For an article that was published online in mid-June, USWNT co-captain Megan Rapinoe was asked by the soccer magazine Eight by Eight if she was excited by the prospect of visiting the White House should her team win the World Cup. “I’m not going to the fucking White House,” she said. The very notion of it seemed absurd: “We’re not gonna be invited.”

Eight by Eight circulated a video version of her comments yesterday, and today Donald Trump launched into a three-tweet tear against Rapinoe to call what he seemed to think of as a bluff. He claimed that the team would in fact be invited, whether they win or not:

By now, dashed-off tirades—complete with incorrect tags—are standard practice for Trump when it comes to dealing with athletes who aren’t interested in celebrating their achievements with him. “Lebron James was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, Don Lemon,” he tweeted in August after James criticized Trump for using sports as a tool for division. “He made Lebron look smart, which isn’t easy to do.”

What used to be a mostly straightforward tradition—you win a championship, then you go celebrate at the White House—has turned into a referendum on athletes’ stances on Trump. In the most high-profile cases, especially when it comes to the NBA, that’s been an opportunity for James (hard no), Steph Curry (hard no), and, most recently, Toronto Raptors forward Danny Green to register their views. “To put it politely,” Green said just over a week after the Raptors won the NBA Finals, “I think it’s a hard no.”

Rapinoe has experience in this realm. In 2016 she began to kneel during the national anthem in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick and his protest against racial injustice and police brutality. Rapinoe is gay and has advocated for LGBTQ rights. And in the lead-up to this year’s World Cup, she was one of the most public faces of the USWNT’s lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation for equal pay and treatment.

To describe the full effect of Rapinoe’s political positioning, it’s worth noting that she came up with her own descriptor ahead of the World Cup: “a walking protest” in regard to the Trump administration.

Rapinoe also has a game on Friday, against the U.S.’s top competitor, France, on top of the presidential run-in. But never mind her stirring cross to Abby Wambach in 2011; she scored two crucial penalties against Spain on Monday to send the USWNT through to this upcoming match. Rapinoe has been doing this on and off the field for the better part of a decade, and judging by the disdainful “as if” she gave when asked about visiting Trump, it’s hard to see her stopping now.