The effects of the Larry Nassar scandal, the worst sexual abuse scandal in sports history, toppled officials and led to changed laws.
Author: Christine Brennan, USA TODAY
Opinion: Colin Kaepernick is about to get what he deserves: a chance
The end may be near for the 3-year-old saga of Colin Kaepernick as the quarterback is scheduled to work out for teams on Saturday.
Opinion: Nationals swing and miss with partisan play at White House celebration
Kurt Suzuki wearing a “MAGA” hat as President Trump celebrated the Nationals turned what used to be a benign event into a political statement.
Opinion: LeBron James’ stance on China uproar weakens his voice on other issues
LeBron James stood by his critical comments of the Rockets GM, saying on Tuesday he doesn’t think “every issue should be everybody’s problem.”
Opinion: Latest doping scandal is worthy of our attention
Renowned track coach Alberto Salazar, who trained many top runners, has been banned four years for possessing and trafficking testosterone.
Opinion: Game 1 win in WNBA Finals for Mystics, Elena Delle Donne makes larger statement
The Mystics’ beautiful and cozy new bandbox of an arena, perfectly sized at 4,200, was packed and rocking for Game 1 of the WNBA Finals on Sunday.
Opinion: NFL must do the right thing and bench Antonio Brown
Roger Goodell can show how much the NFL cares about women by putting Antonio Brown on the sideline while investigating rape allegations against him.
U.S. Olympic officials reprimand but don’t otherwise punish athletes who protested
Fencer Race Imboden and hammer thrower Gwen Berry received letters from the USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland after they protested during Pan Am Games.
Opinion: Serena Williams will never stop equality fight. Billie Jean King would have it no other way
Serena Williams told a reporter she would never stop equality fight. Billie Jean King later tweeted her continuing support for Serena and that fight.
Opinion: Megan Rapinoe embodies all the swagger, fearlessness of the US World Cup team
The U.S. women’s team took over New York as it did the World Cup – with a swagger and fearlessness never before seen in so many young American women.