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KC Current announces contract extension for Temwa Chawinga using new NWSL rule

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • KC Current signed Temwa Chawinga to a High Impact Player contract through 2029.
  • Chawinga has 47 goals and 12 assists in 61 total matches in all competitions.
  • HIP allows teams to exceed salary cap by $1 million and imposes minimum 12% cap charge.

Around a year and a half after announcing a contract extension for Temwa Chawinga, the Kansas City Current has signed its star forward to a new contract under the NWSL’s High Impact Player rule.

Chawinga becomes one of the first players in the league to be signed under the new mechanism and the first in the Current’s history.

Chawinga’s extension that was signed last January went through 2028. The new deal, which runs through 2029, takes advantage of the NWSL rule that allows clubs to pay a player a salary that exceeds the cap.

“This contract extension means a lot to me because I call Kansas City home,” Chawinga said in a statement. “The way the club and the city supports me and my teammates is truly special. I’m looking forward to staying longer in Kansas City and working hard with my teammates.”

This announcement comes just days after the Current traded United States Women’s National Team attacker Ally Sentnor to Angel City FC.

USWNT members Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit) and Catarina Macario (San Diego Wave) are the two most notable HIPs in the league so far.

Chawinga, the back-to-back league MVP, has been a top on-field producer for the Current since arriving in 2024 as a relative unknown, despite gaudy statistics at Chinese club Wuhan Jianghan.

Chawinga has scored 47 goals with 12 assists in 61 matches across all competitions. She has won the Golden Boot in both of her seasons in the NWSL, the second player ever to do so. .

Former head coach (and now sporting director) Vlatko Andonovski had been scouting Chawinga since his days as head coach for Seattle Reign in 2017. He couldn’t bring her to Seattle then, but eventually signed her to the Current after his stint with the USWNT.

In her first season, the Malawi native became the first player to tally 20 regular-season goals, setting a new league record with 26 goal contributions in a season. The Current ended the season in the NWSL semifinals, losing to eventual champion Orlando Pride.

The 2025 season was no different. Chawinga recorded 15 goals, helping the team win the NWSL Shield in a record-breaking season: The club achieved the most points, most wins and fewest goals allowed in a season. But Chawinga missed the Current’s lone playoff game due to injury, and KC was upset as the top-seed by eventual champion Gotham FC.

Despite missing the first four games of this season with the same hip injury, she currently sits second in NWSL scoring with seven goals and two assists.

“Temwa is truly special, and no one changes the game more than she does,” KC Current co-owners Angie and Chris Long said in a statement. “She displays an unwavering commitment to scoring goals under pressure and when it matters most. Combined with her defensive presence, she is, without question, one of the best players in the world. She is someone people want to play with, and she makes our team better. We are so excited to extend her contract and keep her in Kansas City.”

Kansas City Current forward Temwa Chawinga, pictured in a file photo from a match against Chicago on Sunday, May 10, 2026.
Kansas City Current forward Temwa Chawinga, pictured in a file photo from a match against Chicago on Sunday, May 10, 2026. Dominick Williams/file dowilliams@kcstar.com

What the new contract means

The first thing to know about Chawinga’s contract starts with the High Impact Player rule.

It was first introduced in December, intended to keep Rodman with the Washington Spirit. The rule also intends to prevent star players from leaving the NWSL for non-salary capped leagues, since teams can now go over the cap to sign a player.

The HIP mechanism is similar to the Designated Player rule in Major League Soccer, which allows teams to pay three players an unlimited salary but only be counted against the cap at a fixed, predetermined number.

NWSL teams can spend up to $1 million outside the league’s salary cap ($3.7 million in 2026, $4.4 million in 2027), and the allowance is expected to increase yearly in line with salary cap increases. The cap charge of HIPs must be a minimum of 12% of the base salary cap, around $444,000 this season.

The rule was met with criticism from players and fans because it was implemented without negotiations with the NWSL Players Association. They filed a grievance against the league over the rule in January.

Rodman was the first player to sign under the rule in January after her initial $1.1 million contract with the Spirit was rejected by the league. She got a three-year contract worth $2 million annually, according to reports. It made her the highest-paid women’s soccer player, her agent has said.

Chawinga’s contract details have yet to be disclosed.

One of the most controversial parts of the rule is the criteria players must meet to be eligible.

HIPs must meet at least one of eight determining factors, among which is inclusion in the top 40 of The Guardian’s most recent “100 Best” lists. They also could place on the most recent SportsPro Media Top 150 Most Marketable Athletes list, on one of the two most recent Ballon d’Or Feminin Top 30 lists or be a recent MVP finalist or Best XI honoree.

Ballon d’Or Feminin lists have been criticized for skewing toward players at the biggest clubs in countries like England, Spain, France and Germany.

In May, The Cutbacks Flo Lloyd-Hughes reported the NWSL was preparing to remove the criteria entirely, but neither the league nor NWSLPA confirmed the report.

With Chawinga’s contract settled, the Current may now look at a new deal for star midfielder Croix Bethune, who’s under contract through the end of 2027.

The Current’s World Cup break ends Friday, when the club faces Gotham FC in the NWSL Challenge Cup, a match between last year’s Shield winner and last year’s league champion.

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PJ Green
The Kansas City Star
PJ Green is a breaking news reporter for The Star. He previously was a sports reporter for Fox’s Kansas City affiliate and a news reporter for NBC’s Wichita Falls, Texas affiliate. He studied English with a concentration in journalism and played football at Tusculum University. You can reach him at pgreen@kcstar.com or follow him on Twitter and Bluesky - @ByPJGreen
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