How Gotham’s 2025 championship ring reflects past glory and future ambition
A championship ring is, by design, a glittering tribute to a season well won.
But Gotham FC’s 2025 ring, a sequel to its 2023 edition, does more than commemorate a second title. It gestures, with swagger, towards a future still under construction.
“If the ring could speak, what would it say? That’s the challenge. You can’t rely on words, so the design itself has to carry the story” says Ryan Ford, vice president of professional sports sales at The Champions Collective, the company that designed both of the club’s championship rings.
For more than 70 years, the 129-year-old jewelry maker has produced championship rings, beginning with the one it created for the Detroit Lions’ 1952 NFL title. That established an enduring American sports tradition: jewelry that symbolizes on-pitch success.
The company made all six of the New England Patriots’ Super Bowl rings and admits it is more challenging to make those items when teams win titles in quick succession.
“It’s a good problem to have,” Laura Petro, the vice president of brand marketing and fan experience, tells The Athletic. “We just won a championship in 2023, and we’d love to keep that going every year.
“But the challenge was making this ring feel distinct — building on the idea of a dynasty in the making. We wanted that second star front and center, and the team really ran with that brief. The result is something that looks meaningfully different from the 2023 ring — an exciting evolution that reflects our growing list of championships.”
Gotham’s first ring marked the club’s 2023 NWSL championship, its inaugural title.
Unveiled in April 2024 at a home game against the Kansas City Current, the sovereign-style design featured the club crest set in diamonds, the date of the victory (11.11.2023) and the inscription “Walk with me, win with me” inside the band. It told the story of a breakthrough season.
The 2025 campaign, however, was a study in resilience.
Gotham secured a playoff berth for the third consecutive year, then surged through the postseason, defeating the top-seeded Orlando Pride in the semifinals before beating the Washington Spirit 1-0 in the championship match at PayPal Park in San Jose, California. A late strike by Rose Lavelle sealed the victory, making Gotham the lowest-seeded team in league history to win the title.
The new ring, crafted from sterling silver, diamonds and sky-blue gemstones, captures that journey while pointing ahead. A second star rests atop the first at its center, marking the club’s latest championship.
But what makes this ring special is the message it carries on one of the sides. A banner wraps around Gotham’s two trophies, made of diamonds, bearing the team’s new ethos, which reads less like a victory lap and more like a statement of intent: “Always building, never finished”.
As with the first ring, players were involved in the design process. The Champions Collective presented several concepts, incorporated feedback and finalized the piece, which typically takes four to six weeks to complete once the model is ready. Rings are customized to each player and sized and shipped in February.
The cost of such rings remains undisclosed; by policy, neither the company nor Gotham discuss pricing. Teams cover the expense and decide who receives them. In Gotham’s case, that extends beyond players to include the club’s staff.
“If you were to ask anyone who receives one, from employees to players, they all contribute in their own way,” Ford adds. “When they receive the ring, it has a value that really is priceless.”
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
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