NWSL to seek sanctioning for a second division
Fresh from the news that WPSL PRO will seek Division 2 sanctioning, Northern Lights Football has confirmed CBS Sports initial reporting that NWSL has approached US Soccer with their own D2 plans.
While the tier (and market restrictions) are the same for both proposals, NWSL Division 2 will begin life as a home for the reserve sides of the Division 1 clubs before "at some point" offering an alternative home for unaffiliated clubs - echoing the path trodden by MLS Next Pro in the men's game.
The opening slate is 8 clubs who will all play at the same stadium as their existing team: Bay FC, Kansas City Current, North Carolina Courage, NJ/NY Gotham FC, Orlando Pride, Racing Louisville, Seattle Reign and Washington Spirit.
In a statement to Northern Lights Football, the league said:
The National Women's Soccer League has formally submitted an application and supporting documentation for a new Division II league to the United States Soccer Federation.As a global leader in the women's soccer landscape both on and off the pitch, the NWSL and its member clubs are committed to growing our sport in meaningful ways. The demand for professional soccer has never been higher. We look forward to working to build a strong foundation for future generations of players, officials and coaches and ensure the continued advancement of the women's game.
The structure of roster construction is expected to be focused on a pathway for young players to develop, providing an alternative to the present situation where players are variously loaned out, released or (occasionally) given playing time in a professional reserve side against the amateur clubs of the WPSL. Of those three, loaning seems to be the most wide spread (albeit often to USL Super League sides, who are supposedly the same level). Of the teams to take the last option, Chicago (Red) Stars notably had a reserve side dominate the WPSL North, Seattle Reign already have a reserve side in the WPSL Pac Northwest and Kansas City Current are/were slated to re-enter the WPSL in 2026.
Funding a professional women's league - WPSL PRO interview part 2
The franchise entry fee for Division 2-hopefuls WPSL PRO is lower than anything else in the market. In part 2 of our interview with Project Director Benno Nagel, he explains the finances behind the league. (You can catch up with Part 1 here)
What was the last number for NWSL, like $115 million? I think if you throw that up for Division 1, and then for the Super League, I don't know, but they're selling it for a lot more than $1 million. So we just saw an opportunity to provide a chance for folks to buy into professional soccer. We're not gonna sell it for a dollar but we felt that a million dollars was a good number and it's actually a payment that's structured over several years, so it's not a million dollars you have to pay upfront. It's not a bad thing that the NWSL is able to charge that much for their license, it's actually an amazing thing. It's a sign of the growth of the market. I would say the same for the Super League. It's awesome that people are willing to pay that amount of money to play professional soccer.
That's really amazing. At the same time, when you look at how much it costs to operate these teams, and you go back to the premise that we have of "how do we be an athlete first league? How are we a club community first league?" If you give us $5 million to join, I'd rather that $4 million go to your market and go to your community and go to your athletes and go to your staff and just go to your project to make sure that it's gonna be sustainable. We don't need $50 million to run the league. It'd be great to take $50 million and claim $40 million as profit and give it back to your investors and your shareholders, but would that service soccer or would that just service the owners of our league?
We really want to do this to serve soccer and we had to make a number that was gonna be realistic because we do need some resources to operate as a league and we're very lucky that we've got investors at the league level that are gonna support the league operation.
Everything is geared towards how we make it affordable for clubs. So we felt that a million dollars was a healthy number. We're gonna spread it over several years. Anything beyond that, we just felt that it was an overreach.
How do you put your money to work in your community? That's really the most important thing for us, communities and players. You got all the money in the world or you got no money in the world, it's almost equally difficult to go get a facility project.
I think if you look at a group like Carolina Core. Obviously look at a group like Cleveland, those can be the high benchmarks. Look at Sioux Falls. Look at markets like Oklahoma City and Dallas. Think about the Bay Area where I'm at. There's a lot of groups and we don't just want to be a league for the 500,000 plus markets, but how do we penetrate into Little Rock, AR, Wichita, KS, Omaha, NE. There's just so many places that should have teams like this.
Will there be a maximum, a minimum, or an average salary set? I saw that MLS Next Pro doesn't, but USL Championship, in contrast, at D2 for the men's side does.
Yeah we're gonna have minimum standards obviously, in terms of what people need to do to perform in their market and what that leads to in terms of like compensation but we're not necessarily gonna have a cap on what people want to spend. If somebody wants to spend more on certain players or they want to spend more on their roster we're all for it. Of course, those clubs will still have to present a financial plan but if somebody shows that they want to invest, there's been enough impediments and barriers to investing in women's soccer for decades. We don't want to create more of 'em. We don't wanna have people coming into the space and trying to do it for pennies on the dollar. We want to make sure that the athletes are fully professional, that there's safe environments, that there's environments that can have the resources from medical to housing, to travel, to all the stuff that we want to do to make sure it's professionalized.
However, we don't want to curtail anybody's ambition, and we want to make sure that folks have a plan, right? We do want people to go out and think about, "Hey, how do I go get a household name?" Yeah. It's not gonna help me with my community engagement. And what is that gonna cost? I think there's a lot of different ways that we can structure some of these deals as well. And look, there's even possibility that the league in some form, maybe not in the first year, but in some form, could actually have some ability to help supplement certain rosters or certain budgets for certain players.
If we feel that there's a player that's gonna really impact the league, whether that's a big household name that's going for their final final dance or it was time to spend 10 years in the league and they want to come over to play for us or a top prospect that's gonna maybe become an asset and be a player, we can maybe support that.
And last but not least, there's a profit sharing angle to the involvement of the athletes in this.
We'll have more to share on that later, but yes, there is a construct where both the clubs and the athletes will have profit share.
And with that, we will move on to how the new league can empower athletes, in part 3 of this interview next week.
WPSL PRO to seek Division 2 sanctioning
Having spent its embryonic phases identifying as a league which was going to apply for Division 3 sanctioning, WPSL PRO announced this week that it was revising that aim and instead targeting Division 2. The move is anchored by an announcement that Cleveland Sports Group will be a founding member, months after they unsuccessfully bid for an expansion franchise in the NWSL.
From his office in Northern California, WPSL PRO project director Benno Nagel has a global perspective on the development of women's football, and sees his new league as the answer to questions that have been posed for too long.
Our vision has always been to build a successful league and a viable league and a league that we feel can maximize the opportunity and fill that void the best. There's two groups at the top and then three or four groups at the very bottom. And that division three, division two spots are both open really. If you look at the division two versus division three requirements for the Pro League Standards, they're not much different and so we just felt that there'd be a better opportunity for us to provide a slightly higher level of operations to provide hopefully a higher level of play and just to enhance our reach when we look at commercial partners and sponsorship opportunities and just all the things that we want to do we felt that being a division two league to start was a better platform for that.
And Nagel even addressed promotion or relegation.
I think right now, let's get through the first two seasons, and I wouldn't count fall of 2026. That's a half season kickoff launch. I would expect to see if we can be successful at the first two years and add teams at the level to which we think that we can, then I would believe that by 2028 you'd start seeing some movement towards a Division 3 sanctioning application. Then new teams that would come into the pipeline would have that option of either starting division two or populating division three. We have no ambitions for a Division 1 league, Division 2 is the top of our pyramid. Division 4 (the amateur WPSL), where we already have a tremendous base of close to 150 teams and you could see how that future division three could slot in rather nicely and create a true connected ecosystem across all the levels. We do want to achieve some sort of a promotion/relegation structure between Division 2 and Division 3.
What Division 2 has that Division 3 doesn't have, is a requirement that the majority of markets are in metro areas of 500,000.
So are they confident that they'll meet that and won't end up having to decline smaller markets because of the balance of the league?
If you think about Cleveland, if you think about Oklahoma City, where I'm at in the Bay Area, Dallas, Atlanta, we're not concerned about that. We feel that there's pathways for all the teams that we currently have to qualify for that.
The teams they "currently have" is an ever evolving list.
We're still working through the structure of what will that launch look like. That may impact the number of teams that we want to have to start for the first full season. We're hoping to have somewhere between 12 to 16 teams that will join, and that's the spring of 2027. So from that, would all of those groups want to start in the fall of 2026? Maybe there's only a few that do. Everybody has a different preference for how they go to market. We see a way with the critical mass of teams that we have. We know for a fact that we'll be able to do something in the fall of 2026.
Stay tuned for part two of our interview, on the new league's finances, next week.
US Open Cup Second Round Review
Des Moines Menace 1-2 Union Omaha
The Menace again fielded a star-studded line-up, as they welcomed Union down I-80 to Des Moines but the current pros of Omaha strolled out to a comfortable 2-0 lead. A slick piece of passing and a wicked cross from the right was blasted home by Dean Acoff to make it 1-0. The lead was doubled after a goalkeeping error as a shot from Josue Gomez was parried softly back to the Union player. The hosts staked a claim with a 54th minute penalty kick, which also saw the Nebraskans reduced to ten men, Benny Feilhaber with the goal.
Leroy Enzugusi had a golden chance to tie the game in the 81st minute, but after rushing onto a ball behind, he chipped it marginally wide of the keeper and Union Omaha did not face any other challenges.
Defeat for the Menace means $50,000 goes to defending NPSL champions El Farolito as the amateur side which has gone the furthest in this edition of the Cup.
Also of note:
Forward Madison 1-3 FC Tulsa. The Roughnecks make it two home losses for teams from the Northland in this round and conclude our coverage of this year's tournament. Thanks for following along. A reminder that Minnesota United join in the fourth round. Details on our sister site Northland Soccer Journal