Episodios

  • Is San Francisco really the #1 women’s sports city?
    Dec 3 2025

    Kelly and Sara are asking two burning questions this week: Is San Francisco really the top women’s sports town in the world? (The New York Times says so and Kelly agrees.) And: Why in 2025 is Nordic Combined still the *only* sport women aren’t allowed to compete in at the Olympics?

    But first, the women's sports highlights:

    • Mikaela Shiffrin just won her 104th World Cup race — her third in a row and her fifth of the last six. Why isn't this getting more hype!?
    • Is it because there's too many records? How that happened.
    • Speaking of: The PWHL set a record for the highest attendance at a women's hockey game in the U.S.

    And then a few follow-ups. "Like we were saying..."

    • There is adult cross-country! And Ceili McCabe won the Canadian champs in the snow. But the Winter Olympics still don't want to add XC to their events.
    • Why the h*ll aren't women allowed to compete in Nordic Combined in the Olympics?!
    • And, in the Paralympics, there is no women's sled hockey. Technically, it's co-ed, but only three women have ever competed at the Games.
    • What are "whereabouts" violations in doping and why did Canada's most decorated female Olympian get one? Sara explains the logistics of how the system worked when she had to update her whereabouts everyday.
    • And yes, The Enhanced Games appears to actually be happening for real.

    Then: What Makes a Great Women’s Sports City?

    Is San Francisco really the #1 women’s sports city in the world? According to The New York Times (and Kelly), yes. We unpack what actually creates a powerhouse women’s sports environment — fan culture, investment, access, and visibility...

    Disagree? Send us a voice memo to podcasts@livefeisty.com.

    Episode Resources:

    The stats behind Mikaela Shiffrin's record wins: https://www.fis-ski.com/alpine-skiing/news/2024-25/a-century-in-numbers-the-stats-behind-mikaela-shiffrin-s-100-world-cup-wins

    The top women's sports cities ranked: https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6807524/2025/11/18/womens-sports-cities-top-ranked-fans/

    A Q&A with the founder of The Enhanced Games: https://feisty.co/p/q-and-a-the-founder-of-the-enhanced/

    Episode timestamps

    02:58 - Mikaela Shiffrin's record-breaking records

    06:03 - Are there too many...

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  • Should the UCI stop athletes with eating disorders from racing? Sammie Maxwell answers
    Nov 26 2025

    This week, we have a special guest: mountain bike world champion Samara Maxwell opens up about her struggles with an eating disorder and why she actually thinks it was good that her federation forced her to stop riding — or at least she can understand and agree with it now.

    But first, the women’s sports highlights of the week:

    • PWHL opening weekend: Vancouver packed in 14,958 fans to watch them take down Seattle—the highest-attended home game in PWHL history.
    • NWSL Playoffs: Gotham FC’s Rose Lavelle delivered the lone winning goal. And Kelly confirms the hype in the Bay Area was real. Is it time for the NWSL to end neutral site championship games? Up the salary cap? Did Kelly regret not going to the fame?
    • NCAA cross-country championships: Don't let the debate over international recruiting practices mar an amazing race from Doris Lemngole.

    Then, we talk with New Zealand’s Samara “Sammie” Maxwell, the first Kiwi to win the UCI cross-country World Cup overall title.

    Sammie, who has been open about her struggles with an eating disorder, was told to stop cycling by her federation and then left off the Olympic team because they didn't think she had fully recovered — a decision she appealed. She explains why she appealed the decision, but also why she now believes Cycling New Zealand made the right call. And what can be done to address eating disorders in cycling?

    Then, of course, our Feisty Picks of the Week.

    Episode resources:

    • WADA considers banning Ozempic: https://velo.outsideonline.com/news/ozempic-weight-loss-drugs-ban-sports/
    • Climbing introduces policy to combat eating disorders: https://www.climbing.com/news/ifsc-policy-combat-eating-disorders/

    Episode timestamps:

    • 00:23 - Shoutout to the PWHL & the NWSL Finals
    • 18:05 - Kelly explains cross-country to Sara
    • 22:36 - What is happening with NCAA recruitment?!
    • 32:01 - Samara Maxwell on how she's recovering from an eating disorder and what she wants people to know
    • 57:27 - What responsibility do coaches have?
    • 01:10:51 - The future of GLP-1s in sports

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  • Hockey and the woke mob group chat
    Nov 19 2025

    Our resident hockey expert joins us to explain hockey to Americans: all things PWHL, Canadian hockey culture, and is ringette a real sport... ?!

    But first, the women's sports highlights of the week:

    • The NSL playoffs brought in massive economic return for Canada. Now, it's the NWSL's turn: Ranked #8 out of 8, is Gotham FC ruining everyone's brackets?
    • We're rooting for winter sports comebacks: Alysia Liu, who took her first Skate America win, and Mikaela Shiffrin, who just won her 102nd World Cup race and her ninth reindeer. Yes, reindeer.
    • Then, why the heck can't endurance sports get it together?! A cycling world record that no one bothered to record?

    Then it's time to get in the weeds on hockey!

    The PWHL is expanding to eight teams (hello, Vancouver and Seattle!) this season. How did we get here? And what's next for the league? Plus, can you build a non-toxic hockey culture?

    Plus, our new segment: 'Like we were saying...' with updates on sex testing (yes, again). And our Feisty picks of the week.

    Episode resources:

    • The Canada Hockey sexual assault case: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/29/canada-hockey-sexual-assault-case-analysis
    • History of women's hockey: https://thecolgatemaroonnews.com/47399/sports/the-pwhl-part-i-the-history-of-womens-pro-hockey/ and https://thecolgatemaroonnews.com/47893/sports/the-pwhl-part-ii-why-the-league-will-buck-the-trend/

    Episode timestamps:

    00:24 - Soccer playoff highlights

    07:05 - Time for winter sports: Why we're rooting for Alysia Liu

    09:22 - Mikaela Shiffrin's crash comeback & Lindsey Vonn's Olympic hops

    16:43 - Why do triathlon and cycling keep messing up?

    30:03 - PWHL expansion and a season preview

    36:09 - The weird league ownership structure of the PWSL

    39:40 - Hockey's toxic culture?

    50:30 Ringette: A Canadian Sport(??)

    01:05:19 - Like We Were Saying: Could trans athletes be banned from the Olympics?

    01:08:04 Feisty Picks of the Week

    Subscribe to The Feist, our Free Weekly Newsletter covering Women's Sports: https://feisty.co/feistnews/

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  • Winter (Games) is coming...
    Nov 12 2025

    It's coming! Less than 100 days away, with qualification in full swing, this week it's all about the Winter Olympics & Paralympics: What events are women finally getting to do, why is skiing banning Russians, and what the heck is going on with sex testing.

    But first — the highlights we loved in women’s sports this week:

    • At the Ironman 70.3 World Championships Lucy Charles-Barclay and Taylor Knibb went 1-2 in an epic run battle just four weeks after massive heatstroke in Hawaii. How did they do it?!
    • 50-mile, 100km, and 100-mile records all fell at the Tunnel Hill race. What is it about that race? And, hopefully, they don't have to pay for their own drug testing this year!
    • And our report from the Female Athlete Research Meeting at Stanford. What Kelly's actually doing differently in her life now. Plus, we hear the legendary basketball coach Tara VanDerveer & Nobel laureate Carolyn Bertozzi about growing up pre-Title IX.

    Then, it's all about the Winter Games in Milano.

    For the first time ever, women will compete in doubles luge, on the large hill in ski jumping, and in the longest distance in cross-country skiing, the 50km.

    Let's talk a little history of women’s ski jumping (only added to the Olympics in 2014!) and the fights athletes are still fighting, literally fundraising to close the gender pay gap. And, of course, the messy politics of this Olympic cycle — from Russia’s ban in skiing to the FIS’s new confusing genetic sex testing policy.

    And a new segment: 'Like we were saying...' with updates on a few things. And our Feisty Picks of the week.

    Episode resources:

    • Once Prohibited, Women’s Ski Jumping Is Set to Take Flight: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/01/30/magazine/winter-olympics-ski-jumping-women.html
    • New reports on the IOC considering a ban on all trans athletes: https://www.thetimes.com/sport/olympics/article/olympic-ioc-transgender-athlete-ban-womens-sports-zhlpfll3b
    • Project B Basketball League Says It Has No Saudi Funding:
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  • Can "good" billionaires exist in women's sports?
    Nov 5 2025

    How do women’s sports make (lots and lots of) money — without losing their fans or...selling out? Or, screw it, should the make as much money as they can?

    This week, Kelly and Sara dig into the money talk — from WNBA labor negotiations and shifting fan dynamics to what happens when women’s sports finally start cashing big checks. How much do female athletes *deserve* to be paid? And can they make more and more money without alienating their fans? How?

    But first — what we loved in women’s sports this week:

    • The New York City Marathon: Hellen Obiri smashed the course record in 2:19:55 and a record 59,226 runners crossed the line, making it the biggest marathon in history. Are we in a running boom, or a chasing bucket lists boom?
    • And, India wins their first-ever Cricket World Cup! At home. Against undefeated Australia. After an ugly start to the tournament and a wave of online misogyny. This comeback win was massive, a long time coming, and will change the game forever.

    And the epic record-breaking $13.8 million prize purse brings us to this week’s big question: How much do women deserve to be paid?

    Sara starts by breaking down the WNBA’s ongoing contract negotiations — with players pushing for a guaranteed share of league revenue instead of just a higher salary cap. And then we dive into the weeds of women's sports finances: Right now, fans often identify more with players than teams — but will that stay true as female athletes earn more and more? At what point does a (historically) socially conscious fan base turn against a (fundamentally) capitalist enterprise? If a large portion of your fandom doesn't believe billionaires should exist, then is it even possible to create billionaire athletes and league owners off those fans? Can that new model be built?

    Send us your answers in a voice memo to podcasts@livefeisty.com

    And we close with our Feisty Picks of the Week.

    Time Stamps

    0:02 - The record-breaking New York Marathon

    8:35 - Make it a movie: India wins their first-ever Cricket World Cup

    14:45 - How much should women get paid?

    26:00 - Balancing making bank and doing good

    35:38 - Sponsors and women's sports fans

    46:55 - Our predictions for the future of that women's sports growth curve

    47:40 - Feisty Picks of the Week

    Subscribe to The Feist, our Free Weekly Newsletter covering Women's Sports: https://feisty.co/feistnews/

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  • Kelly & Sara try to solve doping
    Oct 29 2025

    This week on The Feist, the marathon world record holder gets slapped with a three-year ban. What's to be done about doping?

    First, the women's sports highlights this week & what we're watching:

    • How did we not realize it was the Gymnastic World Championships? The U.S. had its least medal haul since 2006 and a lot of big names were missing — but a world championship is still a world championship.
    • Swimming world records dropped in Toronto, including Katie Ledecky's 800m record and the first woman ever under 50 seconds in the 100m free.
    • Four more years of the Tour de France Femmes! (Thanks, Zwift!) And the women finally get Mont Ventoux.
    • And why did Kelly have weird stress dreams about running the New York Marathon this weekend? When she's definitely not running the New York Marathon this weekend.

    Then, we have a voicemail from our Feisty correspondent with all the details about the Northern Super League playoffs.

    And an interview with Mithali Das, who regionally coordinates the women's programs for USA Cricket — and is here to answer all of our Cricket World Cup questions: Why are games eight hours? How is the women's sport growing now? Who will win the semis and finals this week — and take home the massive prize purse?

    Then, before the Feisty Picks of the Week, it's time for our in-the-weeds debate: How do we solve doping?

    • Marathon world record holder Ruth Chepngetich is banned for three years after her positive test and some pretty incriminating texts.
    • Meanwhile, pro triathlete Imogene Simmonds was cleared of any fault or negligence for her positive test. Yes, her sexual contamination explanation actually makes sense. Is the system working the way it's supposed to?
    • And the New York Times article about the prevalence of doping and incentives in Kenya: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/world/africa/kenya-runners-doping.html

    Timestamps

    • 00:28 - The gymnastics world championships
    • 10:26 - Swimming World Records and Four More Years of the Tour de France Femmes
    • 25:45 - Feisty correspondent Maya breaks down the Northern Super League and why it's important for Canada
    • 33:47 - The Rise of Women's Cricket: USA Cricket coordinator Mithali Das explains it to us
    • 52:33 - The big doping news this week and what to do about the prevalence of performance-enhancing drugs?
    • 1:16:58 - Picks of the week

    Subscribe to The Feist, our Free Weekly Newsletter covering Women's Sports: https://feisty.co/feistnews/

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  • Victoria's Secret, MrBeast, Red Bull Rampage, and this week in women's sports
    Oct 22 2025

    The great debate: Do female athletes need Victoria's Secret and MrBeast — or do they need female athletes?

    But first, what happened in women’s sports this week:

    • A wild triathlon world championship in Wollongong — even if Sara didn't totally understand at first why it was so wild.
    • Watch the winning Red Bull Rampage run from Robin Goomes: https://www.tiktok.com/@redbullusa/video/7562279735808773398
    • Life Time Grand Prix is locked up and Track Cycling Worlds is starting
    • Plus, the new world record at the 24-Hour World Champs and the confusion leading into the race

    Then we talk about the ongoing question female celebrities, and especially female athletes face: How much spectacle do they want to embrace? What spectacle is good spectacle? (We are pro spectacle here! But anti bad spectacle!)

    World champ Melissa Jefferson-Wooden races 100 random men — and, yes, beats them — for $100K. WNBA star Angel Reese becomes the first athlete to walk the (revamped) Victoria's Secret fashion show. And Athlos shows us how hard it is for an average person to do what the Olympians do.

    One of these things felt different than the others...

    And, of course, there's the Feisty Picks of the Week!

    Timestamps:

    • 00:13 - The Intersection of Sports and Fashion
    • 00:23 - Understanding the World Triathlon Championships
    • 13:31 - Red Bull Rampage & Women's Freeriding
    • 33:53 - The Return of the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show
    • 48:36 - Picks of the Week!

    Subscribe to The Feist, our Free Weekly Newsletter covering Women's Sports: https://feisty.co/feistnews/

    Winter Cycling Program: Join our Winter Training for Cyclists at https://feisty.co/ and look for the yellow banner at the top of the page. Use code TRI50 to save $50.

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  • LIVE from the last all-women's Ironman World Championship
    Oct 15 2025

    This week we’re coming at you from the last all-women’s Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. Unfortunately, it’s the end of an Ironman era (for now!) — but we’re going out with a bang.

    We’ve got all the race drama from the ground — including two frontrunners collapsing while leading the race, a rookie champ who took the world by surprise, podium interviews poolside, and one incredibly badass 80-year-old woman who made history.

    But first — as always — what happened in women's sports this week:

    • Athlos NYC brought track to Times Square - The vibes? Rock star. Masai Russell, Brittany Brown (who doubled in the 100m and 200m with endometriosis, btw), Marileidy Paulino, Keely Hodgkinson, and Tara Davis-Woodhall all showed up and showed out. Oh, and Faith Kipyegon ran the fastest women’s mile ever on U.S. soil: 4:17.78.
    • The Chicago Marathon: Hawi Feysa from Ethiopia dropped a 2:14:56, the 5th fastest woman's time ever run.
    • UCI Gravel World Championships: Lorena Wiebes outsprinted Marianne Vos for a dramatic finish on this dirt championship that looks and feels a lot like road...
    • Weightlifting World Championships: Olympic gold medalist Olivia Reeves is still breaking all the records. She put up 122kg in the snatch and 154kg in the clean & jerk. That’s 339 pounds, people. How did she break world records and another broke her records? A shift in weight classes cut the number of categories from ten down to eight.
    • WNBA Finals: The Aces took it in four over the Phoenix Mercury. But the real talk is about negotiations over the players' collective bargaining agreement — with team valuations skyrocketing (yes, over $100 million in the last year), the stakes are high and the money’s moving.
    • COMING UP: Red Bull Rampage is this Thursday and Chelsea Kimball will be throwing down

    THEN: All things KONA

    • Why this was the final all-women’s Ironman World Championship in Hawaii
    • The race: Absolute chaos and courage — Lucy Charles-Barclay and Taylor Knibb both collapsed, and Norwegian rookie Solveig Løvseth stayed steady and strong for the win
    • The podium: Hear from Solveig, Kat Matthews (who ran a marathon course record in the heat and humidity), Laura Philipp, and Hannah Berry
    • The real legend: Natalie Grabow, 80-year-old woman became the oldest woman to ever finish the Ironman World Championships. (If you're wondering: While Sister Madonna was 82 (!) when she finished Ironman Canada in 2012, no one has ever been able to make the cutoff times in Hawaii's brutal conditions. Until now)
    • The heat, the heartbreak, the heroics — all of it, straight from Kona

    Feisty Picks of the Week

    SARA: Yep, it's Solveig, our new Ironman World Champ

    KELLY: And did you know J.Lo ran a 4:49 mile in high school??

    Timestamps:

    00:00 - Welcome to The Feist: Live from Hawaii

    00:28 - Athlos NYC: Track Vibes in Times Square

    04:24 - Endometriosis Doesn’t Slow Brittany Brown

    05:57 - Fast Roads in Chicago

    08:07 - Gravel Worlds = Chaos & Champions

    12:21- Weightlifting World Records

    15:47 - WNBA Finals and $$$ Talks

    19:36 - Ironman Kona: The Final All-Women’s Edition

    30:43 - Race Recap: Collapses, Comebacks, and Surprises

    31:34 - Poolside with the Podium: Solveig, Kat, Laura & Hannah

    53:20 - Natalie Grabow, Age 80, Finishes Kona

    01:01:41 - Final Thoughts from Hawaii

    Subscribe to The Feist, our Free Weekly Newsletter covering Women's Sports: https://feisty.co/feistnews/

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    1 h y 7 m