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A PHF player signed a record deal. How does it compare to the NWSL and WNBA?

Daryl Watts starred for Wisconsin in college, and now she’s signed a record contract with the Toronto Six. (Lawrence Iles/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The Premier Hockey Federation will have a new highest-paid player next season.

Daryl Watts signed a record two-year contract with the Toronto Six, which will see her earn $150,000 for the 2023-24 campaign. While PHF players are not required to reveal their salaries, Watts will have the highest known salary.

“I think the main reason why I’m releasing it is because women’s hockey has been struggling for so long,” the 23-year-old Toronto native said. “I think a number like this will provide the women’s hockey community great relief and a great sense of hope that the future is bright.”

As a star college player, she won a national title with Wisconsin in 2021. In the 2021-22 season, she racked up 57 points and 28 goals in 38 games for the Badgers.

Her PHF contract smashes the previous record deal signed by forward Mikyla Grant-Mentis last May. Grant-Mentis joined the Buffalo Beauts on a one-year, $80,000 contract ahead of the 2022-23 season.

The seven-team PHF has a salary cap of $750,000 this season. That figure will double to $1.5 million next season, with a projected salary floor of $1.125 million. Watts’ salary for next season reflects that jump. The PHF salary cap has increased tenfold since 2021, when it stood at $150,000.

How do those numbers compare to the WNBA and the NWSL?

The WNBA salary cap stands at $1,420,500 for 2023, with a salary floor of $1,188,990. While the cap is lower than that of the PHF, WNBA rosters hold fewer players, so the average player likely makes more money.

WNBA players can earn a maximum salary of $234,936 in 2023. The minimum salary is $62,285 for the upcoming season, much higher than the PHF’s minimum of $13,500 for the 2022-23 season, though that was created with part-time players in mind.

The NWSL salary cap stands at $1.375 million for the 2023 season. The league does not have a salary floor, but it does have a minimum player salary of $36,400. In 2022, Washington Spirit forward Trinity Rodman signed the biggest contract in NWSL history, worth $1.1 million over four years.

The Kid Mero Talks Trash on ‘Sports Are Fun!’ with Kelley O’Hara

Cover image for Sports Are Fun! with Kelley O'Hara showing UConn basketball star Paige Bueckers.
This week's 'Sports Are Fun' episode digs into UConn star Paige Bueckers's NCAA championship odds.

Welcome to another episode of Sports Are Fun! presented by TurboTax.

In an all-new episode of Sports Are Fun!, soccer icon Kelley O'Hara, sports journalist Greydy Diaz, and JWS intern BJ serve up their hottest takes all things women's sports. And this week, a special guest host — writer, comedian, television host, actor, and internet personality The Kid Mero of 7PM in Brooklyn and Victory Light fame — gets in on the fun.

Of course, the crew doesn't hold back. Starting with a deep dive into UConn superstar Paige Bueckers's ongoing quest for an NCAA championship title.

"I don't know Paige well at all, but I assume getting this record — cool," O'Hara says, referencing Bueckers recently passing Huskies legend Diana Taurasi to become UConn's ninth all-time leading scorer. "But if I'm her, I want a championship."

"If I'm P Buckets, I'm like, 'Yo, listen, I've done everything, I've eclipsed DT in the record books,'" echoed Mero. "Y'all know the history of UConn women's basketball, it's crazy — it's like the Yankees of women's basketball. So to have your name as a championship winner, to have all these records, that's the complete package."

Over an action-packed 65 minutes, Sports Are Fun! also tackles how the USWNT has been performing at the 2025 SheBelieves Cup, trash talk in the women's game, Connecticut denying Marina Mabrey's trade request, the NCAA cashing in on Women's March Madness, and so much more.

'Sports Are Fun!' hosts O'Hara, Diaz, and The Kid Mero embrace trash talk

Before getting into the Paige Bueckers of it all, Sports Are Fun! weighs in on Rose BC's Angel Reese trash talking Phantom BC's Sabrina Ionescu on the Unrivaled bench. And to no surprise, they're here for it.

"Another storyline is trash talking," O'Hara introduces. "Angel Reese was picked up on camera during a timeout [saying] 'Sabrina can't fucking guard.'"

"And Sabrina basically said trash talking is part of the sport — you see it in the NFL, you see in the NBA. But for some reason when it gets to the to women's sports, it's like people don't want to talk about it," continued the two-time World Cup champ. "In my opinion, I love trash talking — it's a game within the game. And I'm all for it because I think it makes it interesting."

"[Trash talk] makes it fun," Mero agreed. "Listen, gambling has has invaded every aspect of sports. You know why? Because it makes it fun. I don't give a shit who's playing in the Frito-Totito Bowl, like San Diego Tech State versus like Grady Academy of Culinary Arts. I don't care who's playing, but I know the spread is 35.5... Let's roll the dice."

"What makes sports fun?" Mero adds. "Competing."

Sports Are Fun! graphic featuring soccer legend Kelley O'Hara.
'Sports Are Fun!' places Kelley O'Hara at the intersection of women's sports and fun. (Just Women's Sports)

About 'Sports Are Fun!' with Kelley O'Hara

'Sports Are Fun!' is a show that’ll remind you why you fell in love with women's sports in the first place. Join World Cup champ, Olympic gold medalist, and aspiring barista Kelley O'Hara as she sits down with sports journalist Greydy Diaz and a revolving cast of co-hosts and friends. Together, they're talking the biggest, funnest, and most need-to-know stories in the world of women’s sports.

From on-court drama to off-field shenanigans, to candid (and silly) chats with the most important personalities in the space, this show screams "Sports Are Fun!"

Subscribe to Just Women's Sports on YouTube to never miss an episode.

Canadian Soccer League NSL Drops Calendar Ahead of April 2025 Kick-Off

Team Canada's Quinn kicks the ball during a 2024 Olympic group-stage match against France.
Canada's 2021 Olympic gold medalist Quinn will play for the NSL’s Vancouver Rise in 2025. (Tullio M. Puglia/Getty Images)

Canada’s Northern Super League (NSL) is preparing for its inaugural season, with the top-flight soccer league dropping a 75-match calendar and broadcast details last week.

The league will officially kick off on April 16th, when Vancouver’s BC Place will host the NSL’s first-ever match, a clash between co-owner Christine Sinclair’s Vancouver Rise FC against the visiting Calgary Wild FC.

Then on April 19th, AFC Toronto will host the Montreal Roses in BMO Field's first-ever NSL game, bringing the pro women's soccer action futher east and arguably initiating a rivalry between two of Canada's largest cities.

The final two NSL clubs will make their debuts one week later, with Halifax Tides FC hosting Calgary on April 26th before Ottawa Rapid FC takes the pitch against Toronto on April 27th.

The NSL has been busy putting the finishing touches on its 2025 launch, with multiple Olympic medalists and ex-NWSL standouts like Canada's own Quinn, Erin McLeod, and Desiree Scott joining the budding league.

Also featuring on NSL debut rosters are US athletes Nikki Stanton and Jasmyne Spencer, as well as Iceland standout Gunnhildur Jónsdóttir — giving the brand-new pro league a chance to flex its potential at the international level.

Angel City defender Jasmyne Spencer dribbles the ball up the pitch during a 2024 NWSL match against the Chicago Red Stars.
Former ACFC standout Jasmyne Spencer has joined Canada's Northern Super League. (Melissa Tamez/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

NSL sets full 2025 calendar, snags top broadcast partners

The inaugural NSL season will see all six clubs playing 25 regular-season matches for a league total of 75 matches. Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver will contend 12 of their matches at home, while Ottawa, Calgary, and Halifax scored 13 games in front of their home crowds.

At the end of regular-season play, the top four teams on the NSL table will qualify for the league's two-leg semifinals. After the home-and-away semis, the two clubs with the highest aggregate score will face-off in the league's first-ever championship match, set for November 15th.

All games will air across Canada via multiple broadcast partners, including TSN, which will broadcast 20 regular-season matches, and CBC, which will air eight. Both broadcasters will also make additional game available via their respective streaming platforms, CBC Gem and TSN+.

Rose BC Runs the Unrivaled 3×3 Basketball Table in Late-Season Surge

Rose BC's Angel Reese celebrates a bucket against the Lunar Owls during Friday's Unrivaled game.
Rose BC sits second in the Unrivaled standings on a five-game winning streak. (Rich Storry/Getty Images)

Rose BC is tearing up the 3×3 basketball court, stringing together a five-game winning streak to surge to second place in the Unrivaled standings.

Forward Angel Reese has led the squad, registering the league’s first-ever 20+ point, 20+ rebound game in Friday’s 72-63 win over the Lunar Owls — the first loss suffered by the top-ranked Unrivaled team thus far.

Reese continued to roll on offense, putting up 23 points and 14 rebounds to lift Rose atop Phantom BC 71-59 on Monday.

"She's finishing now, and she's also taking a lot of leadership with a Rose team that has done a really good job of getting themselves back," said Phantom BC’s Natasha Cloud after Monday’s clash. "Angel set the tone for them — I felt it tonight."

Lunar Owls star Skylar Diggins-Smith dribbles the ball against Rose BC's Brittney Sykes in Friday's Unrivaled game.
The Lunar Owls are the first Unrivaled team to book a spot in the March playoffs. (Rich Storry/Getty Images)

Unrivaled teams battle for first-ever league playoff spots

Rose BC's recent rise is coming at the perfect time. With less than a month to go in the debut league's regular season, the next few weeks will determine which four teams make it to Unrivaled's first-ever playoffs.

After Friday's loss to Rose BC, the first-place Lunar Owls bounced back with an 88-60 victory over the Laces on Saturday — a win that ultimately made co-founder Napheesa Collier's squad the first Unrivaled team to officially punch a postseason ticket.

"We made everyone raise their level of play, and tonight we showed why we’re still number one," said Lunar Owls guard Skylar Diggins-Smith after Saturday's win. 

Currently, Rose BC, Laces BC, and Vinyl BC are sitting above the postseason cut-off line, though the Mist and Phantom BC are each only one game behind the pack — putting every squad still well within striking distance of some inaugural season hardware.

With a locked-in group spanning some of the most talented — and competitive — basketball players in the world, expect even more late-season fireworks in the race to become Unrivaled’s first-ever champion on March 17th.

WTA Rankings Promote US Tennis Star Madison Keys to Career-High No. 5

US tennis star Madison Keys reacts to winning the 2025 Australian Open.
Keys is one of three US players currently in the Top 5 of the WTA rankings. (Robert Prange/Getty Images)

Newly minted Australian Open champion Madison Keys added the highest WTA rankings of her career to her resume on Monday, rising to No. 5 despite withdrawing from last week’s Dubai Open with a leg injury.

The first-time Grand Slam winner joins fellow US standouts No. 3 Coco Gauff and No. 4 Jessica Pegula in the Top 5 WTA rankings, marking the first time three US women have featured in that elite echelon since Serena Williams, Lindsay Davenport, and Jennifer Capriati did so in 2003.

While Emma Navarro slid in at No. 10 to give the US four of the Top 10 WTA rankings, a breakthrough title-winning run at the 2025 Dubai Open launched Mirra Andreeva into the upper tier. The 17-year-old jumped five spots to claim No. 9 and become the youngest Top 10-ranked WTA player since 2007.

The sport's top two players held steady in Monday's shakeup, with No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and No. 2 Iga Świątek keeping their ground.

That said, with the WTA Tour returning Stateside next week, expect more rankings movement — and perhaps a few surprise entries — as players continue to prep for the three Grand Slams remaining in the 2025 season.

Former WTA No. 1 Venus Williams will not play at Indian Wells

Contrary to last week’s widespread reports, tennis legend Venus Williams — who first rose to No. 1 in the WTA rankings 23 years ago this week — said she will not be participating in next month's 2025 BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.

"I love Indian Wells, I would love to be there," the 44-year-old US icon told the crowd during a public appearance in Denmark on Monday. "If I could have accepted it, I would have loved to be there, but I already made commitments."

"We wish Venus all the best and hope to see her back in Indian Wells in the future," said tournament director Tommy Haas in response, reversing the Open’s earlier social media announcement of Williams' wild card berth. 

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