due to with confetti made from recycled paper 

De Blasio, a presidential candidate, told CNN before the parade that he would call for Congress to pass an amendment within the Amateur Sports Act ‘requiring equal pay for men and women in all of our national sports teams.’

Failing that, De Blasio said, he would use an executive order ‘to force’ the U.S. Soccer Federation to pay its female players equally with the men. 

Earlier Wednesday, Cuomo, a fellow Democrat, signed a law expanding gender pay equality in the state. He said women’s soccer players should be paid the same as male players.

U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat, introduced a bill Tuesday that would bar federal funding for the men’s 2026 World Cup until the U.S. Soccer Federation provides equal pay to the women’s and men’s teams.  

Before the players received the key to the city on Wednesday, U.S.S.F. chairman Carlos Cordeiro took the podium and addressed the crowd at City Hall as many parade-goers flooded around the space to listen.

He even suggested that the two sides could quickly come to a resolution in the matter.  

U.S. soccer captain Megan Rapinoe (left) did not sing the national anthem or place her hand over her heart along with her teammates. The 34-year-old star refused to do either during the World Cup and in previous years, she knelt during the anthem in solidarity with former NFL quarterback-turned social activist Colin Kaepernick, who first started the protests in 2016 to address inequality and racist police brutality

Megan Rapinoe of the United States Women’s National Soccer Team receives the key to the city from Mayor Bill de Blasio at a ceremony at City Hall on Wednesday. De Blasio is one of many politicians supporting the players’ effort for equal pay 

Fans cheer as members of the World Cup-winning US women’s soccer team take part in a ticker tape parade

England-born U.S. women’s soccer coach Jill Ellis shakes hands with Mayor Bill de Blasio after Wednesday’s post-parade rally

At first, Cordeiro’s speech seemed conciliatory, as if he was agreeing to the players’ demands for equal pay and equal support, such as promotion, travel, and training accommodations.

‘To the Women’s national team and the millions who support them, in recent months, you have raised your voices for equality,’ Cordeiro said. ‘Today, on behalf of all of us at U.S. Soccer, I want to say: We hear you. We believe in you. And we are committed to doing right by you.’

Then Cordeiro drew the ire of the crowd by congratulating the U.S. Soccer Federation for spending more on women’s soccer ‘than any country in the world.’

At this point, Cordeiro had to stop speaking because he could not be heard over the chants of ‘equal pay!’ from the crowd.

‘We will continue to invest more in women’s soccer than any country in the world and we will continue to encourage others – including our friends at FIFA – to do the same,’ Cordeiro said, quieting the crowd slightly.

It was then that Cordeiro elicited an enormous round of applause by declaring: ‘We believe at U.S. soccer that all female athletes deserve fair and equitable pay.’ 

Megan Rapinoe and her U.S. women’s soccer teammates raise the World Cup trophy at New York’s City Hall 

U.S. WOMEN’S SOCCER TICKER TAPE PARADE:

The ticker tape parade started at Battery Park and went north along Broadway to City Hall, where the team was honored by Mayor Bill de Blasio. 

The city’s first ticker tape parade was held in 1886, when Wall Street workers spontaneously threw ticker tape out of their office windows to celebrate the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty.

The last ticker tape parade was held in July 2015 after the U.S. women’ national team defeated Japan, 5-2, to win the World Cup.

Despite the name, today’s ‘ticker tape’ parades are missing the ubiquitous strips of paper that ran through stock tickers in earlier years.

Instead of ticker tape, about one ton of confetti made from shredded paper, tossed from about 20 buildings, will rain down on the team as they ride in open vehicles up Broadway, according to the Alliance of Downtown New York. Unlike in years past, most of the office towers along the route lack windows that can open.

(Source: Reuters)  

At the rally, Rapinoe noted the diversity of the team: ‘We have pink hair and purple hair, we have tattoos and dreadlocks, we have white girls and black girls and everything in between. Straight girls and gay girls.’

The parade is named for the strands of ticker tape that used to be showered down from nearby office buildings. The tape has since been replaced with paper confetti, already drifting down from office buildings before Wednesday’s parade started.

The Department of Sanitation said it will have 350 workers assigned to parade cleanup with trucks, backpack blowers and brooms at their disposal.

The team had already started celebrating its record fourth Women’s World Cup title. After touching down at Newark Liberty International Airport on Monday, players shared a toast and sang ‘We Are the Champions.’

Team members appeared on ABC’s ‘Good Morning America’ in Times Square on Tuesday to show off their trophy and answer questions from cheering kids.

Rapinoe, the outspoken star who won the awards for the tournament’s best player and top scorer, also appeared on CNN and MSNBC later Tuesday.

Rapinoe told CNN’s Anderson Cooper that Republican President Donald Trump’s slogan ‘Make America Great Again’ is ‘harking back to an era that wasn’t great for everyone. It might’ve been great for a few people.’

Rapinoe told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow that Trump had yet to invite the women’s soccer team to the White House.

Trump had tweeted that he would invite the team, win or lose. Rapinoe has said she wouldn’t be going to the White House. The team has accepted an invitation to visit Congress.

U.S. soccer captain Megan Rapinoe poses with New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and his wife during a post-parade rally 

Dykes on Bikes, the lesbian motorcycle club, got the parade going by leading buses carrying the players out onto Broadway in New York’s Financial District. 

The women rode their bikes with signs reading ‘imagine equality’ on the handle bars – a reference to the team’s quest for equal pay with their male counterparts.   

Now, after two days of the team’s celebratory media tour, tens of thousands of fans are lining the streets of Lower Manhattan, where everyone from sports heroes to U.S. astronauts have been celebrated. 

Roaring fans lined the same route four years ago to cheer on the U.S. women’s soccer team after its 2015 2015 World Cup win.  

Wednesday, floats and an open-top bus brought the team along the route, which ran from Battery Park up Broadway before finally arriving at City Hall for a ceremony hosted by the Mayor. 

And like the bikers, De Blasio also made calls for equal play as the crowd emphatically agreed.  

Kate Lane, who watched the parade, called the pay gap ‘massive’ for the soccer players and ‘across the board’ for most women.

‘Especially in male-dominated professions,’ said Lane, of Limerick, Ireland. ‘Women put just as much commitment into their work as their male counterparts.’

She’s hopeful the younger generation is soaking up the message from the women’s team, noting a girl about 7 years old wearing an ‘Equal Pay’ T-shirt. 

Captain Megan Rapinoe and the U.S. Women’s National Team celebrate during the Women’s World Cup championship parade

Young fans line the street during Wednesday’s ticker tape parade in Lower Manhattan 

Alex Morgan (left), Julie Ertz (center) and Megan Rapinoe (right) share a bottle of champagne during Wednesday’s parade 

Fans react as the U.S. women’s soccer team approaches during Wednesday’s parade in New York’s Financial District 

Dykes on Bikes, the lesbian motorcycle club, got the parade going by leading the buses carrying the players out onto Broadway in New York’s Financial District. The women rode their bikes with signs reading ‘imagine equality’ on the handle bars – a reference to the team’s quest for equal pay to their male counterparts

Fans call out for U.S. women’s soccer team players at the corner of Cedar St. and Broadway during the ticker tape parade 

Megan Rapinoe, Alyssa Naeher, Allie Long and Becky Sauerbrunn of the U.S. with the trophy during the parade

Megan Rapinoe (R) NY Mayor Bill de Blasio, his wife(L) and other members of the World Cup-winning US women’s team take part in a ticker tape parade for the women’s World Cup champions. De Blasio made calls for equal pay on Wednesday 

Play Like A Girl: U.S. women’s soccer team fans packed Lower Manhattan to honor the four-time World Cup champs 


After striking a similar pose after scoring in the quarterfinal win over France, Megan Rapinoe made her famous stance once again on Wednesday during the ticker tape parade 

Megan Rapinoe and Ashlyn Harris pose for pictures during Wednesday’s parade in Lower Manhattan 

A shot of New York’s Financial District, where the 2019 U.S. women’s soccer team is being honored for its World Cup victory 

An Ali Krieger fan urges the U.S. Soccer Federation to pay its female athletes equally, while pointing out that the U.S. women have four World Cup titles. Meanwhile, the U.S. men failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup in Russia 

Construction workers in Lower Manhattan look on as the U.S. women’s soccer team are honored for their World Cup win 

Prior to the parade, Rapinoe addressed the U.S. Soccer staff, thanking them for their hard work throughout the tournament. 

‘Everyone who helped make this incredible ride possible,’ Rapinoe’s champagne toast began, ‘it’s probably bigger than this room, but this is ground zero of it all: Thank you from all of the players. We couldn’t do it without you.’

Then Rapinoe added: ‘Let’s f***ing celebrate!’ 

In the absence of actual ticker tape, a relic from a previous era, recycled confetti rained down on players and fans below from about 20 buildings along the route. 

In total, about one ton of confetti was made for Wednesday’s parade. 

ABC ‘Good Morning America’ host Robin Roberts was chosen to serve as M.C. for the post-parade rally.  

Wednesday’s ticker-tape fiesta is just the first stop on a protracted victory lap that will send the team across the United States in the coming months.

After the New York celebration, the players will jet off to California to appear at the ESPYS, the US sports world’s equivalent of the Oscars, taking place in Los Angeles later on Wednesday.

The team will then be back on the road next month to play in a five-game series of friendly international matches billed as a ‘Victory Tour,’ starting with a clash against Ireland at the Pasadena Rose Bowl on August 3. 

With Crowds chanting ‘USA!’ De Blasio was seen riding a float along with Morgan and several other players. 

Although the heat index was approaching 90 degrees, the Mayor opted to wear a red ‘Team USA’ scarf during the parade.   

Most of the players are seen wearing their World Cup medals, while Rapinoe, the captain, has been primarily responsible for the trophy.  

Two of the team’s 23 players are native New Yorkers. Allie Long, a midfielder from Northport, New York, posted on Twitter about returning to her home state. 

With Crowds chanting ‘USA!’ New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was seen riding a float along with Alex Morgan and several other players. Although the heat index was approaching 90 degrees, the Mayor opted to wear a red ‘Team USA’ scarf

Fans call for equal pay after the U.S. women’s soccer team won another World Cup while being paid less than the U.S. men

The parade will start at 9:30am from Battery Park and head north along Broadway to City Hall, according to the Mayor’s office. The Mayor will also honor the team at City Hall

Megan Rapinoe and the U.S. women’s soccer team pose for a picture ahead of Wednesday’s ticker tape parade

Olivia Ciampi, 15, of Rockaway, Queens, who joined the throng with her mother, agreed equal pay for the team was long overdue.

‘They work so hard and they win so many titles and they really do so much and they deserve it,’ she said.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo took it a step further, telling a press conference that if pay is based on performance, the women’s team should be better compensated than the men’s.

‘They play the same game that men soccer players play. By the way, they play it better, with better results,’ Cuomo said. ‘If there’s any economic rationale, the men should get paid less than the women. Let’s be honest!’

HOW DOES NEW YORK CLEAN UP AFTER A TICKER TAPE PARADE? 

  • 350 sanitation workers 
  • 130 backpack blowers to corral confetti and other garbage
  • 130 hand brooms
  • 35 mechanical brooms 
  • 15 large trash cans on wheels
  • 15 rear-loader trucks 
  • 4 front-loader trucks for heavy lifting 

(Source: AM New York)

In March, all 28 players on the women’s team filed a gender discrimination lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation, demanding their compensation equal that of their male counterparts.

‘The level of interest and excitement is much higher from four years ago,’ said Jessica Lappin, president of the parade’s organizers, Alliance of Downtown New York, referring to the 2015 parade for the team after its last World Cup victory. ‘That’s partly because they’re women’s rights icons now.’

Twelve-year-old Aly Hoover, of Glen Ridge, New Jersey, stood at the sidelines Wednesday with a poster of Morgan, one of the team’s stars.

She says that if she sees Morgan in the parade she’s going to ‘scream my head off and try to get a hug.’

The so-called ticker tape parade is named for the long strands of ticker tape that used to be showered down from office buildings. The tape has since been replaced with paper confetti.

Colorful confetti is already drifting down from office buildings as the parade gets ready to start.

Garret Prather brought his newborn son ‘to celebrate how the American women made us proud on and off the field.’

The parade is named for the long strands of ticker tape that used to be showered down from nearby office buildings. The tape has since been replaced with paper confetti, already drifting down from office buildings before Wednesday’s parade started.

After the parade, Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio planned to honor the team with symbolic keys to the city.

The Department of Sanitation said it will have 350 workers assigned to parade cleanup with trucks, backpack blowers and brooms at their disposal.

Members of the U.S. women’s soccer team, including Megan Rapinoe, rear left, and Alex Morgan, right foreground, stand on a float before being honored with a ticker tape parade along the Canyon of Heroes in New York

A grinning Megan Rapinoe looks down at the crowd during Wednesday’s parade in Lower Manhattan 

Soccer fans, including many families, packed into Lower Manhattan on Wednesday morning to see the U.S. soccer team 

RAPINOE DEFENDS PROTESTING DURING ANTHEM

By Marlene Lenthang for DailyMail.com  

U.S. women’s soccer champion Megan Rapinoe is defending her controversial protests during the national anthem in which she refused to put her hand over her heart in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick during the World Cup, calling it one of the most difficult moments of her life.

‘It was difficult and heavy but I had this immense sense of pride and responsibility in doing that so I think that’s where the strength to do it a number of times came from,’ the team co-captain revealed to CNN host Anderson Cooper Tuesday night.

‘I think that taking care of others, standing up for yourself and other people if they don’t have the ability to do so is very uniquely American,’ she added.

Throughout the tournament she defiantly refused to sing or lift her hands during the anthem, and in years prior used to take a knee as Kaepernick did to protest police brutality and racism, stirring widespread outrage over her ‘disrespect’ for the flag.

Megan Rapinoe of the USA looks on as the rest of the USA team sing the national anthem during the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup

Megan Rapinoe is defending her controversial protest of the national anthem where she refused to put her hand over her heart in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick (center) during the World Cup, calling it one of the most difficult moments of her life

Rapinoe was first white female to follow Kaepernick’s protest when she took a knee before a game in 2016. But in 2017 the U.S. Soccer Federation passed a policy declaring that players must ‘stand respectfully’ during the national anthem, forcing her to alter her protest.

Off the soccer field Rapinoe has become an outspoken critic of the Trump administration, from kneeling during the anthem to refusing Trump’s informal Twitter invitation to the White House.

In June the president initially extended an invitation to the team on Twitter to Rapinoe, but she told Eight by Eight magazine that she would not visit ‘the f***ing White House’ because she objects to the Trump administration.

Since then Trump’s remained mum about an invitation and said to reporters on Sunday ‘We haven’t really thought about it. We’ll look at that’. This week there has been no clarity from the White House.

On Tuesday she revealed she and the team want to go to Washington D.C. and would gladly accept the invitations they’ve received from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Nancy Pelosi, and Chuck Schumer.

Megan Rapinoe #15 of the U.S. Women’s National Team kneels during the playing of the U.S. National Anthem before a match against Thailand on September 15, 2016

‘This is such a special moment for us…to celebrate with the leaders of our country so yes to AOC, yes to Nancy Pelosi, yes to bipartisan Congress, yes to Chuck Schumer, yes to anyone else that wants to invite us and have a real substantive conversation and believe in the same things that we believe in,’ Rapinoe said.

On Tuesday Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said he looks forward to scheduling a time when ‘these inspiring women can come to the nation’s capital.’

Rapinoe opened up her decision to take a knee an essay for The Player’s Tribune titled ‘Why I am Kneeling’.

‘I don’t think anybody can deny the horrors of racism and Jim Crow and mass incarceration and what’s happening on the southern border and gay rights and women’s rights,’ Rapinoe explained Tuesday.

When asked if she felt like she was disrespecting the flag, the 34-year-old athlete said she did not.

‘I do not. I think that protest is not comfortable ever. It’s going to make people uncomfortable… It doesn’t feel good for anyone, even in those moments kneeling. Those were some of the most crazy, personal moments I’ve ever had. That’s what it takes, progress is hard,’ she said.

When asked if she sees a day in the future when she would stand and put a hand over her heart for the national anthem she said, ‘Yeah, I’m very hopeful for that’.

Cooper then gave her the opportunity to look at the camera and give a message directly to President Trump himself.

‘Your message is excluding people. You’re excluding me. You’re excluding people that look like me. You’re excluding people of color. You’re excluding Americans that maybe support you. I think that we need to have a reckoning with the message that you have about Make America Great Again. I think you’re harking back to an era that wasn’t great for everyone,’ she said.

‘You have an incredible responsibility as the chief of this country to take care of every single person, and you need to do better for everyone,’ she added.

Rapinoe then opened up about her sexual identity and revealed she came out to her family in college.

‘It wasn’t difficult for me in the moment, I didn’t realize it until I got to college,’ leading a laughing Cooper to say, ‘I knew when I was six, how could you not know as a teenager?’

‘It’s so embarrassing because I’m just very gay, I don’t know how it happened but as soon as it clicked I was like ‘She has arrived!” she added.

Rapinoe been with professional basketball player Sue Bird since they met at the 2016 Olympics.

Fans get flags and face stickers ahead of Wednesday’s World Cup parade in New York’s Financial District 

Some fans already have their seats near New York’s City Hall, where the parade route ends 

Rapinoe raises the World Cup trophy on Wednesday. The U.S. women will be honored at City Hall by Mayor Bill de Blasio 

Fans wave American flags before the Women’s World Cup championship parade

A small quantity of confetti sits on the floor of the Downtown Alliance one day ahead of a ticker-tape parade for the U.S. According to multiple reports, around one tone of the shredded paper will drop from 20 buildings during the parade 

Soccer fans pack the streets of Lower Manhattan to honor the U.S. women’s soccer team – the 2019 World Cup champions 

A man emerges from a delicatessen displaying a spray-painted sign honoring the four-time World Cup-winning U.S. women’s soccer team, one day ahead of a ticker-tape parade and City Hall ceremony for them. The deli was given a ‘Grade Pending’ evaluation from the New York City Department of Health 


Team captain made a champagne toast to her fellow players ahead of the U.S. women’s soccer team parade in New York

The U.S. women’s soccer team enjoys some coffee and champagne for breakfast ahead of Wednesday’s parade

Ashlyn Harris gives the camera a glance as she pours champagne for her U.S. women’s soccer teammates 

Real estate was in short supply in New York’s Financial District during Wednesday’s parade celebrating the World Cup champs

While the team is feted across the country, the squad has also been held up as champions of gender equality.

The team is suing the United States Soccer Federation to demand equal pay with their male counterparts, and fan chants of ‘equal pay’ cascaded from the stands at the Stade de Lyon after Sunday’s victory.

The outspoken captain Megan Rapinoe has been unafraid to criticize President Donald Trump, saying last month that she would not accept an invitation from him to visit the White House if the U.S. won the World Cup.

Trump responded by tweeting that Rapinoe should ‘win first before she talks.’

Megan Rapinoe carries a champagne flute and a World Cup trophy during Wednesday’s ticker tape parade in New York

Speaking to ESPN on Tuesday, Rapinoe noted she had ‘held up my end of the bargain on that one’ before adding that the Twitter exchange with Trump had actually helped the team in France.

She also reiterated that she would not be going to the White House, saying on CNN’s ‘Anderson Cooper 360’ that: ‘I would not go and every teammate that I’ve talked to explicitly about it would not go.’

‘I don’t think anyone on the team has any interest in lending the platform that we’ve worked so hard to build and the things that we fight for and the way that we live our life, I don’t think we want that to be co-opted or corrupted by this administration.’

In a Twitter tirade directed at Rapinoe, Trump had initially invited the team to the White House ‘win or lose,’ but seems to be walking that offer back now.  

When asked about a potential meeting on Sunday, Trump replied: ‘We haven’t really thought about it. We’ll look at that.’

Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (NY) took to the Senate floor on Monday and invited the women’s team to the upper chamber. 

‘That’s great,’ Rapinoe told reporters in response. ‘I love that. Interested to see what McConnell does. Thank you, Chuck Schumer, for inviting us out. We are very happy to accept your invitation to come.’

Schumer used the opportunity to call for closing the gender pay gap. He also called on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to allow a vote on the floor.

‘While today we celebrate their victory, we also recognize that these women, these athletes, have challenges and they make us really think about the future of women’s sports,’ Schumer said on Monday.

U.S. women’s soccer fans arrived at Wednesday’s parade wearing face paint and sporting Team USA jerseys 


Mallory Pugh posted an Instagram video before Wednesday’s parade while teammate Samantha Mewis played piano 

New York City police officers on patrol before the Women’s World Cup championship parade

Workers prepare City Hall, decorated with banners in preparation for a ceremony with Mayor Bill de Blasio and other dignitaries scheduled to follow Wednesday’s parade for the four-time World Cup winning U.S. Women’s soccer team

The last ticker tape parade was held in 2015 after the U.S. women’ national team defeated Japan, 5-2, to win the World Cup

After a hard-fought World Cup campaign, complete with drama on the pitch as well as a swell of controversies off of it, the American players took time to cool off atop an exclusive NYC rooftop pool and bar ahead of their parade in the city on Wednesday. 

Morgan shared a snap of her and teammate Kelley O-Hara floating on matching Inflatable donuts at the James Hotel on Tuesday afternoon, with the pair clutching cocktails as they laughed towards one another.

The tournament’s Golden Ball winner and co-winner of the Golden Boot trophy, Rapinoe, was videoed dancing poolside along with Ashlyn Harris and Crystal Dunn, with a clear view of the One World Trade Center providing a stunning back-drop. 

Morgan said that during the flight back home, the team was able to bond thanks to lack of Wifi internet access.

‘Initially everyone was excited and then a little hungover and then we slept a little bit. Then we got up and started celebrating a little more and sharing memories,’ she said.

‘This starts an amazing three days and we need to just release all that emotional, physical exhaustion that we’ve had over the past 30 days … now we just get to enjoy each other’s company.’  

Vice-captain Alex Morgan shared a snap of her and teammate Kelley O-Hara floating on matching Inflatable donuts at the James Hotel on Tuesday afternoon

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