Women’s sports is having a moment — as the Husky-crazed residents of Connecticut know better than anyone else.Last year was record-breaking for women’s teams across all professional sports, as they generated $1.88 billion in revenue, according to Deloitte. The global CPA firm’s recent report projects women’s sports will top that in 2025, generating a forecasted […]
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Women’s sports is having a moment — as the Husky-crazed residents of Connecticut know better than anyone else.
Last year was record-breaking for women’s teams across all professional sports, as they generated $1.88 billion in revenue, according to Deloitte. The global CPA firm’s recent report projects women’s sports will top that in 2025, generating a forecasted $2.35 billion.
It’s in this promising landscape that an entirely new league is getting in on the action.
The Women’s Pro Baseball League (WPBL) is launching in the summer of 2026 with six teams representing yet-to-be announced locations.

Its founders, led by legendary player and coach Justine Siegal, are bullish on the prospects and have already announced a major media deal with British television company Fremantle. All of this has grabbed the attention of Ridgefield resident John Freyer.
“One of my favorite movies was ‘A League of Their Own’ — I just have fond memories of it,” he said, referring to the 1992 film starring Geena Davis and Madonna, which tells the story of the last time the U.S. had a professional women’s baseball league.
That was back in the 1940s, when the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League toured during World War II. The league folded in 1954, meaning there hasn’t been professional women’s baseball in the U.S. for some 70 years.

Freyer, a digital marketing and e-commerce executive, believes that Connecticut — with its historic love of the game, its support for women’s sports and a highly successful minor league men’s team (the Hartford Yard Goats) — could provide fertile ground for a professional women’s baseball team.
That’s why he’s heading up the Connecticut Baseball Project.
“I just started asking questions and the next thing I know, I was like, you know what? I’m going to put something together,” he said. “I really think we can generate some buzz around bringing a team to Connecticut.”
“Nestled between Yankees and Red Sox Nation, Connecticut is a state where fans are fiercely divided, and yet we share a deep love for the game,” the Project’s website says. “With quick access to New York City by train and just a short drive from either end of the state, Connecticut is perfectly positioned for a professional team.”
But is it?
Despite women’s sports’ national success, the future of Connecticut’s only professional team, the WNBA’s Connecticut Sun, is uncertain. The Sun play in what is the WNBA’s smallest media market, and the team’s owner — the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority — recently indicated it’s open to a sale, perhaps to avoid having to make a major investment in a practice facility.
“Understanding the business aspect is where the rubber meets the road,” Freyer said. “At the end of the day, for anyone to bring any investment into this to help out, they need to be able to see some type of return.”
He’s just formed Connecticut Athletic Company LLC to take the baseball project forward, and is in talks for real financial backing. But he’s also remaining realistic. He knows Connecticut won’t be in the hunt for one of the first six slots in the league launch next summer, but he hopes it will make it onto the roster for the league expansion after that.
“In order to have a franchise from this league, obviously the real estate and infrastructure has to be sorted out prior to even putting in a bid,” he said. “So, my number one focus right now is contacting venues and getting the idea of what something like that would look like if we were to partner with any type of college or university.”
‘Long overdue’
Venues are also on the mind of Keith Stein, the co-founder of the Women’s Pro Baseball League.

He’s all in on the women’s baseball concept. So much so that he’s just helped break the gender barrier in Canadian baseball, signing female Japanese phenom Ayami Sato to a team he co-owns — the Toronto Maple Leafs — in the country’s Intercounty Baseball League.
When she threw out her first pitch in the Leafs’ season opener May 11, Sato became the first woman to play in a professional men’s league in Canada.
“It’s long overdue,” Stein said.
Stein says the six teams in the initial U.S. league launch will play in just two pre-existing stadiums, yet to be announced, likely with a capacity of around 3,000 to 5,000 seats.
“Everything we do in this league has to be thoughtful and strategic,” he said. “But ultimately, every team will have its own stadium.”
Stein has decided to go for a single-owner model for the league, at least in the first few years, to establish standard protocols throughout all teams. He won’t reveal the amount the league is aiming to raise as it gets off the ground, but it has announced an advisory relationship with Muse Capital, a California-based, early-stage venture investor.
Muse Capital’s founding partner Assia Grazioli-Venier was also appointed WPBL’s board chair and will lead the search for a CEO.
Muse is invested in other aspects of women’s sports, including the pro soccer team Washington Spirit. Grazioli-Venier was the first woman to be appointed to the board of legendary Italian club Juventus, where she helped launch Juventus Women.
Eventually, Stein says, the league wants to sell WPBL franchises to potential owners around the country — and he indicates that the Connecticut Baseball Project may have stiff competition.
“We’ve had many, many offers and expressions of interest in buying individual franchises from great groups and great individuals who are passionate about women’s sport,” he said. “Ultimately, there could be 32 teams.”
New England appeal
That enthusiasm is apparently matched by potential players. The league is holding tryouts this summer and has already had 600 players register.
Although there hasn’t been a professional league in this country for decades, there are plenty of women playing baseball.
“There are women’s teams around the country,” said Siegal, WPBL’s co-founder. “There’s 10,000 girls playing baseball at various levels, from T-ball on up. There’s over a thousand girls playing high school baseball with the boys, and next year there’ll be about eight to 10 women playing college baseball with men.”

In fact, the U.S. already has a national team, which competes against 25 other countries in the Women’s Baseball World Cup.
Siegal herself has waited a long time for this. She’s been playing baseball since she was five, and pitched batting practice for multiple MLB teams before making history as the first female coach of an MLB team with the Oakland Athletics organization in 2015.
She also founded Baseball for All to promote women in the game.
Siegal has plenty of New England ties, having gone to high school in New Hampshire and earned her Ph.D. at Springfield College in western Massachusetts. She’s also worked at Northeastern in Boston.
“I’m a fan of New England and I think it’s a wonderful spot to have a team,” she said. “I think there’s a sports fandom that is particular to New England, and personally I’d love to see a team in the New England area as we grow.”
That enthusiasm is welcome news to Freyer.
“I want to make it undeniable that there is a team coming here, I believe that strongly in it,” he said. “I’m gonna take this as far as I can. That’s my goal, and no one’s told me ‘no’ yet.”