It’s crazy to think that California went 10 years without a professional women’s soccer team. This is a state that icons like Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe and Brandi Chastain call home, one that boasts four of the very best women’s soccer college programs in the country, one that absolutely loves the sport. Never has that been more evident than in 2024.
“Finally”, in the words of Bay FC star Kiki Pickett, that long wait came to an end when both Angel City and the San Diego Wave entered the NWSL in the 2022 season, followed by Bay FC this year.
“How do you not have a team in California?” she says of the delay. “[We have] these big cities where we can get a lot of crowd numbers.”
It’s a reaction justified by the fact that the trio rank among the top five NWSL clubs for average attendance in the 2024 season, despite all being relative newcomers. Any concerns about over-saturation of the market have been squashed, with one fan believing that the situation has actually “exponentially grown” support for women’s soccer in the area.
That’s because of the love for the sport that exists and it is being boosted by some undertones of rivalry. It’s still early days for these three teams to have a relationship anywhere near the level of intensity seen in meetings between the Seattle Reign and the Portland Thorns, for example, which is certainly the NWSL’s biggest and best rivalry. But not only is California proving to be the place to be in the league, signs also suggest it will surely produce the next great rivalry in U.S. women’s soccer.