The 2024/25 Women's Super League (WSL) season officially wraps on Saturday, with Chelsea preparing to claim even more history on the heels of their sixth-straight league title.
The still-undefeated Blues will face sixth-place Liverpool in their final outing, with Chelsea on the cusp of becoming the fourth-ever team to finish a WSL season unbeaten.
Should they do so, Chelsea will join 2012's Arsenal, 2016's Manchester City, and their own 2018 squad in achieving perfection — those this year's Blues would be the first to accomplish the feat in the expanded 22-match campaign.
While the team only needs a draw to remain undefeated, a win would secure Chelsea another record, becoming the first club to tally 60 points in a single campaign — two more than the current mark the Blues claimed in 2022/23.
Despite their astounding WSL record, the Blues have fought hard for their dominance this season, with first-year head coach Sonia Bompastor strategically using her entire roster to maintain the winning legacy left by now-USWNT boss Emma Hayes.
"Don't think it's easy. It's never easy," said Bompastor after Chelsea's 2024/25 title win. "It's a great achievement and a lot of work every day — I don't let my players breathe."

Battle for second-place continues on final WSL matchday
While Chelsea chases records, other top WSL clubs are still jockeying for positions on the league's final 2024/25 table.
Along with the Blues, Arsenal and Manchester United are locked into Champions League qualifying positions for next season — but United could leapfrog Arsenal for a second-place WSL finish on Saturday.
Separated by just one point, the Red Devils and the Gunners will face off against each other in the season's final blockbuster matchup.
Arsenal has extra incentive for a good showing, as the Gunners try to snap their two-game WSL losing streak and gain momentum before battling Barcelona in the May 24th Champions League final.
Chelsea also has a shot at another trophy looming, with the Blues chasing a second domestic treble — winning the league, FA Cup, and League Cup.
However, a tough Manchester United stands in the way of Chelsea's third and final treble title, with the pair facing off in the FA Cup's May 18th championship match.
How to watch WSL matches this weekend
All 12 WSL teams will kick off their season's last matches at 7:30 AM ET on Saturday.
Both Chelsea's game against Liverpool and Manchester United's visit to Arsenal will stream live on ESPN+.
WSL side Manchester City parted ways with manager Gareth Taylor on Monday, just five days before the club faces table-leaders Chelsea in Saturday’s League Cup final — and nine days before they meet Chelsea once again in the UEFA Champions League quarterfinals.
In his nearly five years at the helm, Taylor led Man City to an overall 117-15-29 record, picking up the 2020 FA Cup and 2022 League Cup along the way.
Taylor departs just one year into a three-year contract renewal with the club.
"Manchester City prides itself on competing at the top of the WSL and on its outstanding record of qualifying for European competition," said Man City managing director Charlotte O'Neill in a club statement. "Unfortunately, results this season have so far not reached this high standard."
Former City coach Nick Cushing — who led the team from 2013 to 2020 — will take over interim manager duties for the remainder of the season.
Taylor’s dismissal follows a number of big-name WSL coaching changes, with Arsenal’s Jonas Eidevall and Liverpool’s Matt Beard both exiting the league this season.
Eidevall has since taken over as head coach for the NWSL’s San Diego Wave.
Despite rumblings that Taylor could follow suit and fill the vacancy with the Wave’s SoCal rival Angel City, those rumors appear to be overblown.

Manchester City still in the hunt for non-WSL titles
Sitting 12 points behind Chelsea with just six matchdays left in their 2024/25 season, fourth-place Man City's WSL title hopes have dimmed. However, they remain very much in the running for the League Cup, FA Cup, and Champions League honors.
That said, the Citizens are staring down an unusually demanding gauntlet against one of the world’s top clubs this month.
After facing Chelsea in Saturday's League Cup final and next week's Champions League quarterfinals, City will again take on the Blues in a March 23rd regular-season matchup before wrapping up the pair's two-leg Champions League quarters on March 27th.
Ultimately, the pressure for top WSL teams to properly challenge Chelsea’s years-long dominance is mounting — and some coaches appear to be bearing the brunt of those ambitions.
Liverpool women are moving on to the Women’s Super League after clinching the Women’s Championship on Sunday. The club’s 4-2 win over Bristol City sealed the promotion with two games left on the schedule.
Niamh Fahey opened scoring for Liverpool, knocking in a loose ball in the box to give the visitors the 1-0 lead.
The @Niamh_Fahey1 goal that gave us the lead, before an instant response from the hosts ⚽pic.twitter.com/lLpgAIe4Ou
— Liverpool FC Women (@LiverpoolFCW) April 3, 2022
Liverpool’s advantage was short-lived, with Aggie Beever-Jones responding a minute later to bring Bristol City even.
Jasmine Matthews restored Liverpool’s lead just before the half, striking a close-range shot to put the game at 2-1. The goals kept coming after the break, with Katie Stengel pulling one back to add to Liverpool’s tally.
That's now 7️⃣ for the season for @ksteng12! 🇺🇸pic.twitter.com/0DmJA0qpk6
— Liverpool FC Women (@LiverpoolFCW) April 3, 2022
Bristol City’s Abi Harrison cut into Liverpool’s lead with her 15th goal of the season to put her side within one. Missy Bo Kerns, however, sealed Liverpool’s 4-2 win in the 79th minute.
Liverpool improved to a 15-4-1 record with the win and will play in the WSL for the first time since the 2019-20 season.
Liverpool Women have announced Matt Beard as the club’s next manager.
Most recently, Beard served as Bristol City interim manager while Tanya Oxtoby was on maternity leave.
Welcome back to the Reds, @mattbeard02! 🙌🔴
— Liverpool FC Women (@LiverpoolFCW) May 13, 2021
We're delighted to announce that Matt Beard has been appointed as our new manager. pic.twitter.com/I6OjoW2x6a
Beard is familiar with Liverpool, having led the club to back-to-back WSL titles in 2013 and 2014.
“I’m delighted to be back at Liverpool Women,” Beard said in a statement Thursday. “When the opportunity arose, it was something I wanted to do. I’ve always followed the club since I left — it’s close to my heart.”
Liverpool spent the past season trying to claw their way back into the Women’s Super League after being relegated to the Championship in 2020. After a loss to eventual winner Leicester City in January, Liverpool ended the season in third place and missed out on the WSL bounce-back opportunity.
Beard will be tasked with leading the club back to the Super League when he takes over for the 2022 season.
Back in 2017, Liverpool F.C. announced that it would be expanding its academy training ground in Kirkby so that the men’s first team would train alongside the reserves. The men’s first team, who at the time trained at Melwood, would be welcomed to the AXA Training Centre after a £50 million 9,200 square metre building was added which included ultramodern facilities: full-size gyms, a swimming pool, sports rehabilitation suites for those recovering from injuries, a tennis court, press conference facilities, in-house television studios, and more.
Inside Liverpool's new AXA Training Centre ???? pic.twitter.com/RfdSQiZhN1
— Liverpool FC News (@LivEchoLFC) November 17, 2020
The original plan was to have the first team move to the new training ground before the start of the 2020/21 season, but the delays in construction due to the pandemic pushed back the move date to November.
Liverpool's new AXA Training Centre in Kirkby has been officially opened this morning.
— Caoimhe O'Neill (@CaoimheSport) November 17, 2020
Today is the first time #LFC will train as a squad at the £50m complex - 722 days after construction first began on the facility.https://t.co/EJ4IzrmL83
The men’s first team had their first training session on November 17th. Based on videos, pictures, and quotes from head coach Jürgen Klopp, other members of the coaching staff, and the players, it has exceeded all their expectations, not only regarding the amenities but simply the sheer size of the training centre.
You’d think that with all its unique features, The AXA Training Centre, which is considered by many, one of the best training centers for a football club in the world, would have enough room for the women’s team. Unfortunately, the club deemed that the women’s team would stay put at their current training ground. The Campus, as it’s called, is shared with Tranmere Rovers’ men’s team, a team that now plays in League Two, the fourth tier of men’s football in England. Liverpool’s women’s team likewise plays their home matches at Prenton Park, the home ground of Tranmere’s men’s team. It seems that Tranmere Rovers are doing more for Liverpool’s women team than Liverpool themselves.
A lack of effort being put into its women’s team isn’t something new for Liverpool. The team remains significantly underfunded, and multiple players have left the club in recent years saying they hope to rediscover the joy of football.
Back in 2018, Siobhan Chamberlain left the club after the end of her contract. In her goodbye message, she stated “It’s important to me that I’m in an environment that challenges me every day and one where I can enjoy playing football. I also want to know I am part of a project that’s doing the most it can to develop the women’s game.”
Thank you @LFCladiesfans. pic.twitter.com/GNcXUPbaKO
— Siobhan ⚽️???????? (@Sio_Chamberlain) May 18, 2018
Chamberlain was just the first of many players who felt a lack of support from the club. Once Casey Stoney, a former Liverpool player, became manager of Manchester United, she was able to attract Chamberlain, as well as six other Liverpool players to United: Alex Greenwood, Martha Harris, Naomi Hartley, Emily Ramsey, Lucy Roberts, and Amy Turner. For that many players to leave a club in the FAWSL for a club then in the FA Women’s Championship further confirmed that things were not going well for Liverpool.
Flash forward to 2020, and many players have left the club echoing the words of Chamberlain. Christie Murray stated that she wanted to work in an environment that challenges her and that she wanted to enjoy doing what she loved again.
1/2 As my two years at Liverpool come to an end, I just want to thank my team mates and the fans for their incredible support over both seasons. pic.twitter.com/QpmcNo26pb
— Christie Murray (@christiemurray7) May 30, 2020
Fran Kitching stated that she couldn’t wait to enjoy the game that she loved again and truly be happy.
Excited for my next chapter...???? pic.twitter.com/Li1khh1si8
— Fran Kitching (@FranKitching) June 2, 2020
Courtney Sweetman-Kirk wanted a new environment that challenged her as a person and a player, and a new club that would allow her to have a smile on her face.
— Courtz Sweetman-Kirk ???? (@_CSK9) May 23, 2020
Sweetman-Kirk expanded on this in an interview with Sky Sports, stating that “There has been a slow but definite decline in terms of maybe the investment that the club is getting [in comparison] from the men’s side,” and that she felt that “how you make people feel and what your place is within the club as a whole hasn’t been fantastic.”
Players are not the only ones speaking out. Neil Redfearn, who was hired in early June of 2018 to rebuild the team, quit in September of the same year, after just one game in charge. It’s also been heavily reported that Liverpool are understaffed when it comes to the women’s team. In 2019, only ten people were listed as full time workers, with the rest of the coaching staff and players only listed as part-time workers. Liverpool is one of the most successful clubs in England, and with success comes revenue and profit. Enough to pay everyone full-time salaries.
These problems have affected performances on the pitch; earlier this year, while the men’s team was celebrating their first Premier League title in 30 years, the women’s team, who won the league back to back in 2013 and 2014, was relegated to the FA Women’s Championship. They currently sit 4th in the table, and it is unlikely that they’ll be promoted back to the FAWSL for the 2021/2o22 season.
It further hurts to see Liverpool in this position when other clubs in both the FAWSL and the FA Women’s Championship are drastically upping their support of their women’s sides. Most of these teams either have their women’s teams train in the same facilities as the men’s team or they have an equally impressive training ground separate for them. These teams have put in the investment, and their progress has shown on the pitch.
Arsenal, Chelsea, and Manchester City are now the ‘Big Three’ in the FAWSL, having alternated league titles since Liverpool last won in 2014. They have some of the best players and coaches in the world, all of whom are on full-time contracts. Everton and Manchester United have recently put more investment in their respective women’s teams as well, and this season, they’re giving the ‘Big Three’ their first real competition in years, with United currently sitting first in the table, and Everton in fourth, ahead of Manchester City.
LFC have maintained the ethos “Two teams, one club” when discussing the relationship between the men’s and women’s team, but their actions fail to show that is the case. It’s easy to preach the words “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” but in practice, that’s exactly what the Liverpool women have been forced to do.
Two teams. One club. ♥️
— Liverpool FC Women (@LiverpoolFCW) October 1, 2019
???? @LFC x #LFCWomen ???? pic.twitter.com/3mMZdYg9FR