First National Bank, the Pittsburgh-based regional lender with $47 billion in assets, has secured naming rights to the Pittsburgh Riverhounds' stadium in a multiyear deal announced this week. The facility, previously called Highmark Stadium under a deal that expired quietly in 2023, will now carry F.N.B. branding across 5,000 fixed seats and the club's broadcast inventory. Terms were not disclosed. The Riverhounds declined to comment on annual rights fees, but comparable USL Championship stadium deals in secondary markets typically command $300,000 to $800,000 annually.
The timing is operational, not ceremonial. The Riverhounds have spent eighteen months in what front-office sources describe as "pre-expansion positioning" — upgrading hospitality suites, adding LED boards, and renegotiating local broadcast windows. The club submitted informal materials to Major League Soccer last fall, though no formal expansion bid has been filed. MLS is not currently soliciting new markets, but commissioner Don Garber said in December the league would consider "strategically attractive cities" after 2026. Pittsburgh checks two boxes: a corporate base capable of absorbing premium seat inventory and no direct NBA or NHL competition for winter sponsor dollars.
F.N.B. operates 340 branches across six states and has been methodically expanding its commercial banking footprint in the Ohio Valley. The bank previously held naming rights to F.N.B. Field, a minor-league baseball stadium in Harrisburg, and maintains a club-level partnership with the Pittsburgh Penguins. Regional banks use stadium deals as client entertainment infrastructure, not brand awareness plays. The Riverhounds' suite build-out — twelve luxury boxes added in 2023 — offers F.N.B. a turnkey hospitality venue for commercial clients in robotics, healthcare IT, and advanced manufacturing, sectors where Pittsburgh punches above its metro weight.
What matters here is not the deal itself but the signal it sends to MLS expansion evaluators. Stadium naming rights partnerships demonstrate two things the league weighs heavily: existing corporate appetite for soccer assets and a club's ability to generate non-ticket revenue before MLS economics arrive. The Riverhounds have been profitable in USL Championship since 2021, unusual for a second-division club, and ownership group Tuffy Shallenberger has a clean balance sheet. An MLS expansion fee would likely start at $500 million, and Pittsburgh would need to fund stadium renovations or a new build. The F.N.B. deal provides recurring revenue and a proof point for lenders sizing construction debt.
The Riverhounds are also quietly adding front-office capacity. The club hired a VP of corporate partnerships in January, poached from the Columbus Crew, and is expected to bring on a CFO with stadium finance experience by summer. Those hires happen when a board is preparing a formal bid package, not managing steady-state operations.
Watch for two follow-on moves. First, whether the Riverhounds announce a kit sponsor upgrade in the next 90 days — the current deal with a regional apparel chain expires in June and has been under renegotiation since February. Second, whether Shallenberger meets with Allegheny County officials about stadium lease modifications. The current lease runs through 2028 and includes restrictive use clauses that would need amending before MLS could approve the facility.
MLS has not announced a new expansion timeline, but Nashville SC's successful launch and St. Louis City SC's sell-out debut season have reset internal expectations. Pittsburgh is no longer a curiosity. It is a market with infrastructure, ownership, and now a naming rights partner putting cash on the table.
The takeaway
F.N.B. stadium deal positions Riverhounds for MLS expansion feasibility review; club adding finance capacity, renegotiating kit deal by June.
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