This content was original published by NWSL.
It’s a familiar feeling for Celia Jiménez Delgado. Her heart is racing and she is full of butterflies. It’s the same anticipation she felt before every game in her soccer career, but the next one will be different.
She won’t be on the pitch; she’ll be in the broadcast booth.
Jiménez Delgado is among those who went through the fourth NWSL Broadcast Bootcamp, presented by e.l.f., and come the 2026 season, she’ll be a rookie all over again. But with nerves comes excitement.
“This is something challenging enough that it makes me excited,” Jiménez Delgado said. “It’s something that is rewarding enough to make me feel nervous.”
Through the NWSL’s Beyond the Field Program, the Broadcast Bootcamp is a chance for current and former players to try their hand at live television production. Meg Buchan, the NWSL’s Senior Director of Broadcast and Production, oversees the annual program where participants can try out every role – from producer to on-air talent.
“This is my favorite thing I get to do all year,” Buchan said. “The participants start out with a really overwhelmed, wide-eyed look. By the end of the second day, they’re calm and much more confident. They’re always amazed at how much goes into creating a live sports broadcast and how forgiving and supportive of an environment it can be.”
For players like Jiménez Delgado, getting into television production wasn’t necessarily the obvious career choice after retiring from the NWSL in 2024, but it was too good an opportunity to pass up.


