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Macaela MacKenzie, Kinsey Crowley

How Angel City's jersey sponsorships advanced women's soccer

(Credit: Katharine Lotze—Getty Images)

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! Yi He is a stealthy but influential woman leading Binance, Simone Biles is getting back on the mat, and we share an excerpt from journalist Macaela MacKenzie’s new book Money, Power, Respect: How Women in Sports Are Shaping the Future of Feminism. Happy Thursday!

- Money, power, respect. Jessica Smith came to Angel City FC after a 20-year career in sports. Angel City “seemed idealistic at the time,” she says, but her gut told her she had to be a part of it. The Los Angeles–based team was cofounded by actor Natalie Portman; she leads an ownership group that reads like an Oscars after-party guest list, two-thirds of whom are women. The team joined the National Women’s Soccer League in 2022.

Smith’s first task as head of revenue was to sell jersey sponsorships—the logos you see on the front, back, and sleeve of pro sport jerseys around the world. What these sponsorship spaces sell for sets the tone for brand investment in the team, serving as a microcosm of a team’s valuation; top-tier men’s soccer teams can sell jersey sponsorships for tens of millions. “I’ll never forget the first [league] call I was on,” Smith tells me. After the perfunctory welcome to the NWSL, they asked what she planned to charge for ACFC’s front of jersey. She named a figure more than twice what would have been considered aggressive for the league. “And I’m not exaggerating, multiple people laughed. They laughed out loud in the meeting,” she says.

Smith had been selling jersey sponsorships her entire career. Even when teams are well-established and have sky-high viewership numbers, it’s hard. “There’s only so many qualified companies who can hold a line item for millions of dollars a year,” she points out. Smith didn’t want to sell the team short by bowing to the pressure of precedent. “I remember having this fire. I was like, Oh, you have no f--ing idea what we’re capable of.” If things were going to change for the league, someone had to push. Backed by the majority-woman ownership group, Smith was able to see a different way to value the jersey. “The [traditional] valuation process skews a way that doesn’t understand what women’s sports is today—it doesn’t measure empathy, it just measures impressions on ESPN,” she says. “But that’s not what this is.” This jersey was not just going to be seen by a few thousand fans every week—it was going to be one of the coolest items of clothing you could own. Natalie Portman was going to be wearing this jersey, Christina Aguilera, Becky G—“She has 32 million Instagram followers alone,” Smith says.

"Money, Power, Respect: How Women in Sports Are Shaping the Future of Feminism" by Macaela MacKenzie.

She sold that spot—along with the two other jersey sponsorship spaces—within two months. The club now has well over $5 million in total jersey partnerships, which ACFC believes makes it the highest grossing kit “of any women’s team in the U.S.,” according to club cofounder and president Julie Uhrman. “The market proved it was worth that,” Smith tells me, “but someone had to come in and have the confidence to question the valuation, increase the valuation, and go out and get it done.”

When women own, things change. Before the team had even begun playing, ACFC had sold merchandise in all 50 states and 38 countries. Their opening game sold out a stadium of 22,000 fans—more than the average attendance for many NBA teams. And they are already pioneering a best-in-class player experience for women athletes, including breaking ground on a state-of-the-art practice facility designed to support women and their families (think: on-site day care for athlete moms). And most importantly, ACFC granted their players the right to own a piece of the team’s success, coming up with a creative way to boost players’ salaries by cutting them in on a share of ticket revenues and paying them for the use of their image and likeness.

Smith was “a mess” on ACFC’s opening night. “I’m looking around at 22,000 fans that believed in us enough to buy tickets, I’m looking at our ownership group at the after-party that showed up in their jerseys with their friends and family. I’m looking at the 24 corporate partners that people didn’t think were possible, who paid us fair sponsorship dollars and didn’t undercut our value. It was overwhelming,” she says. “We have so much more to do. But I don’t want to lose sight of that moment of success.”

Excerpted from Money, Power, Respect: How Women in Sports are Shaping the Future of Feminism by Macaela MacKenzie. Copyright © 2023. Available from Seal Press, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The Broadsheet is Fortune's newsletter for and about the world's most powerful women. Today's edition was curated by Kinsey Crowley. Subscribe here.

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