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The Late Sub Talks the Future of the USWNT in Light of October Roster Drop

USWNT head coach Emma Hayes watches player substitutions during a match.
Head coach Emma Hayes' vision for the future USWNT takes shape with October roster drop. (Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

In today’s episode, host Claire Watkins runs down the October roster for the USWNT, discussing comments from head coach Emma Hayes that lays out her vision for the team's long preparation ahead of the 2027 Women's World Cup.

Later, Watkins marvels at yet another incredible 2024 WNBA Finals showdown, as the Liberty take a crucial 2-1 series advantage in their search for the franchise's first WNBA Championship title.

The Late Sub with Claire Watkins brings you the latest news and freshest takes in women’s sports. This is the weekly rundown you’ve been missing, covering the USWNT, NWSL, WNBA, college hoops, and whatever else is popping off in women’s sports each week. Special guest appearances with the biggest names in women’s sports make The Late Sub a must-listen for every fan. Follow Claire on X/Twitter @ScoutRipley and subscribe to the Just Women’s Sports newsletter for more.

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NWSL Stars Earn 2024 BBC Footballer of the Year Nominations

2024 BBC Footballer of the Year nominees Aitana Bonmatí and Caroline Graham Hansen of Barcelona and NWSL stars Barbra Banda, Naomi Girma, and Sophia Smith.
Alongside Barcelona's Aitana Bonmatí and Caroline Graham Hansen, NWSL standouts Barbra Banda, Naomi Girma, and Sophia Smith are up for BBC Footballer of the Year. (Just Women's Sports)

The BBC dropped its 2024 Footballer of the Year shortlist on Tuesday, with three of the five nominees hailing from the NWSL.

Orlando striker Barbra Banda, Portland forward Sophia Smith, and San Diego center back Naomi Girma headline the 10th edition of the traditionally UK-heavy award. Barcelona FC standouts Aitana Bonmatí and Caroline Graham Hansen round out the five-player selection.

A panel that includes coaches, players, journalists, and administrators selects the award's shortlist, with the final winner determined by fan votes.

Footballer of the Year looks outside the UK

Seven of the nine previous winners of the London-based broadcaster's award played their soccer, whether club or country, in the UK.

Only two-time BBC Footballer of the Year Ada Hegerberg, a Norwegian national and striker for Lyon, has earned the honor without a connection to England.

Hegerberg's 2019 win also came during the only other year when all five of the BBC's Footballer of the Year nominees played outside the UK.

USWNT defender and BBC Footballer of the Year nominee Naomi Girma looks upfield with the ball during a match.
USWNT and NWSL center back Naomi Girma is one of five BBC Footballer of the Year nominees this year. (John Todd/ISI/Getty Images)

Stellar resumes back the 2024 Footballer of the Year nominees

After winning Olympic gold in Paris this summer, USWNT stars, NWSL game-changers, and longtime friends Smith and Girma have dominated on both international and domestic pitches this year.

Along with her three Olympic goals, Thorns forward Smith has already matched her 2023 NWSL Golden Boot-winning tally of 11 goals in her 2024 campaign — despite being recently hampered by an ankle injury.

Representing the back line, Girma was the only field player to feature in every minute of the 2024 Paris Games, with USWNT boss Emma Hayes calling her "the best defender I have ever seen."

Despite such praise, the 2023 US Soccer Player of the Year was notably snubbed last month from the 2024 Ballon d'Or shortlist. The other four BCC-nominated players feature on both lists.

NWSL Orlando Pride forward and BBC Footballer of the Year nominee Barbra Banda in action during a NWSL match against Seattle Reign.
A strong NWSL Golden Boot award contender, Orlando's Barbra Banda has scored 13 goals so far this season. (Nicholas Faulkner/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Meanwhile, with 13 NWSL goals so far this season, Zambian national Banda is a frontrunner for the league's 2024 MVP award. With three hat tricks across the Tokyo and Paris Games, her 10 goals across those tournaments make her Africa's all-time leading Olympic scorer.

As for the Barça athletes, Norwegian national Hansen's injuries left her underrated for much of the 29-year-old's career, but her last two seasons with the Liga F side has seen her score an astounding 45 goals in 55 appearances.

Meanwhile, Bonmatí has secured every possible club-level trophy during her Barcelona career, including three UWCL titles. The 2023 World Cup champion with Spain is also the 2023 Ballon d'Or winner.

How to vote for the BBC 2024 Footballer of the Year

Fans worldwide can cast their votes online now through 5 AM ET on October 28th, with the winner announced on November 26th.

Mid-Table Battles Headline NWSL Weekend Games as Playoffs Loom

Louisville forward Uchenna Kanu beats Portland's Kelli Hubly for a goal in an NWSL game.
Saturday's match between Portland and Louisville has major NWSL playoff implications. (Jaime Valdez/Imagn Images)

The penultimate NWSL matchday has arrived, and there's no game with higher stakes this weekend than Saturday's clash between seventh-place Portland and ninth-place Louisville.

Both clubs sit three points from the postseason cutoff line, and while Louisville has everything to gain, the Thorns — who snapped Orlando’s unbeaten streak last weekend — have everything to lose.

Elsewhere in the NWSL, eighth-place Bay FC's Saturday test against the fifth-place Courage could determine multiple postseason fates. Meanwhile, ACFC hosts the surging Royals in a must-win match on Sunday.

Bay FC's Asisat Oshoala celebrates a goal in an NWSL game.
A Bay FC win on Saturday would eliminate three NWSL clubs from playoff contention. (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

NWSL playoff field comes down to two spots 

With just two regular-season games to go, six of the NWSL's eight playoff berths are locked, while six other teams — Portland, Bay FC, Louisville, Utah, Angel City, and San Diego — are looking to punch the last two tickets

This weekend's clinch and elimination scenarios:

  • Seventh-place Portland can secure a berth with a win over Louisville, or a draw with Louisville plus a Bay FC loss.
  • Eighth-place Bay FC can clinch with a win over North Carolina and a Louisville loss, or a draw with North Carolina plus a Louisville loss and a draw between Angel City and Utah.
  • A Bay FC win immediately eliminates Angel City, San Diego, and Utah.
  • To stay alive,​ 11th-place Angel City and 12th-place San Diego must win while 10th-place Utah must at least draw.
  • Ninth-place Louisville can only be eliminated with a loss to Portland plus a Bay FC win or draw.
Orlando's Adriana and Gotham's Tierna Davidson chase the soccer ball in an NWSL game.
2023 champs Gotham and 2024 NWSL Shield-winners Orlando will face off on Sunday. (Mike Watters/Imagn Images)

Hardware hoisters face off on Sunday

The top of the NWSL table has postseason berths and hosting duties all locked up, but even without playoff positioning on the line, Sunday's tilt between league-leaders Orlando and third-place Gotham is about more than bragging rights: The 2024 Shield-winners' visit to the 2023 champions feels like a postseason preview, all wrapped up in a Kelley O'Hara retirement party.

The Pride's response to their first season loss will unfold on Sunday's pitch while Gotham will be facing the only team to defeat them since June. Low stakes aside, this match is arguably all about momentum.

Angel City FC forward Christen Press celebrates with defender Jasmyne Spencer after scoring a goal against the North Carolina Courage in an NWSL game.
Angel City forward Christen Press will square off against the surging Utah Royals this weekend. (Jaylynn Nash-Imagn Images)

How to watch key NWSL matches this weekend

Portland kicks off against Louisville on Saturday at 7:30 PM ET before Bay FC takes on North Carolina at 10 PM ET, both on ION.

Then on Sunday, Angel City faces Utah at 7:30 PM ET, with live coverage on Paramount+.

The Pride's visit to Gotham will kick off at 5 PM ET on Sunday, with live coverage on ESPN.

South Carolina Tops Preseason AP Women’s College Basketball Rankings

South Carolina celebrates their 2023/24 NCAA women's college basketball championship.
South Carolina went undefeated in the 2023/24 NCAA women's college basketball basketball season. (Ben Solomon/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

Picking up right where they left off, 2024 NCAA champions South Carolina claimed the No. 1 spot on yesterday's AP Top 25 women’s college basketball poll. This marks the fourth time in five years the Gamecocks have topped the preseason rankings.

"We knew we'’'d have a target on our backs this season as the reigning champions and this preseason ranking just confirms that," South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley, who swept the 2024 Coach of the Year awards, told the AP.

"We appreciate the recognition, but I know our coaching staff and our team are more focused on what we see in the gym every day," she continued. "And that's every player working extremely hard to get better individually and as a team."

The 2024/25 Gamecock roster is nearly identical to last season's undefeated squad. With all but one starter — Chicago Sky rookie Kamilla Cardoso — returning, fans can expect to see stars like MiLaysia Fulwiley, Ashlyn Watkins, and Te-Hina Paopao continuing to set the standard in Columbia.

The Gamecocks, who blasted Memphis 106-63 in an exhibition game Tuesday night, will officially tip off their hunt for a third national championship in four seasons when they take on Michigan on November 4th. Over the previous three seasons, South Carolina has lost only three games.

UConn's Paige Bueckers and USC's JuJu Watkins face each other during an NCAA women's college basketball game.
UConn's Paige Bueckers and USC's JuJu Watkins lead their teams into the preseason Top 3. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Bueckers, Watkins boost NCAA teams' preseason stock

The impact of big-name players is palpable on the AP's preseason Top 25 list.

Dynasty UConn is on South Carolina's heels at No. 2, thanks in large part to projected No. 1 pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft, Paige Bueckers. Though like many Huskies, Bueckers battled injuries over the last few seasons, hampering UConn's impact.

Her return last year fueled the Huskies all the way to the Final Four. This season — both Bueckers's final collegiate season and legendary head coach Geno Auriemma's 40th year at the helm — she'll take aim at bringing UConn's first NCAA trophy since 2016 back to Storrs.

On the other coast, USC clocks into the AP poll at No. 3 behind headliner JuJu Watkins, who put up arguably the most impactful freshman campaign in NCAA history last year.

Watkins aside, the Pac-12 implosion and resulting conference realignment has other aspects of USC looking decidedly different this season. Now representing the Big Ten alongside fellow former Pac-12 squad No. 5 UCLA, USC picked up top transfers Kiki Iriafen (Stanford) and Talia von Oelhoffen (Oregon State) in the offseason to build a title-contending 2024/25 roster.

Last season's Big 12 champion No. 4 Texas will now play in the SEC. With standout Rori Harmon back from ACL injury to duet with Madison Booker — who stepped up in a huge way last season in Harmon's stead — the Longhorns look a tough addition to the conference.

Stanford players react during a 2024 March Madness NCAA women's college basketball game.
Stanford fell from the AP rankings for the first time since 1996. (John Todd/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

Former college basketball powerhouses omitted

With the departure of top players, a couple of last season's powerhouse teams failed to make the preseason Top-25 cut.

Without 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year Caitlin Clark, plus the retirement of longtime head coach Lisa Bluder, 2024 NCAA runners-up Iowa fell from the rankings.

The biggest snub, however, belongs to new ACC addition Stanford, who went unranked for the first time since 1999. The Cardinal lost LA Sparks rookie Cameron Brink alongside transfer Kiki Iriafen after Tara VanDerveer — the winningest coach in NCAA basketball history — retired last April.

Kiki Rice of UCLA dribbles the ball during an NCAA women's college basketball game.
Kiki Rice's UCLA fell from No. 2 in 2024 to No. 5 in this week's AP poll. (Kirk Irwin/Getty Images)

The preseason AP Top 25 women's college basketball poll

1. South Carolina (SEC)
2. UConn (Big East)
3. USC (Big Ten)
4. Texas (SEC)
5. UCLA (Big Ten)
6. Notre Dame (ACC)
7. LSU (SEC)
8. Iowa State (Big 12)
9. NC State (ACC)
10. Oklahoma (SEC)
11. Duke (ACC)
12. Baylor (Big 12)
13. Kansas State (Big 12)
14. Ohio State (Big Ten)
15. UNC (ACC)
16. West Virginia (Big 12)
17. Louisville (ACC)
18. Maryland (Big Ten)
19. Florida State (ACC)
20. Ole Miss (SEC)
21. Creighton (Big East)
22. Kentucky (SEC)
23. Nebraska (Big Ten)
24. Alabama (SEC)
25. Indiana (Big Ten)

NWSL Boston Causes a Stir With ‘BOS Nation’ Branding

The new BOS Nation FC logo
BOS Nation FC will take the pitch in 2026. (BOS Nation FC)

Set to take the pitch as the NWSL's 15th franchise in 2026, Boston's expansion team unveiled their official branding and promotional materials to markedly mixed reviews on Tuesday.

The team name, BOS Nation FC, is an anagram of Bostonian, a nickname the team describes as "worn proudly by millions across 23 neighborhoods and 48.4 square miles." 

The city's previous pro women's soccer team, the Boston Breakers, played in the folded WUSA and WPS before competing in the NWSL from 2013 through 2017. Boston was officially awarded an NWSL expansion team in September 2023.

Former NWSL star Alex Morgan runs in front of an NWSL LGBTQ+ Pride logo
BOS Nation's branding campaign drew criticism for being exclusionary and transphobic. (Ira L. Black - Corbis/Getty Images)

"Too Many Balls" campaign spurs backlash from NWSL players and fans

While enthusiasm for NWSL expansion continues, the team's "Too Many Balls" campaign drew wide criticism from fans and players alike. Many took to social media to post their concerns about the slogan's exclusionary gender-focused undertones, as well as the message's erasure of other Boston-based women's sports teams.

"As a Massachusetts native, I really want @NWSLBoston to succeed. I also want to shout out @PWHL_Boston, @BeantownRFC, and @GoRenegades as existing women's pro sports teams here to support!" posted former USWNT star Sam Mewis in response.

"The town and the players who will represent them deserve so much more," NWSL Players Association director Meghann Burke told The Athletic. "With the work that has gone into laying a strong foundation for Boston’s 2026 launch, I honestly did not perceive this team to be so unserious."

The overwhelming criticism was apparently unanticipated by the new franchise, as the team's branding release included a statement from Jennifer Epstein, the controlling owner of BOS Nation FC and a minority owner of the NBA's Boston Celtics.

"This is an important moment for women's sports in Boston — and for Bostonians to see that they are fully represented in the team name, brand identity, and even in the tongue-in-cheek tone of the unveil campaign," Epstein said in the release.

Boston team acknowledges campaign missteps

The swift critiques prompted the incoming franchise to release a statement of apology on Wednesday.

Acknowledging that the campaign "missed the mark," the team apologized to the LGBTQ+ community and, more specifically, the trans community "for the hurt we caused."

"Thank you to all who have held us accountable by calling for us to do better," the statement continued. "We hear you and we will, together."

In addition to the apology, the club removed their "Too Many Balls" campaign and merchandise from their website, as well as deleted it from most social media channels.

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