National Women's Soccer League owners

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National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) owners own a share in the National Women's Soccer League and have the right to operate a team. Players' rights to play in the league are controlled by a team. [1] Each NWSL team has an investor-operator that is a shareholder in the league. The league has a profit-sharing arrangement amongst the teams. [2]

Contents

As of April 2023, the league has 14 investor-operator individuals or groups for its 12 current and two future clubs.

Current NWSL teams

Angel City FC

Angel City FC was founded in 2020 with investors Kara Nortman, Alexis Ohanian, Natalie Portman, and Julie Uhrman. [3]

Other investors include: [4] [3]

Chicago Red Stars

Arnim Whisler, Dean Egerter, and Steve Ritchie are considered founding members of the Chicago Red Stars. [6] Whisler has been an owner of the Chicago Red Stars since 2012, [7] while Egerter and Ritchie have been owners since 2021. [6]

Other investors include: [6]

Houston Dash

The majority owner of the Houston Dash is Ted Segal. [8]

Other investors include Gabriel Brener, Oscar De La Hoya, Jake Silverstein, and Ben Guill. [9]

James Harden joined the ownership group in 2019. [10]

Kansas City Current

Lead investors of the Kansas City Current are Angie and Chris Long. Other minority investors include Jen Gulvik and Brittany Matthews (2020–present; started play in 2021) [11]

NJ/NY Gotham FC

The founding investor of NJ/NY Gotham FC is Thomas Hofstetter [12] Since 2012, majority owners have included Tammy Murphy, Phil Murphy, Steven Temares. [13] In 2020, Ed Nalbandian joined as a minority owner. [14] In 2022, Kristin Bernert, Karen Bryant, Carli Lloyd, Kevin Durant, and Rich Kleiman joined as minority owners. [15] [16] [17]

North Carolina Courage

Since 2017, Stephen Malik is the owner and chairman of the North Carolina Courage. [18] Naomi Osaka bought a minority interest in 2021. [19]

OL Reign

Orlando Pride

Portland Thorns FC

Racing Louisville FC

San Diego Wave FC

Washington Spirit

Future NWSL teams

Bay Area (2024)

Utah Royals FC (2024)

Former NWSL teams

Boston Breakers (2012–2018)

FC Kansas City (2012–2017)

Utah Royals FC (2017–2020)

Western New York Flash (2013–2017)

See also

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References

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