Gotham FC is cleaning house, following up Monday's splashy Jaedyn Shaw trade with even more roster moves as the No. 6 NWSL club prepares for a major playoff push.

The Bats officially fulfilled defensive midfielder and 2023 NWSL champion Nealy Martin's trade request on Tuesday, sending her to Angel City in exchange for $85,000 in intra-league funds.

"More than anything I want to thank the Gotham community for taking a chance and believing in me," Martin said in a club statement. "I gave my heart and soul to this club, and a piece of me will always remain in NJ/NY."

Martin's departure is just one recent roster shift, with Gotham also loaning out recently acquired forward Princess Ademiluyi as they look to incorporate Shaw — and her league-record $1.25 million transfer fee — into their system.

Gotham is banking on long-term success from the 19-year-old, signing Ademiluyi from WSL mainstay West Ham United through the 2029 season before sending the England youth national team attacker for further development with USL Super League side Fort Lauderdale United FC on Tuesday.

Big-name NWSL signings tend to create a domino effect, and as long as they have the money, now is the time for mid-table teams like Gotham to trade as the 2025 season inches closer to crunch-time.

Denver Summit FC scored its first-ever player this week, with ESPN reporting Monday that the 2026 expansion side has landed 2024 NWSL champion and Colorado product Ally Watt from the Orlando Pride.

The 28-year-old forward has logged one goal and one assist in her 13 matches so far this season, and posted three goals and four assists in Orlando's record-breaking 2024 campaign.

"One thing that makes us really unique is this talent pool of Colorado players," Denver Summit GM Curt Johnson told ESPN about the club's aim to welcome homegrown athletes. "Colorado has been fertile ground for this sport for a long time. We're going to dig into that, and we're going to hire people that have made their names as a result of their upbringing in soccer in Colorado."

In return for Watt, Orlando will receive $75,000 in expansion allocation money and $37,500 in transfer funds.

While the trade is a done deal, the Denver Summit immediately loaned Watt back to the Pride for the rest of the 2025 season, with Orlando also gaining additional salary cap relief with the temporary loan.

Such intra-league loans are new to the NWSL, introduced in part to help incoming teams Denver and fellow 2026 addition Boston Legacy FC build out their rosters without an expansion draft.

Both franchises have a cache of over $1 million in allocation money available to add players beyond the league's salary cap and transfer thresholds.

With that in mind, the Boston Legacy has opted to stock up on both international signings as well as up-and-coming US talent in recent weeks.


The NWSL outlined new rules for expansion roster building and intra-league loans on Thursday, as two new franchises prepare to enter the league in 2026 without the benefit of an expansion draft.

"With the introduction of free agency and the elimination of the NWSL Draft and Expansion Draft, it was important for us to establish alternative player acquisition assets that support incoming teams while maintaining competitive balance across the league," said NWSL VP of player affairs Stephanie Lee in a league announcement.

Incoming clubs Boston Legacy FC and NWSL Denver will each have access to over $1 million in allocation funds to spend on players beginning on July 1st through the end of 2027.

Both teams can also sign players without being held to a salary cap until the secondary transfer window in 2025, providing players can be loaned out, put on Season Ending Injury designation, or acquired with allocation money used toward the salary cap.

Once the secondary transfer window opens this year, both Boston and Denver will have a $250,000 cap under which they can ink college athletes or international players not under contract.

In addition, the NWSL declared open season on intra-league loans on Thursday, allowing all teams to add athletes to their rosters from other league entities — provided both the player and the league approve the loan.

Each team can have no more than 12 players either in or out on loan at a time, and clubs can only bring in or send out a maximum of three athletes to/from any other single squad.

Overall, the NWSL intends these moves to bolster competition for both its current and future clubs.

"The introduction of intra-league loans — available to all teams — adds greater flexibility and opportunity for player development and strategic roster management league-wide," noted Lee.