JuJu Watkins, the USC sophomore averaging 27.3 points per game and carrying a $1.8M annual NIL valuation per On3, has purchased an ownership stake in Boston Legacy FC, the NWSL expansion franchise scheduled to begin play in 2026. The deal, structured as a direct equity investment rather than an endorsement, values the club north of $50M before it fields a roster or signs a kit sponsor. Watkins joins a capitalization table that includes private equity principals and Boston-area family offices, none of whom have disclosed check sizes.
Boston Legacy FC paid a $53M expansion fee to join the league in December 2023, the highest in NWSL history at the time. The franchise is building a $50M privately funded training facility in Norwood and negotiating a stadium-sharing agreement with the New England Revolution at Gillette Stadium, with early discussions around a dedicated 11,000-seat soccer-specific venue in Boston's Seaport District. The ownership group, led by investors with backgrounds in tech and real estate, has not named a general manager or head coach. Watkins' investment predates both hires, suggesting early access tied to her Southern California visibility and the franchise's interest in West Coast media arbitrage.
The deal marks a structural shift in how NIL capital moves. Watkins is not licensing her name for a flat fee or equity kicker tied to revenue share. She is writing a check—likely low six figures based on comparable minority stakes in NWSL clubs—and taking a seat at the cap table alongside institutional money. Her agent, Klutch Sports, has steered other clients toward ownership plays in recent years, but this is the first known case of a current college athlete taking equity in a professional team outside her sport before graduation. The timing matters: Watkins has two years of eligibility remaining and cannot yet sign a professional basketball contract, but the NWSL stake vests immediately and appreciates independently of her on-court output. If Boston Legacy sells or takes on a strategic partner before she goes pro, Watkins exits with a return that never touched her NCAA compliance file.
The franchise benefits from her 3.8M Instagram followers and her stronghold on the Los Angeles media market, where USC women's basketball has sold out the Galen Center 12 times this season. Boston Legacy FC has not announced a jersey sponsor or a broadcast deal. Watkins' involvement gives the club a credible entry point into conversations with brands that budget around women's sports properties but lack a Boston footprint. Her face on a pitch-side suite invite or a season-ticket campaign mailer carries more weight than a generic NWSL expansion pitch. The club is also betting that her profile grows: if she declares for the WNBA after her junior year and goes top-three, Boston Legacy's valuation rides that momentum without additional cash outlay.
Watch for Boston Legacy FC to name a technical staff by May 2025, when the NWSL expansion draft order is finalized. The franchise will also need to close its stadium deal within 18 months to meet league infrastructure requirements. Watkins is expected to attend at least one home match during the inaugural season, but her actual involvement in football operations will depend on whether Klutch negotiates a board observer seat or passive equity only. The WNBA draft is in April 2026 if she leaves early; the NWSL season kicks off that same month.
The quiet part: Watkins has enough NIL income to diversify into assets that outlast her playing career, and Boston Legacy FC has enough cap table anxiety to bring her in before the club proves it can sell tickets. Both sides are pricing optionality, and the market is watching to see whose bet clears first.
The takeaway
College athlete equity stakes in pro franchises mark the endgame of NIL arbitrage—vesting before the NCAA clock expires.
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