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California high school Mater Dei signs 10

2 days ago
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California high school Mater Dei signs 10

The agreement comes after Playfly acquired Paragon Marketing Group, which has worked in high school sports marketing, events and social media.But Holmes thinks the deal with Playfly will benefit students, athletes and the school — and that other high schools will follow suit in the future. A private school known for competitive athletics, Mater Dei […]

The agreement comes after Playfly acquired Paragon Marketing Group, which has worked in high school sports marketing, events and social media.But Holmes thinks the deal with Playfly will benefit students, athletes and the school — and that other high schools will follow suit in the future.

A private school known for competitive athletics, Mater Dei has produced a variety of professional athletes in its history — Holmes competed for the school before playing football at USC and in the NFL. He said he hopes the deal will grow a second source of revenue for the school beyond fundraising

A private school known for competitive athletics, Mater Dei has produced a variety of professional athletes in its history — Holmes competed for the school before playing football at USC and in the NFL. He said he hopes the deal will grow a second source of revenue for the school beyond fundraising

Still, the deal with Playfly is yet another way that opportunities to monetize sports — not just in college but also in high school — are booming in the world of NIL. With the Playfly deal, brand partnerships with Mater Dei could make their way to students.AdvertisementPlayfly calls itself a “revenue maximizer” and said in a statement that the deal will bring “substantial” revenue growth and brand partnerships to the school — though neither Playfly nor Mater Dei have named any specific partnerships yet.Gurganious said that the agreement is not an NIL deal. “No funds will be directly allocated to student-athletes by Playfly, nor will student-athletes be required to participate in brand promotions on behalf of the school,” he said. “Instead, this initiative aims to foster meaningful connections between brands and the broader athletic community at Mater Dei High School.”“I think parents feel a lot of pressure, kids feel a lot of pressure and I view that as probably the biggest downside, the amount of pressure you see on families… to make it to all these tournaments regardless of the sport they’re in, all the time traveling, the travel stress, the financial stress it puts families in,” Holmes said.High schools in California cannot negotiate name, image and likeness deals on behalf of athletes; students must sign those on their own, and they have begun to do so in states that allow it. According to Mater Dei, the deal makes the high school the first in the country to sign a third-party multimedia rights deal. The agreement aims to “enhance sponsorship opportunities, media exposure, and fan engagement,” the school wrote in a statement Wednesday.“High school sports remain one of the last frontiers of amateur athletics in the United States, trailing college sports by 15-20 years in terms of commercialization and structural development,” Kyle Gurganious, Playfly’s Director of Marketing and Communications, told The Athletic.“We don’t get involved in negotiation or creating opportunities specifically for any individual,” Mater Dei director of athletic development Khaled Holmes said. “Now, as we create these opportunities as a school or as an athletic department or as a program specifically, I wouldn’t be surprised at some point if there were parallel opportunities for our athletes.”“Having been to a number of college games, kind of seeing the opportunities you can create around different programs to get people more engaged, I think those opportunities are kind of endless in some ways,” he said.

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