Haslam Sports Group Pays $205M for Columbus NWSL Franchise, Doubling League's Price Floor
The Browns owners set a new expansion benchmark, validating the league's post-Angel City pricing strategy and forcing Atlanta's ownership to recalibrate their delayed launch.
Published June 3, 2026Source Yahoo SportsFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Columbus NWSL Expansion
DIAMOND · June 3, 2026
ISABELLA'S ISLAY· June 3, 2026
Haslam Sports Group Pays $205M for Columbus NWSL Franchise, Doubling League's Price Floor
The Browns owners set a new expansion benchmark, validating the league's post-Angel City pricing strategy and forcing Atlanta's ownership to recalibrate their delayed launch.
Haslam Sports Group closed on Columbus as the NWSL's 18th franchise at a $205 million expansion fee Tuesday, more than double what Boston and Denver paid eighteen months ago. The deal, announced at ScottsMiracle-Gro Field, gives the Browns and Crew owners a women's soccer foothold while resetting the league's expansion economics.
Columbus becomes operational in 2026, five weeks after Boston Legacy FC and Denver Summit FC completed their first regular-season matches. Atlanta, granted rights last November, is scheduled for a 2027 launch but paid a reported $110 million fee under different market conditions. The gap matters. Columbus's $95 million premium over Atlanta reflects sponsor velocity the league couldn't demonstrate a year ago—Nike extended its kit deal in January, Google Cloud entered as a technology partner in March, and Delta renewed its league sponsorship in April. The Browns' front office has been in NWSL conversations since Q2 2024, when the league's media-rights tender attracted ESPN and Amazon interest.
The Haslam figure changes the calculus for the league's remaining expansion targets. Commissioner Jessica Berman has publicly discussed reaching 22 teams by 2030. At the current trajectory, that means four more franchises, each priced above $200 million if Columbus holds as the benchmark. Philadelphia, Nashville, and Tampa have been named in league expansion materials. Each market now understands the entry cost has a two in front.
The expansion fee structure tells you how the league views itself relative to its last cycle. Angel City paid $110 million in 2020, an outlier driven by Hollywood capital and Los Angeles scarcity. San Diego followed at $50 million in 2022. Boston and Denver came in at $100 million apiece in 2023, signaling that Angel City wasn't a one-time pop. Columbus at $205 million is the league saying Angel City was the floor, not the ceiling.
The Haslam portfolio context matters for sponsors and allocators. The family controls the Browns, Crew, and now an NWSL franchise, creating bundled inventory across three leagues in one market. Procter & Gamble, Nationwide, and Huntington Bank already have Cleveland exposure through the Browns. The Columbus franchise gives them a women's soccer asset in the same ownership family, which simplifies negotiation and creates cross-sport activation opportunities. The NWSL has struggled with sponsor fragmentation—15 teams meant 15 separate front offices negotiating 15 separate deals. Haslam's vertical integration gives the league a proof point for multi-property partnerships.
The timing is not an accident. The NWSL's current media deal expires after the 2027 season, and the league is expected to begin rights conversations in Q1 2026. Columbus online by then strengthens the package. The league can sell 18 teams, 204 regular-season matches, and a geographic footprint that now includes Ohio, a state with 11.8 million residents and zero previous NWSL presence. Media buyers want reach, and Columbus delivers a Top 35 metro without cannibalizing existing markets.
Atlanta's ownership is watching this closely. They agreed to a $110 million fee in November 2024 and are slated to launch in 2027, a year after Columbus. The league's pricing acceleration means Atlanta's investor group either negotiated poorly or the market moved faster than anyone expected. Either way, the gap creates tension. If the league holds firm on Columbus pricing for future expansion, Atlanta's valuation relative to replacement cost drops the moment the team kicks off.
The Crew's stadium infrastructure gives Columbus a structural advantage. ScottsMiracle-Gro Field, a 20,000-seat soccer-specific venue, is already operational and Haslam-controlled. The NWSL team can play there immediately, avoiding the temporary-venue scramble that plagued Bay FC's launch at PayPal Park. Stadium control also means retention of gameday revenue—parking, concessions, suites—which the league's newer teams have had to negotiate away to landlords.
What to watch: Haslam Sports Group will name a president and general manager in the next 90 days, likely poached from another NWSL front office. The league's collective bargaining agreement expires after the 2026 season, the same year Columbus debuts, which could complicate the roster build if a lockout extends into preseason. Separately, the 2026 media tender will reveal whether Columbus's $205 million fee was early pricing for a coming wave or an overpayment ahead of a plateau.
The fee alone is the opinion. The league believes it can extract $200 million-plus from expansion markets, and Columbus's ownership didn't blink. That confidence either attracts capital or exposes a valuation ceiling. The next franchise announcement will clarify which.
The takeaway
Columbus's **$205M** fee doubles the NWSL's expansion floor and sets the 2026 media-rights negotiation baseline while forcing Atlanta's investors to reconsider their **$110M** entry point.
nwslexpansionhaslam sports groupcolumbusfranchise valuationmedia rights
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