JuJu Watkins, the USC sophomore averaging 27.3 points per game and projected top WNBA draft pick, has taken an undisclosed equity stake in Boston Legacy FC, the NWSL expansion franchise set to begin play in 2026. The investment makes Watkins the youngest athlete-investor in the league's current ownership structure and marks her first disclosed venture capital move outside basketball.
Boston Legacy is one of two expansion clubs entering the NWSL in 2026, alongside a yet-unnamed Bay Area franchise. The league sold both slots for a reported $53 million fee per team, a sharp climb from the $2 million Portland Thorns paid in 2013. Legacy's ownership group includes former New England Revolution president Brian Bilello and private equity firm Sixth Street, which separately holds stakes in the San Antonio Spurs and FC Barcelona. Watkins joins a roster of athlete-investors that already includes Billie Jean King and former USWNT forward Aly Wagner.
The timing reflects two converging calculations. First, NWSL valuations have compressed expansion capital into athlete-accessible ranges. While franchise fees sit above $50 million, minority stakes often start under $500,000, a figure reachable for college athletes now clearing seven figures annually via NIL deals. Watkins reportedly earned $1.5 million in her freshman year through endorsements with Nike, Accelerator Active Energy, and Neutrogena. Her agent, Klutch Sports, structured the deal to keep the stake size private while securing board observer rights, a setup that gives Watkins visibility into club operations without governance obligations.
Second, cross-sport ownership is becoming standard infrastructure. Angel City FC, which launched in 2022, counts 34 athlete-investors across tennis, basketball, and soccer. Racing Louisville has Olympic gymnast Shawn Johnson East. Watkins's entry suggests athlete investment groups now function as recruiting pipelines: Legacy gains access to her 4.2 million Instagram followers and Nike co-marketing opportunities, while Watkins tests franchise economics before her WNBA payday arrives in 2027. The structure mirrors how Formula 1 drivers quietly take stakes in sim-racing platforms or helmet manufacturers, treating small equity checks as market research.
What makes this notable is the valuation entry point. Boston Legacy begins play in a renovated 11,000-seat stadium in Everett, roughly 30 minutes north of downtown Boston. The club is banking on New England's soccer density—the Revolution averaged 23,116 fans in MLS last season—but women's soccer attendance in the region remains unproven at scale. The Breakers, a second-division NWSL precursor, folded in 2018 after averaging under 3,000 fans. Legacy's investor deck reportedly projects 8,500-seat average attendance by year three, a figure that assumes corporate sponsorship from Boston's biotech and financial services base. If the club hits those marks, early equity holders could see 3-4x returns by 2030. If not, Watkins's stake becomes a branding expense with tax-loss harvesting upside.
The Klutch involvement is the tell. Founder Rich Paul has quietly built a portfolio strategy around young clients taking fractional ownership stakes in growth-stage sports properties. Lakers forward Anthony Davis owns a piece of the WNBA's Chicago Sky. Draymond Green holds equity in a sports betting platform. The model treats ownership as both wealth-building and post-career optionality: Watkins could leverage the Boston Legacy network into broadcasting deals, coaching advisory roles, or investor intros when her playing days end. It also positions her as a power broker in women's sports capital allocation, a space where credibility compounds faster than returns.
Watch for two follow-ons. First, whether Watkins takes an active role in Legacy's front office buildout. The club still needs a general manager and head coach; Watkins's social reach could help recruit players who value investor alignment with women's sports. Second, whether her involvement triggers similar moves from other high-profile college athletes. If Paige Bueckers or Caitlin Clark announce stakes in the Bay Area expansion club or existing NWSL teams, it signals that athlete ownership is becoming table stakes for Name, Image, Likeness dealmaking.
Boston Legacy FC begins preseason training in January 2026. Watkins is expected to be drafted first overall by the Dallas Wings three months earlier.