Let’s start from the very beginning
From The GIST Sports Biz (hi@thegistsports.com)

Leveling The Playing Field
Good news!
Last year, only 33 Fortune 500 companies (6%) had a sponsorship presence in the WNBA, NWSL, and PWHL, but the second annual report from consulting firm Gather shows that 67 Fortune 500 companies (13%) are in the mix so far this year. Only the beginning.
Women’s sports
✨ Ready for their debut

The GIST: Korean entertainment company HYBE (which cultivated K-pop sensations BTS and Katseye) is getting into sports, sponsoring MLS club LAFC’s first playoff game later today at BMO Stadium. Inspired by Korean player Son Heung-Min’s impact on the team, HYBE is celebrating Korean culture with popular eats from Koreatown staple Love Hour and a lightshow set to K-pop hits.
- It’s an innovative twist fusing LA’s soccer culture with the West Coast’s growing K-pop community, especially in a city with a rich Korean-American heritage. It’s also something NWSL clubs (and women’s sports in general) can consider in multicultural markets, especially those with sizable Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) populations on the West Coast. It’s as simple as that.
K-pop fan data: So what does K-pop have to do with sports? Let’s take a look at the audience data.
- 🌊 They’re about 80% women and predominantly reside on the West Coast. They are also highly interested in purchasing merch (collectibles) and belonging to a community.
- ✨ They’re multicultural. A 2023 SiriusXM study found 54% of listeners identified as AAPI, Hispanic, or multiracial, while a 2014 survey stated AAPIs comprise the largest share of K-pop fandom in the U.S. (33.8%).
- 👶 They’re young. SiriusXM also found 72% of K-pop listeners were Gen Z or millennial. Another survey found 25% of Gen Alphas list it as their favorite genre.
- 🎤 They’re tuned in. According to one U.S. survey of American K-pop fans, 82% listen to the genre daily.
The sports tie-in: Sports teams and sponsors should pay more attention to AAPI audiences, especially since they spend 15% more time watching live sports than the general population.
- There’s also a generational factor here: Younger generations are increasingly streaming global music, and are more likely to enter sports fandom through fashion, music, and other culture-driven pathways.
- The NFL, CONCACAF, and FIFA have leveraged international stars to drive new eyeballs, while California NBA teams like the Golden State Warriors and LA Lakers have already embraced the power of K-pop fandom.
The women’s sports opportunity: NWSL teams in cities with large AAPI communities have hosted theme nights in Seattle, the Bay Area, NYC, San Diego, and Portland, yet there could be more to this strategy. HYBE’s event proves there’s likely a prime, overlapping fandom among young, multicultural women’s soccer fans that teams and sponsors can cater to even further.
- Angel City has a perfect K-pop opportunity at their fingertips: They’ve signed South Korean international Casey Phair to their squad, are singing K-pop songs, and even welcomed girl group Katseye to a game this year. Time to activate.
NWSL
⚽ Playing it forward

The GIST: Today, Black Star — ForSoccer’s media and events brand cultivating Black soccer culture — announced the player lineup and an exclusive capsule collection for the Allstate Next Wave National Showcase, the first national showcase displaying the skills of the top-ranked Black women soccer players in the U.S.
- Black Star’s event looks to cultivate a pipeline for young Black talent in the women’s game. Black soccer fans, especially young ones, are finding space on the pitch, something that sponsors and organizations can find ways to support.
The showcase: The event, which selected 28 rising Black women’s soccer stars, takes place from November 22-25 at Prairie View A&M, an HBCU in the Houston area. The showcase is backed by heavy-hitters in the space like Togethxr, Allstate, and the Black Women’s Player Collective (BWPC).
- The roster includes stars like Texas forward Avia Hughes and Puerto Rican Youth National Team player Jayla Walton, who are already receiving the all-star treatment. Domo Wells, the Washington Spirit’s creative director and designer behind the team’s sold-out Cherry Blossom capsule collection, designed a collection for this squad called ‘Growing The Game.’
The data: While soccer participation and fandom has been criticized for a lack of multicultural inclusion, that’s changing. According to Black Star, 28% of newcomer fans are Black (vs. 16% white).
- YouGov, meanwhile, found that 56% of Black soccer fans are between 18-34 years old, and 24% are just between the ages of 18-24, both figures higher than national averages. And this has an effect on who’s playing: The NWSL player pool is now 12% Black, up 3.8% from 2020.
A final thought: As we’ve reported before, more than 65% of Black soccer fans become more connected to the sport after seeing Black players flourish, and the impact could be profound in women’s soccer: Over 75% of Black soccer fans root for the USWNT while 50% cheer on the USMNT. Those looking to reach and impact these communities should invest in women’s sports.
Together With Boardroom

Big deals. Bold moves. Breakthrough moments. Boardroom’s daily newsletter brings you inside the business of sports and entertainment, with stories on the athletes, innovators, and brands defining what’s next.
- Stay ahead of the game — subscribe today.
📈 A Canadian Women & Sport report revealed that Canada’s professional women’s sports market value has doubled since 2023, with brands investing in the space seeing a 25% boost in brand familiarity and purchase consideration. The Great White (Space) North.
😎 Chase honored its brand ambassador, Las Vegas Aces star and three-time WNBA champ A’ja Wilson, at ComplexCon with her own dedicated A’ja Con activation.
🎓 Hair care brand and UConn partner Madison Reed inked an NIL deal with UConn player Sarah Strong and her mother, former WNBA player Allison Feaster, in the first-ever mother-daughter NIL sponsorship in college sports. Like mother, like daughter.
🇩🇪 The German Football Federation — Germany’s soccer governing body — pledged to invest $116.5M in the Frauen Bundesliga a month after announcing it would be run by an independent entity à la UK women’s soccer. Interesting.
👐 Several women athletes have offered VIP experiences to bidders in an auction to raise money for breast cancer treatment and research, with WNBA star Kahleah Copper and tennis great Martina Navratilova serving as ambassadors for the campaign.
🤖 Amazon laid off 14K corporate workers in one of the biggest layoffs in company history as a result of AI’s influence on technical operations. A brave new world.
Here’s what has GIST HQ buzzing:
🎬 What to check out
The flourishing future of women's sports. Kate Johnson's 13-minute Ted Talk is a must-watch for its data-driven insights from an athlete, marketer, and industry leader who challenges the audience to "Go further" in advancing the space.
🤝 Who’s teaming up
The WSL and Apple. In a first for women’s football, the WSL has signed a deal with Apple to provide clubs and match officials with a suite of tech products —including the MacBook Pro and iPhone 17 Pro — to streamline efficiency, drive on-pitch performance, and tighten growing financial disparities between clubs.
⚽ What to watch
This video about the Muslim-majority state of Kwara, Nigeria, where a group of teenage girls are challenging cultural and religious norms by taking up soccer, despite the risk of community disapproval.
Today's email was brought to you by Aryanna Prasad Bhullar and Briana Ekanem. Fact checking by Bonnie Lee. Operations by Elisha Gunaratnam and Marga Sison. Ads by Katie Kehoe Foster, Alessandra Puccio, and Lisa Minutillo. Managing edits by Ellen Hyslop. Head of content Ellen Hyslop.