SF SOL crestSF SOLGet Started
SPONSORED EXCEPTIONAL TALENT

We Don't Wait for Talent. We Go Find It.

SF SOL sponsors exceptional players. If she's the one everyone watches, we'll invest in her. This is not a financial aid application; it's a talent submission.

We think a girls' youth club should invest in talent the same way professional clubs do. So SF SOL sets aside sponsorships for exceptional players, and we review every single submission that comes through this page.

Here's what we mean by sponsorship: SF SOL covers some or all of her costs to play at the level she deserves — competitive coaching, real league play (SFYS Premier / NorCal Premier), in a club built entirely around girls.

WHAT WE LOOK FOR

  • She stands out — the player other parents ask about
  • Coachability and drive, not just current skill
  • Any club, any background — if she's currently playing elsewhere, that's exactly who this is for

How it works

  1. 1Tell us what makes her exceptional — the short form below, five minutes.
  2. 2Show us — link 1–2 clips (YouTube, Google Drive, Veo, anything watchable). Phone footage from a game is perfect; no highlight reel production needed.
  3. 3We watch every submission and reach out directly to talk next steps — usually a conversation, then seeing her play in person.

Submit her for sponsorship

Five minutes, one or two video links — that's all it takes to get on our radar.

Have a video file instead of a link? Email it to info@girlsleadinggoals.org with her name in the subject — direct upload is coming soon.

Sponsorships are limited and reviewed case by case. Not every submission gets sponsored — but every submission gets watched, and every family gets an answer.

100%of our coaches are women — licensed, named, on the page
81%+last Fall season win rate across our Premier teams
4-16ages covered by one year-round pathway
4seasons a year: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter
50%+of SF SOL families come to us through referral — word of mouth from other parents and players
12+years coaching San Francisco's girls — and families keep coming back