Women's Sports Franchises Cross $1B Mark as WNBA Valkyries Lead Three-League Valuation Surge
Golden State's billion-dollar WNBA entry, Columbus NWSL's $205M price, and F1 Academy capital inflows mark synchronized institutional shift in 18 months.
Published June 7, 2026Source MultipleFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
WNBA + NWSL + F1 Academy
GRAPHITE · June 7, 2026
JOHNNIE BLUE· June 7, 2026
Women's Sports Franchises Cross $1B Mark as WNBA Valkyries Lead Three-League Valuation Surge
Golden State's billion-dollar WNBA entry, Columbus NWSL's $205M price, and F1 Academy capital inflows mark synchronized institutional shift in 18 months.
The Golden State Valkyries are worth $1 billion after one season of play. CNBC's 2026 WNBA franchise valuations, released this week, put the Bay Area expansion team atop the league—ahead of organizations that have been operating for decades. The number matters less for the team itself than for what it confirms: women's team sports have entered their institutional pricing era, and the pattern is showing up across three leagues simultaneously.
The Valkyries launched in 2025 for an expansion fee reported near $50 million. Columbus paid $205 million for an NWSL slot announced in late 2024, entering play this year. F1 Academy, the all-female feeder series, has pulled in multiple eight-figure sponsor commitments since its 2023 launch, with team budgets now tracking toward Formula 2 levels. All three moves happened within 18 months. All three involved seasoned ownership groups—not sports charities or brand exercises, but operators with portfolio logic.
The Valkyries' billion-dollar mark reflects Bay Area market mechanics, but also a broader recalibration. The team is backed by Joe Lacob and Peter Guber, who run the Warriors. Their playbook—premium seating, in-arena hospitality, tech partnerships—translated directly. The Valkyries sold out their first season at Chase Center. Sponsorship inventory moved at NBA-adjacent pricing. The franchise fee was a rounding error; the asset appreciated 20x in one year because the infrastructure was already there. Other WNBA markets are watching. Phoenix, Seattle, and New York franchises are reportedly seeking minority investors at valuations north of $500 million, per league sources. The bidding isn't speculative. It's families and funds that know how to extract margin from live events.
Columbus NWSL's $205 million entry fee—five times what Bay FC paid just two years prior—reflects the same dynamic. The Columbus Crew's ownership, the Haslam family, and new NWSL investor groups are pricing in attendance floors, media escalators, and kit deals that didn't exist when the league nearly collapsed in 2020. The NWSL's new broadcast package with CBS, ESPN, and Amazon started this year at $240 million over four years, triple the prior deal. Franchise values are tracking those rights deals the way MLS values tracked Apple's $2.5 billion commitment.
F1 Academy is the quieter inflection point. The series launched with modest backing from Formula 1 itself, but team budgets have doubled year-over-year as sponsors—TAG Heuer, Aramco, Puma—treat it as a long-dated call option on the next generation of motorsport fans. Prema Racing, a dominant junior team, is running an F1 Academy entry at a reported $3 million annual budget, nearly Formula 3 levels. The graduates aren't yet reaching F1 grids, but the commercial infrastructure is being built as if they will. That's the tell: institutional money doesn't wait for proof of concept anymore. It prices in the audience shift and builds the asset while it's still undervalued.
Serena Williams joining the WNBA ownership group this week—she's now a limited partner in an unnamed franchise, per league disclosures—adds another signal. Williams isn't doing vanity plays. Her venture fund, Serena Ventures, has backed companies worth a combined $14 billion. She's joining because the WNBA is entering its margin-expansion phase, not its awareness phase. The league's 30th season tipped off this month with attendance up 22% year-over-year and salary cap increases funded by actual revenue growth, not league subsidy. The fundamentals are boring now, which is exactly when family offices start calling.
The pattern across WNBA, NWSL, and F1 Academy isn't coincidence. It's the same capital that bought MLS franchises at $100 million in 2014 and sold them at $500 million in 2022. The same groups that saw Premier League club values triple when international broadcast rights caught up to domestic. Women's sports are following the playbook, just condensed. The infrastructure lag that kept valuations depressed—poor facilities, weak media deals, sponsor skepticism—has closed in 24 months. Now it's a liquidity event waiting to happen.
Watch for secondary sales in WNBA franchises this year. The Valkyries' $1 billion valuation creates a floor, and minority stakes in legacy teams (Los Angeles, New York, Chicago) will trade at premiums to newer markets. NWSL expansion slots are capped at 16 teams, so the next entry fee will likely exceed $250 million. F1 Academy will see at least two new teams added for 2027, and the budget threshold will rise accordingly. The allocators who wait for cleaner comps will pay the cleaner price.
The takeaway
Women's team sports franchises are pricing like early-stage MLS or Premier League assets, and the secondary market is about to open.
wnbanwslf1 academyfranchise valuationswomen's sportsgolden state valkyries
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