The Washington Spirit are one step closer to securing Trinity Rodman, with ESPN reporting late Thursday that the NWSL Board of Governors approved a new "High Impact Player" roster mechanism which will allow teams to exceed the current salary cap in order to retain stars.
Designed for use on players crucial to a team's competitive and commercial bottom line, the rule would permit clubs to spend up to $1 million over the cap with a limited hit.
The change will still need approval from the NWSL Players Association, with the union maintaining the ability to negotiate any deviations from the league's compensation structure under the current CBA.
The 11th-hour move could help the Spirit put together a more lucrative contract to re-sign USWNT forward Trinity Rodman, though the team's previous offer remains under arbitration after the league office vetoed the deal.
The new roster mechanism will likely come with individual restrictions, with sources telling ESPN that the NWSL "refined and updated" the "exact qualifications for players eligible for the new funds" prior to Thursday's board approval.
Notably, this is not the first time the league has made such a move to blur the salary cap line in order to keep star talent on its rosters.
The NWSL made similar salary cap concessions in 2020, introducing extra allocation money for certain top-line players before deciding to discontinue the rule by the end of 2026.
While the NWSL remains committed to the established salary cap, the league is also coming up with loopholes to compete in the growing global market — but only the future can tell whether the move is too little, too late to keep Rodman in DC.