The National Women's Soccer League awarded its 18th franchise to Haslam Sports Group for $205 million, marking the highest expansion fee in league history and cementing a valuation framework that will govern the next wave of professional women's sports deals. The Columbus team enters play in 2028.
Haslam Sports Group—owners of the NFL's Cleveland Browns and majority stake in the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks—partnered with the Edwards family on the bid. The $205 million price point represents a 24 percent premium over the $165 million Atlanta committed in November and 71 percent above the $120 million Boston and Denver each paid to begin play this spring. The league declined to comment on fee structure, but two people familiar with the terms said the payment occurs in tranches through 2027, with the final installment due six months before kickoff.
The Columbus close carries a second commercial consequence. Atlanta's franchise agreement included a provision tying full payment of its $165 million fee to the league successfully closing a subsequent expansion at or above that threshold. With Columbus settling at $205 million, Atlanta's payment milestone is now satisfied. The structure—common in venture capital but novel in sports league expansion—protected Atlanta against overpaying if the market softened, while giving the league confidence it could maintain pricing discipline. One team-side advisor called it "the most sophisticated expansion contract I've seen outside Formula 1."
The escalation reflects sponsor appetite more than fan growth. NWSL's current television deal with CBS and ESPN runs through 2027 at a reported $60 million total annual value, but the league is already fielding inquiries for the next cycle with rights consultants forecasting a 3x to 4x multiple. Sponsor renewals are pacing 40 percent ahead of last cycle, according to two brand-side sources, with financial services and automotive categories entering for the first time at seven-figure annual commitments. Columbus adds a market with 2.1 million regional population and no MLS overlap, following the league's calculus to avoid direct competition with men's properties in the same city.
Haslam Sports Group's ownership structure introduces a question mark on stadium control. The group's NFL and NBA assets operate in publicly financed venues with complex lease terms. Columbus will need a soccer-specific site or a creative arrangement with Lower.com Field, currently home to the MLS Crew. One league executive said the application materials included "preliminary site work" but no signed ground agreements. The Edwards family involvement—longtime Columbus business operators—suggests local real estate access, but no parcels have been disclosed.
Two expansion slots remain under the league's stated 20-team plan. Commissioner Jessica Berman said in February the league would "take a breath" after Columbus, but three separate ownership groups—two in the Sun Belt, one in the Pacific Northwest—are already circulating decks. The next close will test whether $205 million becomes the floor or the ceiling.
The Atlanta payment trigger closes on June 30, according to one person familiar with the calendar. Haslam's first tranche is due by September.