• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Alabama Crimson Tide (official thread of Football, Fake Championships and Banjo)

Industry expert: Tua could earn millions via social media under Olympic model

gettyimages-1188484144-e1574704020963.jpg


Tua Tagovailoa has likely played his last snap as an amateur football player, and that’s likely because of just how violent and damaging that last snap was. The smart money (pun intended) is that the junior quarterback will go pro and spend the 2020 season rehabbing his dislocated hip back to health on some NFL team’s payroll rather than doing so for free at Alabama.

And it’s a good thing that Tua’s injury appears to be better than it originally appeared on the Davis Wade Stadium turf, because we could have all witnessed the absolute costliest martyr to the NCAA’s outdated and unjust financial system to date.

Had that really been the end for Tua, he would have lost out on nine figures in potential salary and endorsements — all while the NCAA barred him from capitalizing on his immense popularity while it was at its zenith.

And, according to industry experts, Tua’s popularity as a college athlete may be more lucrative than those of us on the outside of the industry ever imagined.

Speaking to Forbes, here’s what Tyler Farnsworth, founder and chief growth officer of influencer marketing agency (yuck) August United, and Mathew Micheli, co-founder and managing partner of global influencer marketing agency (double yuck) Viral Nation, say Tua could earn, right now, on the open market:

“Tua boasts nearly half a million followers on Instagram and maintains a mind blowing 19% engagement rate on his posts,” says Farnsworth. “He doesn’t post very often but his fans absolutely love him. A guy like Tua could easily earn $25,000 or more per branded partnership.”

Micheli has a similar opinion of Tagovailoa. “Some of these athletes could arguably be more popular than their pro counterparts. For example, Tua Tagovailoa in college football if given the opportunity, would probably out-earn 90% of starting NFL quarterbacks if given the opportunity. I could almost guarantee that,” he says.

According to Spotrac, the highest-earning NFL quarterbacks are Russell Wilson ($35 million), Ben Roethlisberger ($34 million), Jared Goff ($33.5 million) and Aaron Rodgers (ditto).

Now, it’s possible that Micheli was either: a) unaware how much NFL quarterbacks actually earn in salary, b) speaking of how much Wilson, Goff and company earn in social media endorsements specifically, c) speaking hyperbolically, perhaps in hope of landing Tua as a client in the near future, or d) all of the above. It’s also a large jump between $25,000 per partnership, per one estimate, and earning in the top 10 percent among NFL quarterbacks.

Either way, that’s a lucrative market that Tagovailoa and other players of his standing are shut out from while their earning capacity is potentially at its highest.

It could also turn the old joke about SEC players taking pay cuts to go to the NFL into reality.

Entire article: https://collegefootballtalk.nbcspor...-million-in-endorsements-under-olympic-model/

Re: It could also turn the old joke about SEC players taking pay cuts to go to the NFL into reality.

:slappy:
 
Upvote 0
Tua Tagovailoa Has No Protection Against Possible Multi-Million-Dollar NFL Draft Fall

Tua Tagovailoa’s season-ending hip injury may have cost him upwards of $10 million. Why? Unlike other high-profile NFL prospects, the insurance provided to him by the University of Alabama did not include a loss-of-value policy.

That means he will not be able to recoup millions of dollars in potential losses if he falls from the possible No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 NFL draft to, say, the mid-first round, which some prognosticators are expecting.

Tagovailoa, sources said, decided to only take the coverage that Alabama gave to him. Tua’s coverage entitles him to collect if doctors rule he can never play again, as the school purchased permanent total disability insurance for the QB. It’s important to note that Tagovailoa opting to take the school’s policy did not prohibit him to taking out loss-of-value insurance on his own dime.

“Players who are projected to go in the top-five or 10 picks should absolutely have loss-of-value insurance,” said insurance broker Keith Lerner of Total Planning in Gainesville, Fla., who has sold policies to players and schools over the past two decades and used to work with Alabama. “That’s whether the school is paying or not.”

Tagovailoa had no choice but to return to Alabama this season, since NFL rules require players to be at least three years removed from high school before being eligible to declare for the draft. Tua, who graduated from high school in 2017 as the consensus No. 1 QB recruit, entered this college football season projected by NFL Draft pundits to be in the running for the No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 draft.

In last Saturday’s game against Mississippi State, Tagovailoa dislocated and fractured his hip when the Tide held a 35-7 lead in the second quarter. He had surgery on Monday. His reported recovery timeline would not have him participating in athletic activity until at least the conclusion of the NFL Combine in late February and early March.

“I could not imagine a better partner than The university of Alabama throughout this situation,” said Galu Tagovailoa in statement to The Action Network. “They have communicated with us every step of the way during Tua’s time at Alabama, both on and off the football field. We had numerous discussions regarding insurance coverage, and we have been very comfortable with how Alabama has worked with our family at every turn. The most important thing for us right now is getting Tua healthy, and his focus is getting back with his teammates.”

If Tagovailoa enters the draft, he could possibly still go in the top five based on faith alone, but it’s likely he falls behind both LSU quarterback Joe Burrow and Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert. A drop from, say, the No. 4 pick to the No. 11 pick equates to a loss of about $13 million in signing bonus money. A drop from the No. 4 pick to No. 19 is $23 million.

Entire article: https://www.actionnetwork.com/ncaaf...labama-nfl-draft-fall-insurance-loss-of-value
 
Upvote 0
Tua Tagovailoa Has No Protection Against Possible Multi-Million-Dollar NFL Draft Fall

Tua Tagovailoa’s season-ending hip injury may have cost him upwards of $10 million. Why? Unlike other high-profile NFL prospects, the insurance provided to him by the University of Alabama did not include a loss-of-value policy.

That means he will not be able to recoup millions of dollars in potential losses if he falls from the possible No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 NFL draft to, say, the mid-first round, which some prognosticators are expecting.

Tagovailoa, sources said, decided to only take the coverage that Alabama gave to him. Tua’s coverage entitles him to collect if doctors rule he can never play again, as the school purchased permanent total disability insurance for the QB. It’s important to note that Tagovailoa opting to take the school’s policy did not prohibit him to taking out loss-of-value insurance on his own dime.

“Players who are projected to go in the top-five or 10 picks should absolutely have loss-of-value insurance,” said insurance broker Keith Lerner of Total Planning in Gainesville, Fla., who has sold policies to players and schools over the past two decades and used to work with Alabama. “That’s whether the school is paying or not.”

Tagovailoa had no choice but to return to Alabama this season, since NFL rules require players to be at least three years removed from high school before being eligible to declare for the draft. Tua, who graduated from high school in 2017 as the consensus No. 1 QB recruit, entered this college football season projected by NFL Draft pundits to be in the running for the No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 draft.

In last Saturday’s game against Mississippi State, Tagovailoa dislocated and fractured his hip when the Tide held a 35-7 lead in the second quarter. He had surgery on Monday. His reported recovery timeline would not have him participating in athletic activity until at least the conclusion of the NFL Combine in late February and early March.

“I could not imagine a better partner than The university of Alabama throughout this situation,” said Galu Tagovailoa in statement to The Action Network. “They have communicated with us every step of the way during Tua’s time at Alabama, both on and off the football field. We had numerous discussions regarding insurance coverage, and we have been very comfortable with how Alabama has worked with our family at every turn. The most important thing for us right now is getting Tua healthy, and his focus is getting back with his teammates.”

If Tagovailoa enters the draft, he could possibly still go in the top five based on faith alone, but it’s likely he falls behind both LSU quarterback Joe Burrow and Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert. A drop from, say, the No. 4 pick to the No. 11 pick equates to a loss of about $13 million in signing bonus money. A drop from the No. 4 pick to No. 19 is $23 million.

Entire article: https://www.actionnetwork.com/ncaaf...labama-nfl-draft-fall-insurance-loss-of-value

No loss of value rider is borderline negligent.
 
Upvote 0
If Kylie Fucking Jenner can be a billionaire on the basis of nothing more than social media influence, I have to think Tua should be able to reach at least 9 figures.

I suppose there's some comparison to be made between guys that follow athletes a little too closely and guys that fawn over instagram models ... but the numbers will never come close.
It's a different world... Tua was born with the wrong hardware to be Instagram rich.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top