InFrame

Sapphic Soccer Rom-Com ‘Cleat Cute’ Lands Amazon Series Order and New Title ‘Playing the Field’

Photo Credit: St. Martins

by Chris Tremblay  Apr 15

Amazon MGM Studios has taken on the television adaptation of Meryl Wilsner’s Cleat Cute, a sapphic sports romance novel that will now become the TV series Playing the Field. The move marks a significant step forward for the long‑developing project, which was first announced in 2024 without a network or streamer attached.

The series is being developed as a queer sports romantic comedy that blends on‑field competition with off‑field relationships, centering women‑loving‑women characters within professional soccer. Amazon MGM Studios’ involvement places Playing the Field within a growing slate of inclusive and LGBTQ+‑affirming stories geared toward mainstream streaming audiences.

From ‘Cleat Cute’ to ‘Playing the Field’



Meryl Wilsner’s Cleat Cute, published in September 2023, follows two players on the U.S. Women’s National Team whose professional rivalry slowly transforms into a romantic connection. The novel pairs 26‑year‑old captain Grace Henderson, sidelined by injury, with 22‑year‑old Phoebe Matthews, a rookie invited to training camp to step into Grace’s position ahead of the World Cup.

The book’s dynamic hinges on a grumpy‑and‑sunshine contrast: Grace is wary that Phoebe might replace her, while Phoebe idolizes Grace and believes they are effectively dating once their friends‑with‑benefits relationship begins. Their story unfolds as both women navigate elite sport, pressure to perform at the highest level, and evolving feelings that challenge their sense of rivalry.

In its television incarnation, the project has been retitled Playing the Field and reframed as an ensemble comedy that widens the lens beyond a national team narrative. According to recent reporting, the show will follow four players on Crescent City, a fictional professional women’s soccer club based in New Orleans, with Grace and Phoebe’s relationship still anchoring the storyline.

Creative team and production backing



Sarah Tapscott has been announced as showrunner, writer, and executive producer for Playing the Field, positioning her at the creative center of the adaptation. Tapscott will work alongside executive producers Jeff Wachtel and Jared Berenholz, bringing together experience from television development and production to translate the novel’s tone into a serialized format.

Sports icons Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe, partners off the field and co‑founders of their production banner A Touch More, remain attached as executive producers after initially optioning the book in 2024. In earlier comments about the adaptation, Bird and Rapinoe said they wanted to highlight how romantic and platonic relationships are “organically created through sports” and emphasized that Cleat Cute would explore “the messiness, occasional frustration, and undeniable beauty” of loving both the game and its players.

Additional executive producers include Camille Bernier‑Green and Emily Rasenick, who join Wilsner, Bird, Rapinoe, Wachtel, and Berenholz on the project. Wilsner’s direct involvement links the series back to its source material and to the author’s broader body of work, which includes women‑loving‑women romances such as Something to Talk About and Mistakes Were Made.

A Touch More, Bird and Rapinoe’s production company, previously partnered with Future Shack Entertainment to develop Cleat Cute for television before a streaming home was confirmed. The new collaboration with Amazon MGM Studios provides a platform capable of global distribution at a time when queer sports narratives such as Heated Rivalry have attracted widespread attention.

Story, setting, and tone



Playing the Field is described as an ensemble comedy following “the sexy, messy, and exciting lives” of four players on Crescent City, a professional women’s soccer team in New Orleans. The series will weave together romance, friendship, career ambitions, and locker‑room dynamics, using the club setting to broaden the narrative beyond a single couple while retaining a strong romantic core.

At the heart of the show remain Phoebe Matthews and Grace Henderson, whose dynamic carries over from the novel but is now situated within a club‑level team instead of an international squad. Their will‑they‑won’t‑they relationship, which evolves from rivalry and miscommunication into mutual desire, is expected to provide the emotional throughline amid the ensemble’s multiple story arcs.

Descriptions of Cleat Cute and its adaptation frequently compare the story’s tone to a blend of sports‑driven optimism and character‑centered comedy, with one outlet likening the project’s feel to Ted Lasso crossed with A League of Their Own. The book gained attention within queer romance communities as a sapphic counterpart to the hockey romance Heated Rivalry, positioning the adaptation to speak to audiences already enthusiastic about inclusive sports stories.

Representation, timing, and what comes next



Cleat Cute’s shift to a major studio streamer comes amid heightened visibility for LGBTQ+‑centered romance narratives and growing demand for women’s sports content. Wilsner’s focus on women‑loving‑women relationships and a nonbinary authorial perspective has made the novel a touchpoint for readers seeking affirming representation within commercial romance.

The adaptation’s production timeline remains unclear, and there is currently no announced release date for Playing the Field. Earlier coverage suggested that filming had not yet begun and that any eventual premiere would likely fall no earlier than 2027, though those projections predated Amazon MGM’s confirmed involvement.

Casting details have not yet been released, and no performers have been officially attached to the series as of mid‑April 2026. Fan interest remains high, with online speculation and aspirational casting discussions circulating since at least early 2026, but none of those suggestions have been confirmed by the studio or producers.

For now, the major development is that Amazon MGM Studios has formally taken the project forward under the new title Playing the Field, with a creative team in place and a clear ensemble‑driven premise centered on queer romance in professional women’s soccer. As additional details on filming, casting, and scheduling emerge, the series is positioned to become one of the most visible sapphic sport rom‑coms on a major streaming platform.

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