• Loading stock data...
Sunday, June 15, 2025

U.S. Soccer, Flush With Cash, Lays Off Dozens

  • U.S. Soccer is in the process of relocating from Chicago to suburban Atlanta.
  • The 30 employees laid off equate to roughly 9% of its workforce.
Sep 13, 2024; New York, New York, USA; United States men's national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino poses for a photo with chief executive officer and secretary general JT Batson, sporting director Matt Crocker, president Cindy Parlow Cone, and MLS commissioner Don Garber after a press conference introducing him as the new head coach for the United States men's national team at Warner Bros. Discovery Hudson Center.
Lucas Boland-Imagn Images

U.S. Soccer’s incredible financial run wasn’t enough to save the jobs of dozens of employees. 

On Tuesday, the federation laid off 30 employees across multiple departments, according to The Athletic, as the organization prepares to move from its headquarters in Chicago to suburban Atlanta. The new headquarters is currently under construction and won’t open until 2026, but U.S. Soccer has turned a local elementary school into a temporary headquarters for the time being. 

As part of the relocation, “the Chicago office will close in 2025, and while not all staff will relocate, we deeply appreciate the invaluable contributions of those who won’t be making the move. Our new Training Center will allow us to operate more efficiently, positioning U.S. Soccer for long-term success in the ever-evolving landscape of global soccer,” U.S. Soccer said in a statement to Front Office Sports.

The layoffs come amid a strong fiscal year for the nonprofit, which is expecting commercial revenues of $110 million in 2024, The Athletic reported, up from $32 million the prior year. U.S. Soccer’s fiscal year ends March 31. The federation employs roughly 340 people, making the 30 cuts equate to about 9% of its workforce. Not all layoffs were immediate. Some have a termination date in April 2025, while others were offered relocation packages to join the company in Fayetteville, Ga. Employees have 60 days to accept the relocation package. Those who don’t will receive 60 days of severance pay. 

For its fiscal year that ended March 2024, total revenues were $188 million, compared with $148 million for the prior year, according to USSF’s latest financial statements.

Last month U.S. Soccer hired new men’s national team manager Mauricio Pochettino with a reported two-year salary of $6 million per year and partially financed by Ken Griffin, CEO and founder of hedge fund Citadel.

Employees told The Athletic they have been anticipating the cuts since August when the federation CEO JT Batson emailed the staff about an upcoming October meeting that would discuss “relocation packages [and] the approach to the timing of relocations.” Staff realized some jobs would survive the relocation and others would not. Their anxiety intensified this week when staff received calendar invites to one-on-one meetings with their supervisors, some of which included human resources representatives. 

One anonymous employee told The Athletic that they knew they’d be “invited” to Atlanta and that some individuals wouldn’t “make the cut, so to speak. This was basically weighing on all of us for over a month already, and then the invite stuff happened—it was very, very hard to deal with,” they said.

A spokesperson for U.S. Soccer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 5, 2024; Miami, FL, USA; FIFA president Gianni Infantino presents the FIFA Club World Cup trophy during the Club Word Cup draw at Telemundo Studios.

Revamped Club World Cup Is FIFA’s Billion-Dollar Gamble

The revamped soccer event debuts amid controversy.
Jun 10, 2025; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino stands during the anthem against the Switzerland during the first at Geodis Park

Gold Cup Is Complicated for USMNT—but U.S. Soccer Has Its Eyes on..

Uncertain tournament success isn’t fazing forward-looking U.S. soccer.

Thunder Win Sets Up First 6-Game NBA Finals in 4 Years

It will be the first Finals series of at least six games since 2022.
Tennessee wide receiver Grant Frerking (0) drills during fall practice at Haslam Field in Knoxville, Tenn. on Friday, Aug. 6, 2021.

Ex-Tennessee Football Player, On3 Staffer Accused of Financial Scams

Grant Frerking parted ways with On3 amid “allegations of criminal misconduct.”

Featured Today

Jan 24, 2017; Davidson, NC, USA; The Davidson Wildcats student section cheers during the first half against the Duquesne Dukes at McKillop Court at John M. Belk Arena. Davidson defeated Duquesne 74-60.

Every College Wants a Flashy Basketball GM Hire Right Now

The role is more important than ever, and the definition is ever-evolving.
August 31, 2024; Columbus, Ohio, USA; The Goodyear blimp flies over Ohio Stadium during the first half of Saturday’s NCAA Division I football game between the Akron Zips and the Ohio State Buckeyes.
June 6, 2025

Why the Goodyear Blimp Is at Every Major Sports Event

The airship wasn’t built to cover sports. Now it’s a regular presence.
May 27, 2015; Paris, France; Mirjana Lucic-Baroni (CRO) knocks the clay off her shoe during her match against Simona Halep (ROU) on day four of the French Open at Roland Garros
June 4, 2025

Roland-Garros’s Iconic Red-Clay Surface Is a Precise Alchemy

The exact science behind maintaining the French Open’s red clay.
Alex Jensen introductory press conference on Monday, March 17, 2025.
June 3, 2025

Alex Jensen Started Utah Utes HC Job While Still Coaching the Mavs

How Jensen began building an NCAA program while patrolling the Dallas sideline.
Hilary Knight

The PWHL Badly Wants Parity. At What Cost?

The expansion draft has turned Seattle and Vancouver into instant title contenders. 
June 13, 2025

From NFL to PGA Tour: How Brian Rolapp Could Reshape Golf

Brian Rolapp is set to become the PGA Tour’s first CEO.
Napheesa Collier
exclusive
June 13, 2025

WNBA Union Left Out of Ion Talks, Wants Say in Future Deals

Ion has aired the WNBA since 2023.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

Ted Leonsis unpacks basketball’s global rise, media rights, and portfolio ownership.
June 13, 2025

Swift-Eh? NHL Hopes Taylor’s Magic Touch Boosts the Stanley Cup Final

The pop superstar got emotional about the Oilers’ overtime win Thursday.
June 12, 2025

Potential Goodell Successor Brian Rolapp Leaves NFL for PGA CEO Job

Rolapp is the architect of the NFL’s 11-year, $111 billion media deals.
1895 Club
June 12, 2025

A U.S. Open Club Costs $1,800 per Day. It’s Sold Out

The 1895 Club, which costs $1,800 per day, is in its second year.
June 12, 2025

Ice, Ice, Maybe: Atlanta’s $3B NHL Arena Project Approved

The growing Georgia market advances its push to land an expansion franchise.