‘Los Angeles Is for Everyone,’ ‘Pay Us What You Owe Us’: The Long History of Women Athletes Leading the Resistance

A’ja Wilson (#22) and Jackie Young (#0) of the Las Vegas Aces wear shirts saying, “Pay us what you owe us” prior to the 2025 AT&T WNBA All-Star Game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on July 19, 2025, in Indianapolis. (Steph Chambers / Getty Images)

On June 14, the players and coaching staff of Angel City Football Club, the women’s professional soccer team of Los Angeles, walked out of their locker room and onto the brilliant green pitch wearing black warmup shirts that read “Immigrant City FC” on the front and “Los Angeles is for everyone / Los Ángeles es para todos” on the back.

Ten thousand of those same shirts were draped over the stadium seat railings for their loyal fans, who slipped them on to create a sea of support—a unified protest that pushed back against Trump-issued ICE raids in their LA communities. 

Just last week, during one of the most anticipated WNBA All-Star games in history—and on the heels of Thursday’s collective bargaining agreement negotiations—WNBA players warmed up for their game in identical black T-shirts that read, “Pay Us What You Owe Us.” The sold-out crowd of over 16,000 fans at Indianapolis’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse chanted, “Pay them!”

Women’s sports, especially these sorts of sports moments, don’t just entertain. They draw us into larger social movements. When 10,000 fans slip on “Immigrant City FC” shirts, and the rest of us begin searching for them, the pitch is transformed into a venue for solidarity, a season of collective resistance. 

These women athletes’ recent actions join a powerful tradition. Since at least the late 1800s, women athletes have used their platforms for social change, and they’ve always had audiences eager to follow them.

The Popularity of Women’s Sports

Today, we are experiencing a surge in the popularity of women’s sports. Record numbers follow the WNBA, the PWHL, the NWSL, the WTA, and NCAA women’s sports. For the first time, women’s teams are making headlines on ESPN and The Athletic, while women-run sports sites such as The Gist and Just Women’s Sports are growing their fan base.