Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers has launched an NFT campaign with Metabillia that will pay him a total of $1 million, Yahoo Finance has learned.
As a result, the 19-year-old's total compensation through name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals is now approaching the $4 million mark.
The average NIL quarterback sponsorship pays the athlete $2,466 per deal, according to Opendorse. Ewers's $1 million sponsorship is broken into 12 payments of various amounts well above the average on top of 50% revenue share.
“Our focus is to partner with young and upcoming athletes," Metabilia CEO Joe De Perio told Yahoo Finance. "It's well-documented Quinn is, if not number one in his [NFL] draft class, but pretty up there. I think his game is made for Sunday as well.”
College athletes were cleared to profit from their NIL on June 30, 2021, when the NCAA made the groundbreaking decision to approve an interim policy that would allow all student-athletes to profit from their NIL. Players can be paid for sponsorship appearances, social media posts, autographs, and even non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
There are currently 29 states that have passed their own NIL policies outside of the NCAA. The industry raked in an estimated $917 million in the first year of NIL, according to Opendorse, and is projected to break the billion-dollar mark in 2022.
Ewers, who is expected to return from an injury on Saturday against rival Oklahoma, has been a flashy face in the space since he left high school a year early to attend Ohio State.
Ewers played his first season in Ohio, where NIL laws weren’t as stringent, and signed a $1.4 million deal with GT Sports Marketing. Since transferring to Texas, Ewers signed a six-figure deal to promote Wrangler jeans (KTB), among other partnerships.
Ewers’s NFT launch is centered on exclusivity. Supporters pay an initial membership fee, starting as low as $30 and as high as $500, to acquire access to future exclusive NFT drops and signed memorabilia.
NFTs have become popular in the space. Multiple industry experts have told Yahoo Finance that NFTs could play a big role in funding the NIL industry.
Like any other potentially valuable collector’s item, NFTs don’t have a set price. Although the broader NFT market has slumped amid crypto's decline this year, Texas fans can still funnel millions of dollars into Ewers's NFT knowing that 50% of the revenue will kick back to their star quarterback. Ewers will also receive 50% of any company revenue from secondary market activity.
"It's a way for fans to connect with the athlete,” De Perio said, “and for boosters to purchase NFTs on athletes they support.”
And since there’s no set value for the service and the NIL space as a whole lacks regulatory oversight, there’s no limit to how much Ewers or any other athlete could make off a project like this.
Through NFTs, boosters can pay as much as they want to support players. According to the press release from Metabilia, Ewers has already locked in a “six-figure plus” commitment from a prominent donor group to support the project.
“I think it’s awesome,” Ewers told KXAN-TV in Austin last month. “I think it’s a great deal that players are finally getting paid. You know all this hard work that we do with summer workouts, all this fall camp and film studies — I think it’s a great deal that we can finally get paid.”
—
Josh is a reporter and producer for Yahoo Finance.
Click here for the latest trending stock tickers of the Yahoo Finance platform
Click here for the latest stock market news and in-depth analysis, including events that move stocks
Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance
Download the Yahoo Finance app for Apple or Android
Follow Yahoo Finance on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flipboard, LinkedIn, and YouTube
Draymond Green, or rather, Mr. Curry, has work to do.
In the wake of mounting interest rates, San Antonio's housing market has been showing signs of slowing since the second quarter of 2022. Here's what homebuilders are doing to respond.
Scorsese and DiCaprio have been trying to develop an adaptation of Erik Larson's book for 12 years.
Texas error means National Guard troops deployed in Abbott's border mission face surprise tax payments
Ramona Shelburne: Reporting w/ @wojespn: The Golden State Warriors are taking "every legal course of action" to discover how video of Draymond Green punching Jordan Poole during a scuffle at practice on Wednesday was made public, sources told ESPN. …
The author opens about learning to cook, her famous family and trying to change the narrative that it's "selfish" for moms to take time for themselves.
"I don't even know if it's legal for him to come back." Dan Harmon: “I Don’t Even Know if It’s Legal” for Chevy Chase to Appear in Community Movie [Updated] Wren Graves
The subsidiaries of Tampa-based HCI Group, Homeowners Choice Property & Casualty Insurance and TypTap Insurance Co., hold 26,200 policies in force that amount to more than $10 billion in exposure in the six-county Southwest Florida region where Hurricane Ian made landfall. One estimate places the total insured losses from Hurricane Ian at up to $57 billion, which doesn’t include flood claims taken on by the National Flood Insurance Program.
In one of the more unusual television advertisements of this year’s midterm election campaigns, Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., accuses Democrats of wanting to defund police departments. “Violent crime is surging in Louisiana,” he says in the ad. “Woke leaders blame the police.” Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times That wasn’t the unusual part. In Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and other states, Republicans have painted Democrats as hostile to police and as cheerleaders
In the coming weeks, there is a real chance that student loan borrowers will begin sending in their applications amid deep uncertainty about whether the Biden administration’s program will even hold up in court.
As a rule, the NFL’s Thursday Night Football games are awful. Players are generally lethargic after playing just four days earlier in their usual Sunday slots. Coaches, also lacking the typical prep time, haven’t had enough bandwidth to install more than generic offensive or defensive schemes. What typically follows is what we got in last night’s 12-9 snoozer between the Indianpolis Colts and the Denver Broncos, where the most interesting part of the action came on the third play of the game. Th
Is Matt Patricia really the offensive play-caller in New England?
A San Antonio police officer has been fired after shooting a teenager who was eating a burger in his car, parked in front of a McDonald’s, as reported by HuffPost.
Jake Paul has his eyes on recent MMA free agent Nate Diaz after his main event against ex-UFC champ Anderson Silva.
(Bloomberg) — New York Mayor Eric Adams declared a state of emergency over the city’s migrant crisis, saying that the recent arrival of more than 17,000 asylum-seekers from Central America and South America is straining the city’s resources. Most Read from BloombergBiden Says Putin Threats Real, Could Spark Nuclear ‘Armageddon’Stock Traders Hit Sell Button on Hawkish Fed Bets: Markets WrapBiden Should Hit Saudi Arabia Where It Really HurtsKremlin Lets State Media Tell Some Truths About Putin’s
Ava Jones and her family were hit by a vehicle in Louisville in July. The crash killed her father and left her with four torn ligaments in each knee.
The Broncos had an open receiver on their final play of overtime.
The evolution of Migos has been one to watch in Hip-Hop over the years.
With Hurricane Ian bringing massive storm surge and inland flooding, Floridians could have more than $10 billion in uninsured flood losses, according to an analysis by CoreLogic, a property-information and analytics firm.
ESPN's Ryan Mcgee lists Texas A&M in the "College Football Bottom 10"