Raising the Game: A Women’s Sports Podcast

Episode 23 | Hilary Knight's PWHL Sign-and-Trade, Lynx on Top, and USWNT drops one to Brazil

1 h 15 min · 10. Juni 2026
Episode Episode 23 | Hilary Knight's PWHL Sign-and-Trade, Lynx on Top, and USWNT drops one to Brazil Cover

Beschreibung

Hilary Knight's PWHL expansion saga ended with the wildest move of the process: Vegas signed her via an expansion franchise offer and immediately traded her to Detroit for a first-round pick. It was completely legal, it was a long time coming, and it tells you everything about how expansion teams are already thinking about winning before the draft even happens. Episode 23 breaks down both phases of PWHL expansion in full detail. We cover who got protected (and who got surprisingly left out, including Knight herself by Seattle), how Detroit and Hamilton built rosters that already look like playoff contenders, and what San Jose and Vegas are working with heading into next week's draft. We also react to Nelly Korda's dominant LPGA season and a stunning result at Roland Garros. This week we dig into: * PWHL expansion phases 1 and 2: which players were protected, which teams are winning the early roster race, and the full story behind the Hilary Knight sign-and-trade that landed her in Detroit in exchange for a first-round draft pick * Nelly Korda wins the 2026 US Women's Open at Riviera Country Club for her second consecutive major and fourth overall, finishing first or second in seven of her eight tournament starts this season * Mirra Andreeva wins the French Open at 19 years old, becoming the youngest Roland Garros women's champion since Monica Seles in 1992, with her opponent being a qualifier who had to survive extra matches just to reach the final * USWNT falls 2-1 to Brazil in the first of two friendlies in the 2027 World Cup host nation, with Sophia Wilson scoring her first international goal since returning from maternity leave, and real questions about defensive discipline under the pressure of 31,000 fans * WNBA Commissioner's Cup standings check-in, a bold prediction for the championship game, and why the New York Liberty are quietly lurking in the standings Also on the show: Serena Williams' doubles comeback with Victoria Mboko at the HSBC Championship, the Texas Longhorns winning their second consecutive college softball World Series with 1.5 million viewers per game (up 33% year over year), and Team USA's Women's Basketball 3-on-3 squad claiming the World Cup in Warsaw. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage. Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

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Alle Folgen

26 Folgen

Episode Episode 26 | The Door - Part 2: Ann Meyers Said Yes When the World Laughed, Lisa Leslie's WNBA Legacy, Venus changes Wimbledon Cover

Episode 26 | The Door - Part 2: Ann Meyers Said Yes When the World Laughed, Lisa Leslie's WNBA Legacy, Venus changes Wimbledon

This is The Door Part 2, part of our Trailblazers series — the women's sports history special that picks up where Episode 13 left off, moving into the modern era with six athletes who each forced a renegotiation of the terms the sports world handed them. Timely on two fronts: Venus and Serena Williams are playing Wimbledon doubles together as this drops, and the WNBA is celebrating its 30th anniversary. From a 1979 NBA training camp in Indiana to Simone Biles on the floor in Paris, this episode traces what "opening the door" actually cost — and what it made possible. This week we cover: * Ann Meyers Drysdale and the 1979 Indiana Pacers tryout: The Pacers signed a woman to a $50,000 free agent contract and invited her to training camp. She didn't make the team — but the tryout reframed what was considered possible. She went on to pioneer women's sports broadcasting in men's leagues and front office leadership for an NBA franchise, all at a time when neither was supposed to exist. * Lisa Leslie and the founding of the WNBA: When Leslie signed with the Los Angeles Sparks in 1997, she passed on better-paying overseas contracts to help build the league from scratch. Twelve seasons, two championships, three MVPs, and the first dunk in WNBA history. She understood personal brand before the term existed, and Caitlin Clark's arrival in 2024 traces directly back to what Leslie chose to build and stay for. * Venus Williams and equal pay at Wimbledon: Venus published an op-ed in the Times of London in 2006 — with data — and Wimbledon equalized prize money in 2007. She and Serena, back on the doubles court this week, have been among the most dominant forces in the sport for 30 years running. * Megan Rapinoe and the USWNT equal pay lawsuit: Filed in March 2019, three months before the World Cup. Settled for $24 million in February 2022. The legal blueprint the team created is now being referenced by federations around the world. * Simone Biles and the right to say no: Her withdrawal at the Tokyo 2021 team final — citing the twisties — was polarizing at the time. Her Paris 2024 comeback, three gold medals, reframed the conversation entirely around athlete mental health and what it looks like to set a boundary on the world's biggest stage. The episode also covers Caitlin Clark's impact on WNBA attendance (up nearly 50% year-over-year in 2024) and the hosts' honest take on the complicated narrative forming around her heading into the 2025 season. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage.Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

Gestern1 h 26 min
Episode Episode 25 | Serena's Wimbledon Singles Comeback, WNBA Grows to 50 Games, PWHL Draft Drama Cover

Episode 25 | Serena's Wimbledon Singles Comeback, WNBA Grows to 50 Games, PWHL Draft Drama

Serena Williams is back in Grand Slam singles for the first time since 2022, and she's doing it at Wimbledon, on the grass, with a wild card and no ranking. At 44, she's entering the draw at its most unpredictable entry point while also teaming up with Venus (who just turned 46) for doubles, where the two have won six Wimbledon titles together. The Queens Club already showed what her presence means: sellout days, a 300% spike in social media engagement, and capacity at 95%. All eyes are heading to the All England Club. This week also brings major news from the WNBA, which announced a 50-game regular season beginning in 2027, and the NWSL resumes from its World Cup break with one of the busiest transfer windows the league has seen. This episode covers: * Serena's Wimbledon return: the wild card, the Venus doubles reunion, and the business case — what her presence does to ticket sales, attendance, and broadcast attention at a Grand Slam * WNBA expands to 50 games: what jumping from 44 games means for scheduling, salaries, broadcast deals, and the possibility of international WNBA games on the horizon * NWSL returns from the World Cup break: Sam Kerr signs with Gotham FC, Angel City fires their head coach and reshuffles the roster, Wave star Dudinha tears her ACL, Denver Summit gains Lindsey Heaps coming off her Lyon career, and Bay FC fighting to stay relevant * The NWSL's Men's World Cup moment: how the NWSL and US Soccer are using the tournament as a marketing springboard — from sidewalk stencils to Emma Hayes tactics breakdowns — and why right now may matter more than the Women's World Cup next year * PWHL Draft recap: Detroit builds a veteran powerhouse (Hillary Knight via sign-and-trade, Daryl Watts, Brenda Curl), while Seattle Torrent loses its biggest names and selects Abbey Murphy, dividing a fanbase that takes inclusion seriously We also run the WNBA heat check at 15 games, break the league into contenders, challengers, and disruptors, and preview the All-Star game in Chicago on July 25th. Plus, it's Episode 25 — we celebrate with stats from 24 episodes of covering women's sports. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage. Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

24. Juni 20261 h 26 min
Episode Ep 24 | NWSL's Bold World Cup Marketing Bet, PWHL Entry Draft Day, WNBA MVP Watch Cover

Ep 24 | NWSL's Bold World Cup Marketing Bet, PWHL Entry Draft Day, WNBA MVP Watch

The Men's World Cup is in the U.S., and the NWSL isn't sitting it out — they're turning 1.42 billion soccer fans into a fan acquisition opportunity. With their "Summer of Soccer" initiative, the NWSL is making one of the most intentional marketing plays in women's sports history. Caitlin and Alex dig into the research on who the women's sports fan actually is — the fluid fan, the new-to-sports fan, the one who learned to navigate a dozen streaming apps because broadcast TV never made room — and why that fan base represents a structural shift in how women's sports grows, not just a short-term spike. The data is genuinely wild: televised women's sports content hit 370 million viewer hours in 2024, up 430% from 2021. The product has always been there. The access is finally catching up. This week we cover: * The NWSL's "Summer of Soccer" marketing push: how the league is using the Men's World Cup as a conversion play for new fans, what CMO Rachel Epstein is actually saying, and the search and app gaps women's sports fans have had to navigate for decades * PWHL Entry Draft (it's today!): coaching updates close out with Christine Bumstead to Seattle and Kim Weiss to Vegas, plus the hosts' take on Pascal Realme's controversial Toronto hire. Then full first-round predictions — starting with KK Harvey going #1 overall to Vancouver, and working through all 12 picks * Lynx vs. Aces, 97-100: a close loss that didn't feel that close until the final minutes, second-chance points as the story of the game, and why the Lynx are still the best team in the league (per Caitlin) * WNBA MVP Watch: the cases for Olivia Miles, Kelsey Plum (seriously, why isn't she getting more attention?), A'ja Wilson, and Breanna Stewart — and whether a rookie can win MVP and Rookie of the Year in the same season * USWNT vs. Brazil in Fortaleza: a 1-0 win with eight red cards all going to Brazil, Sophia Wilson forcing the own goal, Brazilian head coach Arthur Elias getting ejected for putting a pinnie on a referee, and Dudinha's devastating ACL/meniscus diagnosis [NAME CHECK: "Duginia" in transcript — confirmed as Dudinha, San Diego Wave forward] Plus: Serena Williams back on the doubles court at the Berlin Open and eyeing Wimbledon, Wimbledon's record 20% prize money bump to £64.2 million, Kelsey Plum officially signs with Adidas, and Gotham FC breaks ground on a new purpose-built training facility in New Jersey. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage.Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

17. Juni 20261 h 20 min
Episode Episode 23 | Hilary Knight's PWHL Sign-and-Trade, Lynx on Top, and USWNT drops one to Brazil Cover

Episode 23 | Hilary Knight's PWHL Sign-and-Trade, Lynx on Top, and USWNT drops one to Brazil

Hilary Knight's PWHL expansion saga ended with the wildest move of the process: Vegas signed her via an expansion franchise offer and immediately traded her to Detroit for a first-round pick. It was completely legal, it was a long time coming, and it tells you everything about how expansion teams are already thinking about winning before the draft even happens. Episode 23 breaks down both phases of PWHL expansion in full detail. We cover who got protected (and who got surprisingly left out, including Knight herself by Seattle), how Detroit and Hamilton built rosters that already look like playoff contenders, and what San Jose and Vegas are working with heading into next week's draft. We also react to Nelly Korda's dominant LPGA season and a stunning result at Roland Garros. This week we dig into: * PWHL expansion phases 1 and 2: which players were protected, which teams are winning the early roster race, and the full story behind the Hilary Knight sign-and-trade that landed her in Detroit in exchange for a first-round draft pick * Nelly Korda wins the 2026 US Women's Open at Riviera Country Club for her second consecutive major and fourth overall, finishing first or second in seven of her eight tournament starts this season * Mirra Andreeva wins the French Open at 19 years old, becoming the youngest Roland Garros women's champion since Monica Seles in 1992, with her opponent being a qualifier who had to survive extra matches just to reach the final * USWNT falls 2-1 to Brazil in the first of two friendlies in the 2027 World Cup host nation, with Sophia Wilson scoring her first international goal since returning from maternity leave, and real questions about defensive discipline under the pressure of 31,000 fans * WNBA Commissioner's Cup standings check-in, a bold prediction for the championship game, and why the New York Liberty are quietly lurking in the standings Also on the show: Serena Williams' doubles comeback with Victoria Mboko at the HSBC Championship, the Texas Longhorns winning their second consecutive college softball World Series with 1.5 million viewers per game (up 33% year over year), and Team USA's Women's Basketball 3-on-3 squad claiming the World Cup in Warsaw. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage. Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

10. Juni 20261 h 15 min
Episode Episode 22 | Caitlin Clark's Defense Is a Liability, PWHL Expansion Begins, Triple Espresso Is Back Cover

Episode 22 | Caitlin Clark's Defense Is a Liability, PWHL Expansion Begins, Triple Espresso Is Back

After a 16-point blowout loss to the Portland Fire, the rest of the WNBA is circling something on the whiteboard: Caitlin Clark's defensive game is a weakness teams are now actively targeting. Alex and Caitlin break down the Fever's recent skid — a viral bench huddle moment, Clark skipping a postgame press conference after the Golden State loss, and Portland's suffocating defensive game plan that turned an 8-2 Fever lead into a 17-2 Portland run. The bigger concern isn't any single game. It's the pattern: teams are ISo-ing whoever Clark is guarding, she's getting blown by or into foul trouble, and the team's offensive firepower can't always bail them out. On the flip side, the Minnesota Lynx are sitting at the top of the WNBA standings, Olivia Miles is already a rookie of the year frontrunner, and Natasha Howard is playing some of the best basketball of her career. This week we cover: * Indiana Fever and Caitlin Clark: The defense problem is real. Gino Auriemma said it years ago, Portland just proved it, and the question is whether Clark can fix it before it costs the Fever a playoff run. Plus: what Becky Hammon's fiery postgame presser after the Aces-Wings game tells us about the WNBA's officiating inconsistency this season. * PWHL expansion draft begins: The PWHL released its first-ever salary transparency data. 66% of the league earns under $60K, with Emily Clark of Ottawa the highest paid at $127,000. Now free agency has opened and the four new expansion teams (San Jose, Hamilton, Detroit, Vegas) are starting to build rosters. Alex and Caitlin walk through phases one and two of the expansion process and why Kendall Coyne Schofield could end up playing for her home-state team. * PWHL awards and coaching: Two goalies — Anne-Renée Desbiens and Erin Frankel — are both in the running for Billie Jean King MVP alongside Kelly Pannek, a first in league history. Also: only three of twelve PWHL head coaches are women, and Caitlin is not letting that slide. * Triple Espresso reunites: Mallory Swanson, Trinity Rodman, and Sophia Wilson are all back on the USWNT roster for the Brazil friendlies. Their first time together since the 2024 Olympic gold medal match. With the 2027 Women's World Cup qualification window approaching, Emma Hayes has made it clear: there's no time to waste. * NWSL June break breakdown: Utah Royals are unbeaten in 10 games, San Diego Wave look like the most complete team in the league, and the break might be the one thing that can stop Utah's momentum. Also: the Chicago Stars fired GM Richard Fuez after a 0-9-3 start and a minus-19 goal differential. Plus: Alexia Putellas leaves Barcelona after 14 seasons and 232 goals, Bunny Shaw becomes the highest-paid women's footballer at $2.3M per year after signing a new deal with Man City, Serena Williams is returning to doubles, and Holly Rowe live-streamed the College Softball World Series after ESPN cut the feed. Dense week. Follow Raising the Game for weekly women's sports coverage.Instagram/Threads/YouTube: @rtg_podWebsite: rtgpod.comSubstack: substack.com/@raisingthegamepodcastEmail: raisingthegamepod@gmail.com [raisingthegamepod@gmail.com]

3. Juni 20261 h 33 min