Chicago Red Stars to play June match at Wrigley Field

The Red Stars said playing at the Friendly Confines is an effort to make the team more accessible

The Chicago Red Stars have announced that they will face Bay FC in a NWSL match at Wrigley Field on June 8.

It will be the first NWSL game held at the iconic home of the Chicago Cubs, one of the city’s most recognizable landmarks.

The Red Stars were sold last fall to an ownership group led by Laura Ricketts, who is also a co-owner of the Cubs.

In a press release, the Red Stars said the game was part of an effort to make the team “more accessible to sports fans in Chicago.” The team’s home games typically take place at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, IL, 15 miles outside of downtown Chicago.

“Wrigley Field is one of the most iconic sports venues in the country. This is a unique opportunity for us to bring further visibility to our team and women’s soccer,” Red Stars captain Alyssa Naeher said in a club release.

“Chicago has always been an incredible sports town with such a rich history; I can’t wait to compete on the field, under the lights, in front of our dedicated Chicago fans from every part of the city!”

Wrigley Field was home to the Chicago Sting of the NASL in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The last top-level soccer match it hosted came back in 2012, when Roma beat Polish side Zaglebie Lubin in a friendly.

CHICAGO, IL – JULY 22: A general view during the first half of a international friendly match between Roma and Zaglebie Lubin on July 22, 2012 at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by David Banks/Getty Images)

“Playing at Wrigley Field will be the event that fans of the Red Stars, Cubs and Chicago sports won’t want to miss,” said Chicago Red Stars president Karen Leetzow.

“On behalf of the Red Stars, I’d like to thank the Cubs for inviting us to Wrigley Field and giving these elite athletes the stage they deserve. We look forward to representing our great city and showing Chicago fans and the country how talented this club is and the intense level of competition that exists on the pitch every week in the NWSL and in Chicago’s backyard.”

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Bay FC appoints Montoya as first head coach

The 48-year-old has a long coaching history in the Bay Area

Ahead of its inaugural NWSL season, Bay FC has named Albertin Montoya the club’s first head coach.

Montoya has a long coaching history in the Bay Area, including his time as head coach of FC Gold Pride in the Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS) League. He’s also coached the United States U-17 girls national team and most recently served as interim coach of the Washington Spirit last year.

Bay FC will enter the NWSL in the 2024 season, joining the Utah Royals as the league’s two new teams for next year.

“As the inaugural head coach of Bay FC, I’m honored to be a part of the foundation upon which our team’s history will be built,” Montoya said in a club release. “Together, we’ll create a legacy of determination, unity, and excellence.”

Bay FC general manager Lucy Rushton added: “As we moved through the process, Albertin was by far our leading candidate. His football philosophy—and his strong commitment to it—matches up perfectly with the style of play and the team identity we want our club to embody.

“His reputation within the football community also speaks for itself – there is a tremendous amount of respect for him as a coach, as a leader and as a person.”

Montoya, 48, is also the founder of the Montoya Soccer Academy, a Bay Area-based program that is renowned in the area for developing young talent.

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NWSL expansion sides Bay FC, Utah Royals sort ‘asset selection order,’ which we can explain

Confused? We’re here to help

NWSL’s next two clubs gained some clarity over some very important future decisions, but only in the least clear way possible.

The league announced Wednesday that the asset selection order for incoming expansion sides Bay FC and the Utah Royals has, per a league press release, been sorted “via a random generator during a meeting involving members of the league and representatives from both teams.”

Here at Pro Soccer Wire, we understand that the rules of U.S.-based soccer leagues are obscured by jargon at the best of times. However, through some hard-won knowledge, we can provide some guidance when the discussion goes away from soccer basics like “it is good to score goals,” and drifts into phrases like “priority in the Discovery Order ranking.”

Here’s your guide to what just happened to the expansion teams.

What does “asset selection order” even mean?

NWSL has many different ways for players to end up on a given team’s roster. The college draft, expansion draft, the waiver wire, the discovery process, the Under-18 Entry Mechanism, the distribution order…it’s a lot. Too much, really.

With two expansion teams coming in at the same time, NWSL had to sort out which of them gets to go first in a given process. You can’t use the standings, like we do normally, when the teams haven’t played any games.

So in this case, NWSL assembled a list of several of its player acquisition processes (namely the college draft, expansion draft, the discovery order ranking, the waiver wire, and the distribution order), randomized which of the expansion teams picked first, and allowed them to draft…their drafts.

That’s not a joke, literally the teams were given the choice to select which mechanism they wanted to have the earlier pick in. Per the league, the Utah Royals were given the first shot at the list, and selected priority in the NWSL draft. Bay FC went next, and this went on until the top spots in the various asset selection methods were all assigned.

That sort of makes sense, but terms like “discovery order,” what do they actually mean?

Let’s go in order of how they were picked by the two expansion teams.

College draft priority: Utah, as of right now, will have the first pick in the 2024 college draft’s first and third rounds, and the second pick in rounds two and four. Bay FC will have the opposite set-up: the second pick in the odd-numbered rounds, and the first pick in the even-numbered rounds.

Whichever team comes in 12th place this season will have the third pick in each round, provided they haven’t already traded their natural picks away. If we go any further on that front, we’re going to be lost down a rabbit hole, so let’s stay focused.

Expansion draft priority: Bay FC will have the first pick in the expansion draft, which will last for 12 rounds. The teams will alternate from there, and both teams will be able to pick up to 12 players.

More info on how this particular expansion draft will work should come at a later date, as each previous version has been conducted under different rules.

Discovery order: Utah has priority here. The discovery order is essentially a list each team keeps of players that aren’t currently in the league, that they would like to sign (certain USWNT players have a different path into the league, we’ll get to that). If two teams both want to sign a given player, their discovery order determines who gets to pursue that player first.

NWSL’s rules are designed for parity and to keep teams from bidding against one another, and this mechanism keeps things orderly. Once a team uses their discovery order priority, they go to the bottom of this particular list.

Distribution order: Bay FC is atop this slightly different list, which is essentially the discovery order, but for USWNT players. What makes things more complicated is that this is a remnant from when U.S. Soccer’s contracts made clear who could be categorized as a USWNT player and who couldn’t. That changed late in 2021, when U.S. Soccer and the NWSL ended the allocation system.

Now, the NWSL competition manual for 2023 says “certain individuals in the USWNT player pool” are eligible for the distribution order. In practical terms, the only players in the current U.S. player pool that are not in NWSL are Lindsey Horan and Catarina Macario, but this can (and almost certainly will) change in the months to come.

Waiver wire: Utah is first on this list, with Bay FC second. The waiver wire is a place for other NWSL teams to claim the rights to a player within the league once their team has relinquished them.

Here’s an example: Team A has Player X on a two-year contract, but after one season decides to let them leave, Player X would go onto the waiver wire, and the priority order would give Utah the first choice on whether to add them or not. If Utah passes, Bay FC would get the next opportunity, and so on down the list. After the expansion teams, the reverse order of the 2023 standings would be used.

Will this ever be more simple?

There’s always a chance, but’s never going to be close to what you would call “simple.”

The NWSL has used the notoriously convoluted MLS rulebook as a sort of jumping-off point in crafting their own methodology. While it’s not the only place they look to for examples of how a league can work, MLS clubs share ownership with three NWSL teams, and it is a pretty successful soccer league in terms of financial viability and sustained growth.

In other words, don’t expect NWSL expansion to feature straightforward rules. It’s always going to be a complicated process, because adding teams to a league involves a lot more than just kits, badges, and 52 more pro women’s soccer jobs.

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The Bay Area NWSL expansion team will be called Bay FC

The club’s logo is defined by a “B” that draws inspiration from the Golden Gate Bridge

The San Francisco Bay Area NWSL expansion team has announced it will be known as Bay FC.

The club will enter the NWSL in 2024 as the league’s 14th team, joining the Utah Royals as expansion teams who will begin play next year.

Longtime U.S. women’s national team players Brandi Chastain, Leslie Osborne, Danielle Slaton, and Aly Wagner were the driving force behind securing a Bay Area franchise, and all four will sit on the club’s board.

“Bay FC will be a uniting force, building a culture of belonging and shared pride,” Wagner said in a press release. “We will be a beacon of hope and connection, welcoming and embracing people of all backgrounds. While community is our foundation, our love of football is our reason for being. Bay FC will have the fire to be the best, and we will show up every day with intensity, competitiveness, passion and a drive to win.”

The club’s logo is defined by a “B” that draws inspiration from the iconic Golden Gate Bridge, and its color palette contains navy blue, red and gray — a combination the club says is inspired by the area’s natural beauty.

“Bridges define the Bay Area and are symbols of strength that connect us all. Bay FC will unite the region’s tapestry of different cultures, languages and ideas with shared pride and a sense of belonging,” Slaton said.

The NWSL awarded the Bay Area an expansion team in April. Global investment firm Sixth Street will be the club’s majority owners, with a reported $53 million franchise fee setting a new NWSL record.

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