Sam Mewis had to medically retire from soccer in the peak of her career. She is staying close to the game she loves with her new job.
Denver will be named the winner of a new women’s pro soccer franchise—beating Clark’s Cincinnati bid in part because it plans to build a stadium.
U.S. women’s national team legend Carli Lloyd is lacing her boots up again. But don’t look for her in the National Women’s Soccer League. Lloyd will be playing with a collection of former USWNT teammates in The Soccer Tournament,
The latest: He and Gov. Jared Polis joined National Women's Soccer League commissioner Jessica Berman on Thursday to celebrate Denver becoming home to the 16th NWSL club. The yet-to-be-named team expects to start competing in 2026.
The Project Level fund will make one of its first investments in a National Women’s Soccer League’s expansion team in Denver, Ariel co-CEO Mellody Hobson said in a letter to clients Jan. 30. Hobson will be an alternate governor of the yet-to-be-named team, while Rob Cohen, CEO of IMA Financial Group, will be the controlling owner.
For Denver FC’s grassroots movement to rally the city around a bid for an NWSL paid off this month, when the league awarded Denver its 16th team, set to begin play in 2026.
The investment group bring the team to Denver said the team name and stadium location are still being finalized.
Eight teams have been sent home as the tournament shifts from the group stage to the quarterfinals this spring.
Ariel Investments president and co-CEO Mellody Hobson and Ariel Investments ‘Project Level’ managing partner Jason Wright join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the National Women's Soccer League expansion in Denver,
The 2024-25 UEFA Women's Champions League is heating up. The group stage is over and eight teams remain chasing the biggest prize in European club soccer. Now it gets serious.
Diana Matheson announced formal plans to create a professional women’s soccer league in Canada. Matheson, who racked up 206 caps for the Canadian national team in her career of nearly two decades, was the first to pursue what is usually a given in countries with successful national teams: a domestic