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Megan Rapinoe speech highlights discrimination after winning Best FIFA Women's Player award

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Best FIFA Women's player Megan Rapinoe believes Raheem Sterling and Kalidou Koulibaly are inspirations for how they have fought to combat racism in football

Megan Rapinoe has been named the Best FIFA Women's Player ahead of USA team-mate Alex Morgan and England's Lucy Bronze.

She won the gong with 46 per cent of the ranking points, ahead of Morgan (42 per cent) and Bronze (29 per cent) while England striker and Bronze's team-mate Ellen White was voted 10th overall.

England captain Steph Houghton voted for Rapinoe to win the award and had Rose Lavelle and Bronze as her second and third picks respectively, while England boss Phil Neville went for Bronze, Rapinoe and White.
Megan Rapinoe attends the Best FIFA Football Awards 2019
Image: Megan Rapinoe beat England's Lucy Bronze to the award

Rapinoe, 34, won the Golden Boot for most goals and Golden Ball for best player at the Women's World Cup earlier this summer after helping the USA win the tournament with six goals and three assists.

The USA co-captain, vocal off the pitch for gender equality and LGBTQ+ rights, delivered an impassioned speech upon collecting her award.

We have a unique opportunity in football, different to any other sport in the world to use this beautiful game to actually change the world for better. That's my charge to everyone, I hope you take that to heart and just do something, do anything. We have incredible power in this room
Megan Rapinoe

Rapinoe said: "If we really want to have meaningful change, what I think is most inspiring, would be if everybody other than Raheem Sterling and [Kalidou] Koulibaly, if they were as outraged about racism as they were.

"If everybody else was as outraged about homophobia as LGBTQ players. If everybody was as outraged about equal pay, or the lack thereof, or the lack of investment in the women's game, other than just women. That would be the most inspiring thing to me.

"We have incredible platforms. I ask everyone here, because I think everyone in this room probably has that crown that they're bearing, lend your platform to other people, lift other people up, share your success.

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"We have a unique opportunity in football, different to any other sport in the world to use this beautiful game to actually change the world for better. That's my charge to everyone, I hope you take that to heart and just do something, do anything. We have incredible power in this room."

Lucy Bronze celebrates a goal for England Women against Norway
Image: Lucy Bronze won the Women's World Cup Silver Ball earlier this summer

Bronze misses out after being named UEFA Women's Player of the Year last month - the first Englishwoman to win the award - and also won the Women's World Cup Silver Ball after helping the Lionesses reach the semi-finals.

The 27-year-old starred for England at right-back, playing every minute in all seven matches as they lost out to eventual champions USA in the last four.

Bronze, who has been with French club Lyon since 2017, also won the treble last season, lifting the Women's Champions League after a 4-1 win over Barcelona.

Morgan, meanwhile, also finished the World Cup with six goals and three assists for the USA, but missed out on the Golden Ball to team-mate Rapinoe by minutes-per-goal - and has now missed out on this award too.

Alex Morgan during the Best FIFA Football Awards 2019
Image: Alex Morgan, along with Rapinoe, helped the USA win the World Cup this year

The 30-year-old caused a stir with her tea-sip celebration against England in the semi-finals, being accused of disrespect, but she responded by claiming that there was a "double standard" for female players.

Earlier in the tournament, she became just the second woman in history to score five goals in one game when the USA thumped Thailand 13-0 for the biggest ever victory at the Women's World Cup.

Best FIFA Women's Player - top 10

Ellen White celebrates scoring for England against Norway in the Women's World Cup quarter-final
Image: England's Ellen White was voted the tenth Best FIFA Women's Player

1. Megan Rapinoe (USA)

2. Alex Morgan (USA)

3. Lucy Bronze (England)

4. Amandine Henry (France)

5. Vivianne Miedema (Netherlands)

6. Rose Lavelle (USA)

7. Julie Ertz (USA)

8. Ada Hegerberg (Norway)

9. Wendie Renard (France)

10. Ellen White (England)

FIFPRO Women's World 11: Sari van Veenendaal, Lucy Bronze, Wendie Renard, Nilla Fischer, Kelly O'Hara, Amandine Henry, Julie Ertz, Marta, Rose Lavelle, Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan.

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