USC sophomore guard JuJu Watkins bought into Boston Legacy FC, the NWSL's newest expansion franchise, making her the first active NCAA athlete to hold equity in a U.S. major-league team. The deal was announced Thursday with no disclosed stake size or valuation, though NWSL expansion teams are currently valued around $100 million to $120 million based on the Bay FC and Utah Royals entries.
Watkins joins a Boston ownership group led by Ari Friedman, David Friedman, Steve Pagliuca (Bain Capital, Boston Celtics co-owner), and Elizabeth Pagliuca, alongside venture investor Jess Lee and Jennifer Grossman. The franchise begins play in 2026, giving Watkins roughly 18 months to either declare for the WNBA draft or remain in college while holding the position. Her NIL portfolio already includes Klutch Sports representation, partnerships with Nike and Beats, and her own signature shoe releasing this spring. The Boston stake sits outside NCAA compensation rules because it's an investment, not endorsement income, though the structure will draw compliance review.
The move opens two lanes. First, it establishes athlete equity as a recruiting signal for women's sports properties trying to differentiate in a sponsor market where Nike, Visa, and Ally Financial are already stretched across NWSL, WNBA, and college categories. Boston Legacy FC needs brand separation from the established coastal franchises; Watkins delivers 3.2 million Instagram followers and the exact Gen-Z demographic sponsors pay premiums to reach. Her presence in ownership calls also solves the access problem: she can text DMs to potential sponsors' daughters who watch her highlights, not their ads.
Second, it sets a precedent for college stars who want optionality beyond the WNBA's $76,535 rookie salary. If Watkins stays at USC through her junior or senior year, she'll collect NIL deals while her Boston equity appreciates in a league where media rights are up for renewal in 2027. If she declares early, she carries ownership into her professional career, effectively pre-negotiating a post-playing role. Either way, she's built a position that doesn't depend on her knees holding up. The Pagliacas, who also own pieces of the Celtics and Liverpool FC, know this math: athletes who own boards stay involved longer and recruit better.
NWSL franchises are already trading at multiples comparable to MLS expansion fees a decade ago. The Bay FC ownership group paid a reported $53 million fee in 2023; secondary stakes are now clearing $100 million in private conversations. Boston's metro market, combined with a 2026 Gillette Stadium lease and New England Revolution infrastructure sharing, positions Legacy FC in the top tier for local media and sponsorship yield. Watkins is betting that her equity appreciates faster than her NIL deals, which have shorter windows and no residual value.
Watch whether other top-10 NIL earners follow this template before the next WNBA draft class. Colorado's Shedeur Sanders and Miami's Cam Ward are already shopping investment structures in lower-tier soccer and G League teams. The NWSL's governance rules allow individual investors below a 5% threshold without league approval; above that, franchises need board votes. Watkins' exact stake will surface when Boston files its first ownership disclosure in mid-2025.
The franchise's first kit sponsor and jersey patch deals close in Q3 2025, which is when Watkins' value as an ownership ambassador becomes measurable.
The takeaway
JuJu Watkins bought into NWSL's Boston Legacy FC, the first active college athlete to own major-league equity, betting appreciation beats NIL income.
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