LOVB Pro: The Complete Guide to America’s Women’s Pro Volleyball League (2026)
A League That Changed Everything for Women’s Volleyball
For decades, the calculus for elite American women’s volleyball players was brutally simple. After college, you had two choices: buy a one-way ticket to Europe, Turkey, Brazil, Japan, or China — or find a new career.
Haleigh Washington, a two-time Olympic medalist, described the overseas experience in blunt terms: “You’re not a person over there. You’re something they paid for. You’re a commodity.” Her teammate Jordyn Poulter added: “The amount of money we could make is better overseas, but you’re so far from home, you’re living this alternate life.”
That calculus has changed. League One Volleyball — LOVB Pro — launched its inaugural season in January 2025, and by the end of its second season in April 2026, it had already reshaped the landscape of professional volleyball in America. Here is the complete story of how it happened, what it means, and where it is going.
The LOVB Model: Youth Clubs First, Pro League Second
LOVB is unique in professional sports because it built its foundation before it built its stadium. The organization started in 2020 as a network of elite youth volleyball clubs. By the time the pro league launched in 2025, LOVB already had 54 club locations serving over 14,000 youth athletes across the country. Today, that number has grown to 92 club locations and more than 26,000 youth athletes.
Founder and CEO Katlyn Gao explained the philosophy: “We wanted to create a pro league that was deeply connected to its youth community and provide this true pathway for women in this country to play professionally.”
The league is structured as a single-entity ownership model. All six teams are centrally owned by the league, with plans to sell individual franchises over time. Austin was sold in June 2025 to a group that includes David Blitzer, Peter Holt, and Spurs Sports & Entertainment. Omaha was bought by a group led by Olympic gold medalist Jordan Larson and rebranded to LOVB Nebraska. Salt Lake was purchased by Synergy Sports Capital, an investment group that includes former NFL running back Reggie Bush.
The league has raised over $160 million from investors including Lindsey Vonn, Candace Parker, Amy Schumer, Kevin Durant, and Alexis Ohanian.
The Six Teams and Their Stars (2026 Season)
| Team | Home Venue | Key Players | 2026 Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| LOVB Atlanta | Gateway Center Arena | Kelsey Cook (Season MVP 2025), Lauren Carlini | Playoff qualifier |
| LOVB Austin | H-E-B Center, Cedar Park | Madisen Skinner, Logan Eggleston, Asjia O’Neal | Champions (back-to-back) |
| LOVB Houston | Fort Bend County Epicenter | Ana Carolina da Silva (Brazil), Anne Buijs (Netherlands) | Playoff qualifier |
| LOVB Madison | Wisconsin Field House | Dana Rettke, Grace Loberg | Competitive season |
| LOVB Nebraska | Baxter Arena, Omaha | Jordan Larson, Lexi Rodriguez | Playoff qualifier |
| LOVB Salt Lake | Bruin Arena | Haleigh Washington, Jordyn Poulter | Finals (lost golden set) |
The 2026 rosters featured 17 Olympians from Team USA’s Paris 2024 silver medal squad, plus international stars from 20 countries, bringing the total Olympic medal count across all rosters to 23.
Viewership Explosion: The Numbers That Prove Growth
The second season on USA Network shattered every expectation. Here are the numbers:
- USA Network “Game of the Week” (Wednesday prime time) averaged 115,000 viewers — up 164% from 2025
- Championship Game 1 (Salt Lake vs. Austin): 163,000 average viewers, peaking at 225,000 — the most-watched LOVB match in history
- 7.5 million total viewers across USA Network’s entire LOVB coverage — up 133% year-over-year
- Championship viewership up 50% compared to 2025
- Social media impressions for the championship event up 273% year-over-year
- Victory+ streaming audience jumped 136% over the prior ESPN+ audience
- 52% of viewers are women — rare for sports broadcasts and a signal that the audience is exactly who advertisers want to reach
The Championship: Back-to-Back for Austin
LOVB Austin won its second straight title in what might be the most dramatic championship series in the league’s young history. After dropping the first match of the two-match series to LOVB Salt Lake, Austin faced elimination. They responded with a five-set win (25-20, 21-25, 22-25, 25-22, 15-11) to force a winner-takes-all golden set. Austin dominated the golden set 15-8 to secure the championship in front of a sold-out crowd at the Long Beach Pyramid.
Madisen Skinner was named Championship MVP for the second consecutive year, scoring 21 points in match two with a .342 hitting percentage and nine digs. Logan Eggleston added 15 kills, 14 digs, and three blocks. The crowd included Rams wide receiver Puka Nacua sitting courtside.
Player Compensation: A New Standard
LOVB’s player compensation package sets a new bar for women’s professional volleyball in the United States:
- Minimum salary: $60,000 per season
- Full healthcare including maternity leave
- Childcare support and fertility resources
- Mental health support services
- Housing and transportation assistance
- Revenue sharing from media deals
- Fully guaranteed contracts — no cuts, no trades, no waivers
This matters because the alternative — playing overseas — often meant salaries as low as $20,000 in smaller European leagues, no healthcare, no maternity protection, and no job security. Kelsey Cook played the 2025 season while pregnant, with her roster status fully protected.
LOVB vs. PVF: Understanding the Two Leagues
The United States now has two professional women’s volleyball leagues. Here is how they compare:
| Aspect | LOVB Pro | PVF |
|---|---|---|
| First season | 2025 | 2024 |
| Teams (2026) | 6 | 8 |
| Structure | Single-entity (centrally owned) | Traditional franchise model |
| Draft system | No draft (free agency) | 5-round draft |
| Roster protections | No cuts, no trades | Players can be cut |
| TV partners | ESPN, USA Network, Victory+ | CBS Sports, Fox Sports |
| Olympic talent | 23 Olympic medalists | Primarily college pipeline |
| Youth connection | 92 clubs, 26,000+ youth athletes | None |
The consensus among volleyball observers: LOVB fields higher-quality volleyball (14 LOVB players made the US National Team vs. 1 from PVF), while PVF has more teams and a longer operational track record.
What’s Next: Expansion to 10 Teams
LOVB is expanding to 10 teams by 2027. New franchises will be located in Los Angeles, Minnesota, San Francisco, and Miami. The league will split into East and West conferences, each with five teams. The expansion will bring more jobs for American players and more opportunities for fans to watch elite volleyball in their home markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
How can I watch LOVB Pro matches?
Matches broadcast on ESPN, USA Network, and stream on Victory+. The “Game of the Week” airs Wednesday nights on USA Network.
How much do LOVB tickets cost?
Ticket prices vary by market. The championship match at the Long Beach Pyramid was sold out. Check individual team pages for pricing.
Will LOVB add men’s volleyball?
No timeline has been announced, but the league’s expansion to 10 teams and its youth club pipeline position it well for future growth.
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