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NWSL awards Columbus expansion for $205M, Haslams enter women's soccer

Billionaire NFL owners pay league-record price for 2028 franchise, signaling women's sports valuations have crossed into institutional-asset territory.

Published May 24, 2026 Source Yahoo Sports From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
National Women's Soccer League
DIAMOND · May 24, 2026
ISABELLA'S ISLAY · May 24, 2026

NWSL awards Columbus expansion for $205M, Haslams enter women's soccer

Billionaire NFL owners pay league-record price for 2028 franchise, signaling women's sports valuations have crossed into institutional-asset territory.

The National Women's Soccer League granted its fifteenth franchise to Columbus, Ohio for $205 million—the highest expansion fee in league history and nearly triple the $75 million the Golden State Valkyries paid to enter WNBA last year. Haslam Sports Group, the family office controlled by Cleveland Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam, will operate the club starting in the 2028 season. The team plays at Lower.com Field, the downtown stadium built for the MLS Crew in 2021, which seats 20,000 and already hosts international women's friendlies.

The Columbus franchise marks the NWSL's fourth announced team since January 2024, following Boston ($100 million), Cincinnati ($99 million), and Denver ($110 million). League commissioner Jessica Berman has stated publicly that the NWSL will reach sixteen teams by 2028 and pause expansion afterward to stabilize scheduling and commercial infrastructure. The $205 million price reflects the league's position that scarcity—not just current revenue—drives franchise value. For context, Angel City FC sold for $250 million in a secondary transaction last fall, despite posting estimated annual revenue under $25 million. The Haslams paid a premium to enter a market the league considers strategically locked: Columbus is the largest U.S. city without a women's professional team, sits in a dense population corridor between Pittsburgh and Indianapolis, and benefits from residual soccer infrastructure left by the Crew's sustained MLS success.

The valuation matters because it establishes a new floor for women's sports franchises in institutional portfolios. When private equity firm Carlyle Group and two sovereign wealth funds underwrote the WNBA Golden State expansion last year, they treated it as a venture bet with demographic upside. The Haslams are paying double that multiple for a league whose median team drew 7,800 fans per match last season—respectable, but not yet NBA minor-league scale. What changed is media optionality: the NWSL's current broadcast deal with CBS and Amazon runs through 2027, and renewal negotiations begin this fall. League executives expect rights fees to increase five to sevenfold, from the current $45 million annually to somewhere between $225 million and $300 million. At the high end, that would place per-team media revenue near $18.75 million—enough to justify acquisition prices north of $200 million under standard sports-franchise discounted cash flow models, assuming 40% EBITDA margins by 2030.

The Haslams bring operational credibility but also reputational complexity. Jimmy Haslam was implicated in the Pilot Flying J fuel rebate fraud case a decade ago, and the Browns franchise has cycled through five head coaches since the family took control in 2012. The NWSL conducted standard background diligence, and the ownership group includes Dee Haslam as the primary decision-maker, a structure meant to emphasize governance stability. More relevant is the family's track record with stadium deals: they negotiated $435 million in public financing for Browns stadium renovations in 2023, and Lower.com Field already benefits from Columbus city infrastructure bonds that matured in 2022. The franchise inherits a venue with premium suites, club seating, and hospitality capacity the NWSL has struggled to monetize in smaller markets.

The league's expansion pause after 2028 shifts pressure to commercial execution. Sixteen teams means balanced scheduling, fewer travel anomalies, and a cleaner sell to broadcasters who want predictable inventory. It also means no new $200 million checks for at least three years, so the NWSL must prove that current franchises can generate returns through ticket sales, sponsorships, and merchandise rather than valuation appreciation alone. The Columbus team will open scouting and technical staff hires in the next six months, with a general manager expected by September. The NWSL college draft class entering in 2028 will be the deepest in league history, as NCAA roster limits expand and transfer portal movement accelerates player development timelines.

The Haslams' entry also clarifies the buyer profile the NWSL prefers: established sports operators with balance sheets large enough to absorb early operating losses and patient enough to wait for media-rights tailwinds. The alternative—celebrity-backed ownership groups like Angel City—delivered brand heat but uneven management depth. The league has quietly tightened vetting standards since 2023, requiring proof of $50 million in liquid operating reserves and personal guarantees from principal owners. The $205 million fee is paid in tranches: $60 million at signing, another $60 million at the 2026 NWSL season opener, and the remainder in $28.3 million annual installments through 2029. That structure lets the league book expansion revenue across three fiscal years while giving buyers time to build local sponsorship pipelines before major capital calls come due.

The next franchise decision centers on the sixteenth market. NWSL executives have evaluated Tampa, Nashville, and Phoenix, but insiders suggest the league will prioritize a market with existing MLS infrastructure and ownership willing to cross-promote. Columbus was the easiest approval because the Crew and NWSL team share a landlord—Haslam Sports Group controls both entities and avoids the awkward lease negotiations that delayed other expansion bids. The final slot will likely go to a market where stadium economics and local government incentives align, not the largest remaining metro area. The announcement could come before the 2025 NWSL Championship in November, as the league prefers to space expansion news across calendar years to maintain sponsor attention.

The takeaway
The **$205M** expansion fee sets a new valuation benchmark for women's sports franchises, pricing in future media-rights growth the NWSL must now deliver.
nwslexpansionhaslam sports groupcolumbusfranchise valuationwomen's soccer
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