JuJu Watkins, the USC basketball sophomore averaging 26.8 points per game this season, has acquired an undisclosed equity stake in Boston Legacy, the National Women's Soccer League expansion franchise launching in 2026. The announcement positions Watkins—still three months from her twentieth birthday—as the youngest known athlete-investor in NWSL ownership, continuing a pattern where basketball capital migrates into soccer's cap table.
Boston Legacy, which begins play in 15 months, joins the NWSL as its fifteenth franchise under ownership group led by Jennifer Epstein and backed by a consortium that now includes Watkins. The franchise paid a reported $100 million expansion fee last year, roughly double what Bay FC paid in 2023. Watkins joins a roster of athlete-investors across the league that includes Megan Rapinoe in OL Reign, Candace Parker in Angel City FC, and Naomi Osaka in North Carolina Courage. Her stake was announced through Boston Legacy's Instagram account Wednesday morning, with no accompanying dollar figure disclosed. Industry sources familiar with NWSL minority stakes suggest investments at this profile tier typically range from $250,000 to $2 million, depending on equity allocation and marketing integration rights.
The timing matters because Watkins sits at a peculiar inflection point in NIL economics. She earned an estimated $1.4 million in name-image-likeness deals last year, per On3 valuations, making her the highest-paid women's college basketball player while still ineligible for the WNBA draft until 2026—the same year Boston Legacy kicks off. Her current endorsement portfolio includes Klutch Sports representation, a signature shoe deal with Nike, and partnerships with Celsius, Raising Cane's, and Beats by Dre. The Boston investment creates a dual timeline: she can appear in Legacy marketing materials and courtside seats during her presumptive first WNBA season, generating content loops that serve both the franchise launch and her own platform expansion. Meanwhile, the NWSL's aggregate media valuation has climbed steadily since CBS, ESPN, and Amazon inked a four-year $240 million rights package in 2023, implying a per-team content value of roughly $4.3 million annually for an established club. Boston Legacy's expansion cohort—joining alongside a rumored second franchise—will dilute that figure slightly, but early investor positions typically bank on the league's upward trajectory rather than immediate cash flow.
The athlete-investor model in women's soccer works best when the name carries leverage beyond the sport itself. Watkins has 3.2 million Instagram followers, triple the number of most WNBA rookies entering the league, giving Boston a ready-made amplifier for ticket launches, kit drops, and broadcast promos. Her cross-sport credibility also signals to potential corporate sponsors that the franchise is building a roster of ambassadors who can move the needle in markets beyond soccer purists. Boston's front office has been methodical in its pre-launch phase, hiring Carrie Taylor as club president in October and announcing Ginny Gilder—co-owner of OL Reign before its Seattle sale—as a minority stakeholder. Adding Watkins accelerates the timeline for brand visibility while the technical staff is still being assembled.
The next milestones are straightforward: Boston Legacy must name a head coach by summer 2025, begin roster construction through the NWSL expansion draft in December 2025, and secure a primary jersey sponsor ahead of the inaugural season. Watkins, who has one year of college eligibility remaining, will enter the WNBA draft in April 2026, roughly six weeks before Boston's first regular-season match. Her draft city—likely New York or Los Angeles—will determine how often she can physically appear at Legacy events, but the equity stake endures regardless. The franchise's pre-sale ticket deposits have already exceeded 5,000, per the Boston Globe, suggesting demand exists before a single player is signed.
NWSL expansion fees have now jumped 150 percent in three years, driven by a perception that women's soccer sits at the inflection point men's MLS occupied in the mid-2000s. Watkins is betting on that trajectory with capital she earned before turning pro.