The Oklahoman

Benching doesn’t sully Rattler’s marketabil­ity

- Ralph D. Russo

Oklahoma’s Spencer Rattler and Miami’s D’Eriq King have been two of the most prominent football players to cash in on college sports’ new era of allowing athlete endorsemen­ts.

A month and a half into the first season during which a player can earn money from his name, image and likeness, King is out for the season with an injury and Rattler, a preseason All-American, is a backup quarterbac­k.

A cautionary tale for companies looking to partner with college athletes in the future?

Not necessaril­y. Those who work with athletes, schools and brands say everything about NIL compensati­on for college athletes is still evolving, but the change in status for a couple of highprofile players is unlikely to cool the burgeoning market.

“That’s some of the risks you’re going to take with doing a deal. But those same risks occur in the real business world: Is this marketing campaign going to work?” said Lyle Adams, a former Wake Forest soccer player and founder of Spry, a software company that schools and athletes can use to monitor NIL compliance. “I think as the space matures, brands and athletes will be able to navigate this a bit better in the future.”

If anything, the way the season has played out for Rattler and King shows why allowing athletes to capitalize on what could be the height of their fame and marketabil­ity was so important.

Rattler entered the season being touted as a Heisman Trophy favorite and possible high first-round NFL draft pick. That was only part of what made him one of the most famous players in college football. He had also cultivated a huge social media following, with 390,000 Instagram followers. Opendorse, a company that provides a host of NIL services to dozens of Division I universiti­es and colleges, estimates that following could make Rattler $10,000$20,000 for one promotiona­l IG post.

Rattler has the same marketing agency that works with Kansas City Chiefs star Patrick Mahomes handling his NIL opportunit­ies. One deal with a Norman, Oklahoma, car dealership landed him two automobile­s.

Darren Heitner, a Florida-based sports and entertainm­ent attorney, doubts any company that partnered with Rattler has regrets.

“These brands received a very strong return on investment right around the time they entered into these arrangemen­ts,” said Heitner, who consulted on Florida’s NIL law. “That return probably exceeded whatever their spends were right around that time alone. And that’s a byproduct of the vast amount of attention paid on NIL as a whole, but also these individual­s, specifically. And their marketabil­ity. And their recognizab­ility.”

Opendorse CEO Blake Lawrence said the company is still gathering data in this first year of NIL to determine the exact correlatio­n between performanc­e and marketabil­ity. For some athletes, their personal brands are already so strong that a dip in performanc­e might not result in a correspond­ing dip in NIL value, Lawrence said. What that looks like as more athletes enter the NIL market, especially in the highest profile sports such as football and men’s basketball, is still to be determined.

Even after Rattler was benched during the Texas game earlier this month, he added almost 900 Instagram followers. He is still the most followed college football player in the country with the highest rate of audience engagement, Lawrence said.

Rattler has been one of the most talked-about players in college football this week and what he does next (go pro? transfer?) is still a huge story.

“Spencer Rattler is still the king of college football marketabil­ity-wise,” Lawrence said.

Caleb Williams, the quarterbac­k who replaced Rattler against the Longhorns and started this weekend against TCU, has gone from 39,000 Instagram followers before the Texas game to more than 65,000 after another terrific performanc­e Saturday night. Rattler remains a conversati­on starter in a way he might never be again, even if he goes on to a successful NFL career.

That’s especially the case for King, an undersized quarterbac­k who was coming off a knee injury. King’s chance of becoming an NFL star to match his status at Miami going into this season was not great, and now a shoulder injury has ended his season after four games.

Like a lot of college stars, King has a platform unlikely to ever be bigger. Not allowing him to capitalize on that – the way any other college student can – was why many decried NCAA rules prohibitin­g NIL compensati­on to athletes for decades. That ended July 1.

“It’s so important for these athletes to have this opportunit­y, whether it’s due to an injury or poor performanc­e, that they can capitalize off their fame now because nothing is guaranteed in the future,” Heitner said.

 ?? JEFFREY MCWHORTER/AP ?? Oklahoma quarterbac­k Spencer Rattler (7) throws downfield against Texas during the first half on Oct. 9 in Dallas.
JEFFREY MCWHORTER/AP Oklahoma quarterbac­k Spencer Rattler (7) throws downfield against Texas during the first half on Oct. 9 in Dallas.

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