Kaden Coleman-Bennett, a high school football player, sports his school’s colors. Shutterstock.com (background); Courtesy of Dematha Catholic (ad); Maansi Srivastava/The New York Times (Coleman-Bennett)

Selling Their Names

Teen athletes can now profit from sponsorship deals. How will that change high school sports?

Kaden Coleman-Bennett was 10 when youth football coaches started pressing envelopes with thousands of dollars into his mom’s hand, asking for Kaden to play for their club teams. Brittany Coleman always refused. Payments for top players, an open secret in youth sports, weren’t allowed, and she didn’t want to tarnish her son. But there was another, potentially far more lucrative, way for Kaden, who became one of the best eighth-grade football players in the nation, to profit from his talent.

Coleman allowed her son to sign sponsorship deals with a local fashion brand and an athletic gear company. Now a 14-year-old freshman at the national football powerhouse DeMatha Catholic High School in Hyattsville, Maryland, Kaden also has an agent to help him with future deals.

“The goal is for him to reach a million dollars his freshman year,” his mom says.

Just as college athletes can now accept payment for their athletic talent through name, image, and likeness, or N.I.L., deals—which compensate players for the use of their image in commercials and other promotional material—so can high school students. Since 2021, when the National Collegiate Athletic Association (N.C.A.A.) began allowing N.I.L. deals for college athletes, high school athletic associations in at least 40 states and the District of Columbia have implemented their own N.I.L. policies. Major brands such as Reebok, Gatorade, and Leaf Trading Cards have offered deals to a handful of high school football and basketball stars, and local businesses including real estate companies and restaurants participate as well. The deals can range from modest—free clothing and food—to multimillion-dollar signing bonuses.

The idea of student athletes profiting from high school sports has raised concerns. State association rules tend to leave it to the students and their families to negotiate contracts—schools aren’t involved—and missteps could lead to predatory deals or even a student’s losing eligibility to participate in school sports.

“In compensating minors, you just hope that they have someone responsible acting on their behalf,” says David Ridpath, a professor of sports business at Ohio University.

But the potential for some of the bigger deals to bring financial security to families and lucrative recruitment offers from colleges is too good to pass up, say proponents. Keith Hardy, the founder of clothing company Second N Six, sees his deal with Kaden as a win for both of their futures.

“It is a bet on Kaden’s future,” Hardy says, “that he is going to blow up even more in high school and wherever he goes to college.”

Kaden Coleman-Bennett was 10 when youth football coaches started pressing envelopes with thousands of dollars into his mom’s hand. They wanted Kaden to play for their club teams. Brittany Coleman always refused. She knew that payments for top players, an open secret in youth sports, weren’t allowed. She didn’t want to harm her son’s reputation. But there was another way for Kaden, who became one of the best eighth-grade football players in the nation, to profit from his talent.

Coleman allowed her son to sign sponsorship deals with a local fashion brand and an athletic gear company. Kaden is now a 14-year-old freshman at the national football powerhouse DeMatha Catholic High School in Hyattsville, Maryland. He also has an agent to help him with future deals.

“The goal is for him to reach a million dollars his freshman year,” his mom says.

College and high school athletes can now accept payment for their athletic talent through name, image, and likeness, or N.I.L., deals. These deals compensate players for the use of their image in commercials and other promotional material. Since 2021, when the National Collegiate Athletic Association (N.C.A.A.) began allowing N.I.L. deals for college athletes, high school athletic associations in at least 40 states and the District of Columbia have implemented their own N.I.L. policies. Major brands such as Reebok, Gatorade, and Leaf Trading Cards have offered deals to a handful of high school football and basketball stars. Local businesses including real estate companies and restaurants participate as well. The deals can range from free clothing and food to multimillion-dollar signing bonuses.

The idea of student athletes profiting from high school sports has raised concerns. State association rules tend to leave it to the students and their families to negotiate contracts. The schools aren’t involved in making deals. However, mistakes could lead to predatory deals or even a student’s losing eligibility to participate in school sports.

“In compensating minors, you just hope that they have someone responsible acting on their behalf,” says David Ridpath, a professor of sports business at Ohio University.

But the potential for some of the bigger deals to bring financial security to families and profitable recruitment offers from colleges is too good to pass up, say proponents. Keith Hardy, the founder of clothing company Second N Six, sees his deal with Kaden as a win for both of their futures.

“It is a bet on Kaden’s future,” Hardy says, “that he is going to blow up even more in high school and wherever he goes to college.”

Shutterstock.com (Background); Georgia Jones/University Images via Getty Images (Dunne); Sean Gardner/Getty Images for Raising Cane’s (Endorsement)

Livvy Dunne, a former college gymnast, has endorsement deals worth more than $4 million.

From College to High School

The money started rolling in to high school sports almost immediately after the N.C.A.A. changed its rules in 2021, allowing college athletes to sign N.I.L. deals and turning some of them into millionaires almost overnight (see timeline, below)That year, California became the first state to open the opportunity to high school athletes. Within months, Jaden Rashada, then a junior quarterback at Pittsburg High School in California, signed a deal worth somewhere in the low thousands to promote AIR, a sports recruiting platform, on his Instagram and X accounts. By the next year, the top-five high school N.I.L. deals were worth more than $1 million each, according to sports media company On3.

The danger, to many administrators, was the potential for introducing high school athletes to the gamesmanship of the college sports world, where schools, usually working through third-party donors, offer multimillion-dollar N.I.L. deals that can determine which college an athlete chooses to attend. In some cases, an athlete might transfer to another school for a better deal. If high schoolers could sell themselves this way, it would defeat the purpose of school sports, critics say.

The money started rolling in to high school sports almost immediately after the N.C.A.A. changed its rules in 2021. Some college athletes, who are now allowed to sign N.I.L. deals, have become overnight millionaires (see timeline, below). In 2021, California became the first state to open the opportunity to high school athletes. Within months, Jaden Rashada, then a junior quarterback at Pittsburg High School in California, signed a deal worth somewhere in the low thousands to promote AIR, a sports recruiting platform, on his Instagram and X accounts. By the next year, the top-five high school N.I.L. deals were worth more than $1 million each, according to sports media company On3.

The danger, to many administrators, was the potential for introducing high school athletes to the gamesmanship of the college sports world. Schools, usually working through third-party donors, offer multimillion-dollar N.I.L. deals to influence which college an athlete chooses to attend. In some cases, an athlete might transfer to another school for a better deal. If high schoolers could sell themselves this way, it would defeat the purpose of school sports, critics say.

via Instagram

Ella Hagen, a runner, promotes sneaker brand Hoka on Instagram.

“High school sports are about the team—not an individual’s own personal pursuit of excellence,” Karissa Niehoff, the executive officer of the National Federation of State High School Associations, writes in response to N.I.L. deals on the organization’s website. “The primary reason that an overwhelming majority of high school students play sports is to have fun and spend significant and meaningful time with their peers.”

State rules, which continue to evolve, have so far aimed to prevent exploitative deals by, for example, prohibiting student athletes from signing professional contracts; taking payment based on winning or losing; or accepting compensation for agreeing to attend another high school.

And while a few high school athletes have become millionaires from N.I.L. contracts with big companies such as Nike, the vast majority, experts say, will get deals amounting to just hundreds of dollars and a minimal time commitment—something like a part-time job.

“There’s no added pressure in any way,” says Ella Hagen, 18, a runner at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

“High school sports are about the team—not an individual’s own personal pursuit of excellence,” Karissa Niehoff, the executive officer of the National Federation of State High School Associations, writes in response to N.I.L. deals on the organization’s website. “The primary reason that an overwhelming majority of high school students play sports is to have fun and spend significant and meaningful time with their peers.”

State rules have so far aimed to prevent exploitative deals. For example, some rules prohibit student athletes from signing professional contracts; taking payment based on winning or losing; or accepting compensation for agreeing to attend another high school.

A  few high school athletes have become millionaires from N.I.L. contracts with big companies such as Nike. But experts say the vast majority will get deals amounting to just hundreds of dollars and a minimal time commitment, similar to a part-time job.

“There’s no added pressure in any way,” says Ella Hagen, 18, a runner at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

High-profile college N.I.L. deals got many high school athletes dreaming of large paydays.

While a student at Summit High School in Breckenridge, Colorado, last year, Hagen became the first female high school student to sign an N.I.L. deal with running shoe brand Hoka, and she has also signed with watchmaker Coros.

Hagen says the N.I.L. deals have mainly helped her become a better athlete, with no downsides. In addition to receiving running gear and sports watches, she’s been paid to run in brand-sponsored races in the U.S. and France. (Her father, Michael, declined to say how much.) Through Coros, she’s had the mentorship of pro athletes representing the brand.

“It just felt like having the brands by my side while I was training and competing made me more motivated,” Hagen says.

The companies see an opportunity to establish relationships with future stars while getting their wares in front of other teens, says Ryan Poland, the Coros representative who approached Hagen.

“It’s a cool brand story when you can start supporting someone when they’re 16, 17 years old and—I would hope—continue to support them when they’re chasing an Olympic dream or something like that,” he says.

Last year, Hagen was a student at Summit High School in Breckenridge, Colorado. She became the first female high school student to sign an N.I.L. deal with running shoe brand Hoka. She has also signed with watchmaker Coros.

Hagen says the N.I.L. deals have mainly helped her become a better athlete, with no downsides. In addition to receiving running gear and sports watches, she’s been paid to run in brand-sponsored races in the U.S. and France. (Her father, Michael, declined to say how much she’s been paid.) She’s had the mentorship of pro athletes who also represent Coros.

“It just felt like having the brands by my side while I was training and competing made me more motivated,” Hagen says.

The companies see an opportunity to establish relationships with future stars while getting their wares in front of other teens, says Ryan Poland, the Coros representative who approached Hagen.

“It’s a cool brand story when you can start supporting someone when they’re 16, 17 years old and—I would hope—continue to support them when they’re chasing an Olympic dream or something like that,” he says.

Courtesy of Rok Baller and Seth Bunger (field); Courtesy of Shotwitdee (gym)

Anayeli Guzman on the softball field; and in the gym, representing D1 Training

Staying Focused

Some teen athletes do dream of getting lucrative deals. The kind of money the top N.I.L. earners are bringing in could go a long way toward securing their financial futures.

“It’s such an opportunity for their families and themselves,” says Anayeli Guzman, 16, a junior softball player at Evangelical Christian School in Fort Myers, Florida. Earlier this year, she signed with a local gym, D1 Training, which uses videos of her training for promotion.

“I hope someday that could be me,” she says of the headline-making deals, “that I can provide that opportunity for my family.”

Her father, Leon, calls the athletic gear and free training D1 provides Anayeli—worth between $160 and $240 a week—“a blessing.”

Around school, where she’s the first student to get an N.I.L. deal, Anayeli’s known as “N-I-L-ee.” Her teammates seem to be taking it in stride, says the athletic director, Chris Harris.

“We don’t want any jealousy,” he says. “If you have a school culture that celebrates success, that’s going to motivate more student athletes to seek their own N.I.L. deal or scholarship.”

Some teen athletes do dream of getting big money deals. The kind of money the top N.I.L. earners are bringing in could go a long way toward securing their financial futures.

“It’s such an opportunity for their families and themselves,” says Anayeli Guzman, 16, a junior softball player at Evangelical Christian School in Fort Myers, Florida. Earlier this year, she signed with a local gym, D1 Training. The gym uses  videos of her training for promotion.

“I hope someday that could be me,” she says of the headline-making deals, “that I can provide that opportunity for my family.”

Her father, Leon, calls the athletic gear and free training D1 provides Anayeli—worth between $160 and $240 a week—“a blessing.”

Around school, she’s the first student to get an N.I.L. deal. Anayeli is now known as “N-I-L-ee.” Her teammates seem to be taking it in stride, says the athletic director, Chris Harris.

“We don’t want any jealousy,” he says. “If you have a school culture that celebrates success, that’s going to motivate more student athletes to seek their own N.I.L. deal or scholarship.”

Do N.I.L. deals get in the way of pursuing high school sports for the fun of it?

As for Kaden, who once preferred drawing and science to football, he’s still adjusting to his newfound celebrity. While he was outside his school one day this spring, a group of high school students passed by and called out to him. He didn’t know them.

“They were like, ‘There’s number 0,’” referring to Kaden’s uniform number, his mom says, “and making a fuss over him. It is so unreal.”

For now, Kaden’s agent isn’t taking a commission, which for N.I.L. agents can range from 10 to 20 percent. He’s getting to know his new client and working on a marketing plan.

Kaden knows that the $1 million goal might be aspirational, but he’s promised his mother to continue making his grades, doing his homework, and being a good son.

“The only people out there who touch a million dollars are in the N.F.L. or in college,” he says. “With a lot of help, I have hit all my goals so far. I know how to stay focused.”

As for Kaden, who once preferred drawing and science to football, he’s still adjusting to his newfound celebrity. While he was outside his school one day this spring, a group of high school students passed by and called out to him. He didn’t know them.

“They were like, ‘There’s number 0,’” his mom says, referring to Kaden’s uniform number, “and making a fuss over him. It is so unreal.”

For now, Kaden’s agent isn’t taking a commission. (The commission for N.I.L agents can range from 10 to 20 percent.) He’s getting to know his new client and working on a marketing plan.

Kaden knows that the $1 million goal might be a stretch, but he’s promised his mother to continue making his grades, doing his homework, and being a good son.

“The only people out there who touch a million dollars are in the N.F.L. or in college,” he says. “With a lot of help, I have hit all my goals so far. I know how to stay focused.”

Teen Athlete Ella Hagen Talks Running—and Promotes a Shoe Brand
The runner talks about herself and encourages other girls to compete.

Joe Drape is a sports reporter for The New York Times.

Joe Drape is a sports reporter for The New York Times.

TIMELINE

Allowing Student Athletes to Profit

For more than a century after its founding in 1906, the N.C.A.A. barred college students from profiting from their name, image, and likeness. Here’s how things changed for college and high school athletes.

For more than a century after its founding in 1906, the N.C.A.A. barred college students from profiting from their name, image, and likeness. Here’s how things changed for college and high school athletes.

2009: Opening the Door

Shutterstock.com (background); Eric Draper/AP Images

Former college basketball player Ed O’Bannon (right) sues the N.C.A.A. for using his likeness in commercials, raising the question of whether student athletes should be paid.

Former college basketball player Ed O’Bannon (right) sues the N.C.A.A. for using his likeness in commercials, raising the question of whether student athletes should be paid.

2019: Pay to Play

California’s Fair Pay to Play Act allows college athletes in the state to get paid through N.I.L. deals. This sets off a cascade of similar laws in other states.

California’s Fair Pay to Play Act allows college athletes in the state to get paid through N.I.L. deals. This sets off a cascade of similar laws in other states.

June 2021: N.C.A.A. v. Alston

Shutterstock.com (background); Jeff Gentner/AP Images (Alston)

Shawne Alston and other college players sued the N.C.A.A. over compensation.

The Supreme Court rules that the N.C.A.A. can’t limit the education-related benefits colleges can offer athletes, opening the door to N.I.L. deals.

The Supreme Court rules that the N.C.A.A. can’t limit the education-related benefits colleges can offer athletes, opening the door to N.I.L. deals.

July 2021: New N.C.A.A. Rules

After years of pressure, the N.C.A.A. changes its rules to allow college athletes to profit from N.I.L. deals.

After years of pressure, the N.C.A.A. changes its rules to allow college athletes to profit from N.I.L. deals.

August 2021: High School Deals

California becomes the first state to pass legislation allowing high school athletes to sign N.I.L. deals.

California becomes the first state to pass legislation allowing high school athletes to sign N.I.L. deals.

$10.5 million

VALUE of the N.I.L. deal quarterback Bryce Underwood received to attend the University of Michigan. He signed the deal while in high school.

Source: University of Michigan

VALUE of the N.I.L. deal quarterback Bryce Underwood received to attend the University of Michigan. He signed the deal while in high school.

Source: University of Michigan

<1%

PERCENTAGE of the 8 million U.S. high school athletes who’ll get a lucrative N.I.L. deal.

Source: Education Week

PERCENTAGE of the 8 million U.S. high school athletes who’ll get a lucrative N.I.L. deal.

Source: Education Week

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