Cone helped lead efforts that led to the USSF reaching a deal with women’s team players on Feb. 22 that will have players split $22 million to settle six years of litigation. The USSF also agreed to establish a fund with $2 million to benefit the players in their post-soccer careers and charitable efforts aimed at growing the sport for women. The agreement is contingent on a deal for a new collective bargaining agreement to replace the contract that expires March 31.
“Equal pay has gone from a whisper in the locker room to a roar on the field to fundamentally changing the business of sports and soccer in the United States and around the world,” the women players said in a statement. “We look forward to Cindy’s leadership.”
The men’s CBA expired in December 2018, and the sides neared a deal last June before the USSF backed away.
The U.S. will co-host the 2026 men’s World Cup with Canada and Mexico, and sites are to be announced by this May. FIFA says it will assume a more direct role running the World Cup than it did in 1994, when a local organizing committee headed by USSF President Alan Rothenberg took charge.
“We’re in the process of understanding what that’s going to look like,” USSF CEO Will Wilson said. “When we have a clear sense of that, we’ll understand who we need to hire.”
Cone and Wilson also are leading efforts to establish a national training center.
Under Cone, the USSF reached a new equipment agreement with Nike in November that starts in January 2023 and on Tuesday announced a $200 million, eight-year agreement with WarnerMedia that will shift USSF English-language broadcasts to HBO Max, TNT and TBS in 2023 from ESPN and Fox.
Cone will have to give more attention to some of the less visible portions of the federation.
“I need to do a better job of listening and communicating with our membership,” Cone said. “I came into a really challenging situation and had to right the ship, and now we’re sailing in a good direction right now, and so now it does allow me to shift my focus more the grass-roots efforts.”