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U.S. Soccer star Carli Lloyd on pay gap: 'We are done with it'

Carli Lloyd, star of the 2015 World Cup winning team, is now turning her energies toward a new match-up: equal pay for equal play.
Carli Lloyd greets exiting teammate Megan Rapinoe during the FIFA Women's World Cup Final against Japan, which they won, at BC Place Stadium on July 5, 2015 in Vancouver, Canada. (Photo by Rich Lam/Getty)
Carli Lloyd greets exiting teammate Megan Rapinoe during the FIFA Women's World Cup Final against Japan, which they won, at BC Place Stadium on July 5, 2015 in Vancouver, Canada.
Carli Lloyd, a two-time Olympic gold medal winner and member of the 2015 World Cup winning team, is now turning her energies toward a new match-up: equal pay for equal play.

"Simply put, we're sick of being treated like second-class citizens. It wears on you after a while. And we are done with it," Lloyd wrote in an essay published in The New York Times.

Lloyd and four other members of the U.S. Women's Soccer team filed a wage-discrimination complaint in late March with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission seeking equal pay.

RELATED: Fan influx hasn't bridged soccer's alleged gender wage gap

NBC News previously reported that although female players are paid as little as 40 percent of what a male player could make, attendance for women's national soccer team games has risen to striking range with the men's game levels in the past year. And the women's team has had more success is tournament play than the U.S. men's team could dream of.

"If I were a male soccer player who won a World Cup for the United States, my bonus would be $390,000. Because I am a female soccer player, the bonus I got for our World Cup victory last summer was $75,000." Lloyd says in her essay.

On Sunday, U.S. women's soccer team co-captain Becky Sauerbrunn said players could decide in July to boycott August's Olympics if nothing has changed regarding the complaint. Lloyd strikes a similar affirmative tone in her essay.

"We are not backing down anymore," Lloyd wrote.

"If I've learned anything in my career, it's that nothing worthwhile in life comes easy. That's just the way it is. This isn't about a money grab. It's about doing the right thing, the fair thing," she continued. 

This story originally appeared on NBCNews.com.