The explosion of popularity in U.S. women’s sports has led Major League Baseball to an obvious conclusion: It’s time to invest in softball so that it can eventually reap the financial rewards.
Unlike soccer, basketball and hockey however, baseball lacks a significant pipeline of amateur female talent in the United States. From an early age, girls are pushed out of baseball and into softball. Over the last few years, MLB has invested in softball development at the amateur level, but has not been involved in professional initiatives.
Unlike soccer, basketball and hockey though, baseball lacks a significant pipeline of amateur female talent in the United States.
MLB’s reason for investing its time and money into youth baseball and softball has always been about building its future bottom line. When they get kids to have an emotional connection to what they call “diamond sports,” they hope that many of them turn out to be future season ticket holders.
Baseball’s popularity in America has become increasingly regionalized and the league has, in recent years, turned an intense focus toward finding new fans and finding new sources of revenue. So, when a longtime baseball executive took over a new professional softball league in April, it only took a few weeks for MLB to claim a significant piece of the action.
MLB has invested a roughly 20% stake in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL), per two sources. The monetary amount is not public, but those sources indicated it is around eight figures. This isn’t a tepid, philanthropic donation to an up-and-coming professional league: It’s MLB watching the skyrocketing revenues in other women’s professional leagues and taking its best opportunity to get its cut.
MLB’s investment in the AUSL isn’t just because it’s the most established professional softball league in the United States right now. It’s because the AUSL is now run by Kim Ng, a longtime MLB executive and the league’s commissioner. It is Ng’s job to use the investment from MLB and increased fan interest in women’s sports to grow the league even further.
The AUSL operates four teams, which will travel around the country in 2025 before settling in home cities in 2026. Players are paid $45,000 to $75,000 for their 24-game seasons, and ESPN will carry 33 AUSL games this season.
“We had alignment with Athletes Unlimited in our conversations for more than a year,” Noah Garden, MLB’s deputy commissioner of business and media said in a statement to MSNBC. “After the dialogue began, Athletes Unlimited brought Kim on board, which just made the fit even better. We are putting meaningful resources behind this endeavor because a rising tide lifts all boats.”
The tide is indeed rising in women’s sports.
In 2024, the WNBA announced that it had set a record in league viewership, attendance and merchandise sales. The year-over-year increases reported by the WNBA — helped by the arrival of Caitlin Clark — are mind-boggling.
The United States Women’s Soccer Team continued to be more compelling than their male equivalent, winning an Olympic gold medal for the United States after the men’s team bombed out in the quarterfinals.
Then, in 2024, ESPN reported its most-watched regular-season season of college softball since 2015. The Women’s College World Series Finals attracted 2 million viewers, up 24 percent from 2023.
This year’s Women’s College World Series (WCWS) Finals begin on Wednesday, with a three-game championship series that will be broadcast on ESPN.
Investing in the AUSL is easier than MLB creating its own softball league, as the NBA did with the WNBA back in 1996. MLB’s confidence in this specific league comes from its deep relationship with its new commissioner.









