NIL
What were the biggest sports business deals of Q2 2025?

The second quarter of 2025 was another busy period of deal-making in the sports industry.
TKO began the quarter by teaming up with Saudi Arabia to launch a boxing promotion that aims to shake up the sport, while newly crowned Premier League champions Liverpool sealed a bumper kit contract with Adidas.
On the broadcast front, NBC struck a multibillion-dollar extension for US rights to the Olympic Games, the National Hockey League (NHL) bagged a lucrative deal with Rogers Communications in Canada and Rugby Australia (RA) secured an uplift on its partnership with Nine for the rest of the decade.
Q2 also saw William Chisholm agree to buy the Boston Celtics in a deal valuing the National Basketball Association (NBA) team at US$6.1 billion – a record for any North American sports franchise.
Below, SportsPro provides summaries, analysis and data-led insights into the deals that got the industry talking over the last three months, crowns the ‘Top Dealer’ of the last quarter and presents every sponsorship and media rights deal tracked during that period.

TKO launches new Saudi-backed boxing promotion

Image credit: Sela
Sport: Boxing
Category: Finance & investment
Terms: TKO to serve as managing partner, overseeing day-to-day operations, management and oversight of the promotion
TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), has confirmed it will be launching a new boxing promotion in partnership with Saudi Arabia.
SportsPro says…
This multi-year venture sees Endeavor-owned TKO team up with Saudi events company Sela, which is owned by the country’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), and General Entertainment Authority (GEA) chairman Turki Alalshikh.
TKO and UFC chief executive Dana White have been frequently linked with an entry into boxing, which has always looked like a natural fit for the pair given their experience in combat sports.
There is a lot currently unknown about this new promotion, including its roster and event schedule. That said, it seems there will be a heavy emphasis on unearthing the next wave of talent – a welcome prospect given the shrinking pool of boxing stars in the US.
Mark Shapiro, president and chief operating officer of TKO, also said on a TKO earnings call that the company stood to receive a fee of “US$10 million plus” and was “not putting any money” into the project.
Shapiro and White have both bemoaned the fragmented nature of boxing, where splintered governance, an excessive number of championship belts and squabbling promoters have meant elite bouts often fail to materialise.
The arrival of Alalshikh, though, has changed all that. Indeed, scanning the trusted pound-for-pound rankings on The Ring – which Alalshikh bought last year – reveals that most of the sport’s best have all now fought on a Saudi Arabia-backed card.
TKO’s entry into boxing has prompted many questions. Will the new promotion be the sport’s equivalent of LIV Golf? What will this mean for other established promotional companies such as Matchroom, Queensbury and Top Rank? And is TKO looking to create the ‘UFC of boxing’?
There is plenty to be answered in the coming months. But whatever this new venture is aiming to be, the combination of TKO, Alalshikh and Saudi Arabia is a potent mix for disrupting boxing.
Liverpool confirm new Adidas kit deal from 2025/26 season

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Soccer
Category: Sponsorship & marketing
Terms: Multi-year deal; reportedly valued at more than UK£60 million per year
English soccer champions Liverpool have unveiled German sportswear giant Adidas as their new kit partner from next season.
SportsPro says…
Reports that Liverpool were set to reunite with Adidas emerged last year. Confirmation of the deal means the pair will partner for a third time, having done so from 1985 to 1996 and then from 2006 to 2012.
The Reds, who won a record-equalling 20th top-flight title this season, have had their kit supplied by Nike for the past five years in a pact that reportedly saw the club pocket a guaranteed UK£30 million (US$40.4 million) per year from the US brand, plus a royalty of around 20 per cent on net sales of club products.
This new contract with Adidas is reportedly an uplift on the Nike tie-up and is set to see Liverpool earn more than UK£60 million (US$80.9 million) per year. That would put the Premier League champions up amongst the rest of the top tier’s ‘big six’ in terms of the competition’s most valuable kit partnerships.
The extra income will also help Liverpool close the revenue gap on Manchester City, Manchester United and Arsenal, who all earned more than the Merseyside outfit in the 2023/24 financial year.
Though Nike has lost Liverpool, the company is due to continue partnerships with Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and Brighton & Hove Albion next season.
Adidas, meanwhile, beefs out a Premier League club kit roster for the 2025/26 campaign that currently consists of Arsenal, Aston Villa, Newcastle United, Manchester United, Nottingham Forest and Fulham.
NBC and IOC sign US$3bn Olympic broadcast extension to 2036

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Olympics
Category: Broadcast & OTT
Terms: Valued at US$3 billion; runs until 2036
NBCUniversal’s parent company Comcast has agreed a US$3 billion extension with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to retain the US broadcast rights to the Olympic Games until 2036.
SportsPro says…
This extension felt like a parting gift from outgoing IOC president Thomas Bach, giving the Olympic movement and his successor Kirsty Coventry revenue certainty for more than a decade and funds to help futureproof the Games.
The IOC has spent the past decade wondering how it can maintain the Games’ appeal, particularly among younger audiences, a challenge which has been exacerbated by geopolitical issues and awkward time zones for recent editions of the Olympics, as well as a global pandemic that dominated Tokyo and Beijing and affected viewing figures.
However, Paris 2024 was an unqualified success, not least for NBC, which has made sport a core component of its streaming service Peacock, which showed every minute of last year’s Olympics.
The importance of this deal should not be underestimated given that NBC, whose prior contract with the IOC until 2032 was worth a whopping US$7.65 billion, is ultimately the single biggest benefactor of the worldwide Olympic movement.
Having shown every Summer Olympics since 1998 and every Winter Olympics since 2002, NBC has now made sure to secure another one of its marquee properties for the long-term.
Interestingly, though, the new deal extends beyond a traditional broadcast rights partnership, with Comcast set to provide technological infrastructure, offer access to its cohort of technology startups and collaborate with the IOC on digital advertising opportunities in the US, giving it potentially even greater control over how the Olympic broadcast is delivered.
Boston Celtics sold to William Chisholm in record US$6.1bn deal

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Basketball
Category: Finance & investment
Terms: Celtics acquired at a US$6.1 billion valuation
A group led by US businessman William Chisholm has agreed to acquire the NBA’S Boston Celtics in a deal valuing the team at US$6.1 billion.
SportsPro says…
The US$6.1 billion sale marks a significant return for the Grousbecks, who bought the franchise in 2002 for US$360 million. The Boston Globe reports that the sale price could rise further, with the shares sold in 2028 likely to be more valuable given the NBA is expected to further grow its revenues by then.
Either way, the sale is another sign that US franchise valuations continue to soar.
Chisholm and his group will benefit from the league’s new set of domestic media rights deals, which kick in from next season and are worth US$76 billion. However, it remains to be seen how he and Wyc Grousbeck will work together in managing the franchise up to 2028.
Chisholm will face significant challenges upon joining the franchise, which includes inheriting an expensive player payroll that will force him to make luxury tax payments. The Celtics also do not own their arena, which limits their gameday revenues, and they only own a minority stake in their local regional sports network (RSN) partner, meaning they cannot fully profit from their media rights.
Still, the Celtics’ US$6.1 billion sale opens the door for the NBA to consider expansion, with current team owners likely to be more open-minded given the high price tag.
NHL locks in Rogers media rights extension in Canada

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Ice hockey
Category: Broadcast & OTT
Terms: Valued at CAN$11 billion; runs from 2026/27 until 2037/38
The NHL has agreed a 12-year extension of its Canadian broadcast partnership with telecommunications company Rogers Communications.
SportsPro says…
The deal represents a major win for the NHL. The league has more than doubled the amount it receives under its current contract with Rogers, which was worth CAN$5.2 billion (US$3.8 billion).
Plus, with the agreement including an option to sublicense some of the rights, as Rogers did to Amazon for the final two years of its existing contract in an effort to recuperate some of its investment, there is still room for the deal to deliver further value for the NHL.
Though among the most popular sports in the US, ice hockey reigns supreme in Canada, meaning the NHL’s media rights are among the most coveted in the market.
One factor that potentially drove Rogers’ desire to retain the NHL is the improving performances of Canadian clubs, which drives interest and viewership. This season’s Stanley Cup playoffs featured five teams from Canada, up from four last year, and the Edmonton Oilers have reached the finals for a second consecutive year.
In fact, game seven of the 2024 Stanley Cup Finals was the most-watched broadcast ever on Sportsnet and viewership has been surging again in Canada during this year’s postseason, illustrating why Rogers was prepared to pay big to keep hold of the rights.
Rugby Australia extends Nine broadcast pact to 2030

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Rugby
Category: Broadcast & OTT
Terms: Five-year deal valued at up to AUS$240 million; includes all men’s and women’s international Tests (excluding Rugby World Cup matches), Super Rugby games, Sanzaar Tests and men’s Nations Cup
Rugby Australia (RA) has signed a five-year domestic broadcast extension with commercial network Nine in a deal valued at up to AUS$240 million (US$155.7 million).
SportsPro says…
RA announced a deficit of AUS$9.2 million (US$5.5 million) in 2024 and warned of “another challenging year”, so this broadcast extension will be warmly received by the governing body.
Indeed, RA will view the improved deal as a major win in a market where domestically it lags behind the Australian Football League (AFL) and National Rugby League (NRL), who pocket around AUS$640 million (US$384 million) and AUS$400 million (US$240 million) respectively from their broadcast contracts each year.
Super Rugby potentially being less accessible on free-to-air (FTA) television will spark debate about whether revenue superseding reach is in the best interests of Australian rugby union. RA, though, evidently deemed the exclusively arrangement with Stan Sport necessary in order to ensure an uplift in value of the new pact, while still retaining a significant FTA offering.
RA will be hoping to have landed on a deal that offers viewers the best of both words.
US Ski & Snowboard lands record Stifel sponsorship extension

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Winter sports
Category: Sponsorship & marketing
Terms: Reportedly valued at US$100 million; runs from May 2026 until April 2034
US Ski & Snowboard has extended its partnership with financial services firm Stifel in a deal described as the largest sponsorship in the national governing body’s history.
SportsPro says…
Stifel first partnered with US Ski & Snowboard back in 2022 and the latest extension, which Reuters reports is worth US$100 million comes after the company generated record revenues of close to US$5 billion in 2024.
The renewal comes with an expanded package of rights for Stifel, including title sponsorship across the entire US ski team in all disciplines, as well as the designation as the exclusive financial services partner of the governing body.
However, the length of the relationship suggests a big motivation for Stifel to lock in an extension was a desire to be associated with US Ski & Snowboard in the build-up to a home Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, which last year was confirmed as the host of the 2034 edition.
That may also have inspired its decision to introduce a performance bonus programme for athletes and coaches as part of the expanded deal, which will allow Stifel to be seen putting money directly into athlete pockets and enable it to align with the team’s success in the run-up to the Games.
US Ski & Snowboard will be hoping that other brands will be thinking the same way and that it can capitalise on the opportunity of the Winter Olympics returning to the Utah capital for the first time since 2002.
Alexis Ohanian makes latest women’s sport investment with WSL champions Chelsea

Image credit: Getty Images
Sport: Soccer
Category: Finance & investment, women’s sport
Terms: Reportedly valued at UK£20 million
Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian has bought a ten per cent stake in Women’s Super League (WSL) champions Chelsea.
SportsPro says…
Ohanian’s investment portfolio has shown he is a major supporter of women’s sport. This investment in Chelsea Women suggests he believes European women’s soccer holds major growth potential, with the continent featuring some of the sport’s biggest names and most storied clubs.
Having previously been key in driving the growth of the National Women’s Soccer League’s (NWSL) Angel City, which is considered the most valuable women’s soccer team in the world, the technology entrepreneur will hope to inspire similar development for the Blues. Since being spun off, Chelsea now have dedicated personnel and are striking bespoke commercial deals for their women’s team, which their owners believe will ensure the club remains one of women’s soccer biggest outfits.
Ohanian’s decision to invest in Chelsea comes as the WSL increases its efforts to grow its commercial revenues. A new broadcast deal with Sky and the BBC that begins next season will be worth UK£65 million (US$86.4 million) over five years, while the recently rebranded Women’s Super League Football (WSL Football) body is now in search of a league-wide sleeve partner deal, following Barclays’ title sponsorship extension for the WSL, worth a reported UK£45 million (US$59.8 million).



Women’s sport revenues to reach US$2.35bn in 2025
Date: March 2025
Published by: Deloitte
Market(s): Global
Category: Finance & investment, women’s sport
- Commercial revenues surpassed US$1 billion for first time in 2024
- Basketball (US$1.03 billion) and soccer (US$820 million) to generate biggest revenues this year
- Significant rise in broadcast (US$590 million) and matchday revenues (US$500 million) also anticipated
Access the full report here.
Global sports industry generated US$170bn revenue in 2024
Date: May 2025
Published by: Two Circles
Market(s): Global
Category: Finance & investment
- 19 of the top 20 sports properties grew revenues in 2024 compared to the previous year
- The National Football League (NFL) topped all sports properties with annual revenues of US$13.9 billion, an eight per cent year-over-year (YoY) increase
- The industry remains on track to achieve annual earnings of US$260 billion by 2033
Access the full report here.

Toyota
Founded: 1937
HQ: Aichi, Japan
Sector: Automotive
Category: Sponsorship & marketing
Key deals signed: England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), Cheetahs, San Francisco Unicorns, USA Swimming, New Zealand Rugby, Cricket Scotland, Cricket Ireland, Northern Super League
The second quarter was a particularly busy one for Japanese automotive giant Toyota, with SportsPro tracking eight deals across four continents that were signed by the car manufacturer over the past three months.
Two of those, with USA Swimming and the Cheetahs, were extensions. But there also were new deals that saw Toyota snap up premium inventory, including the front of the England cricket team’s playing shirts and the training kit of the All Blacks rugby union side, which became available after petrochemicals company Ineos cut short its deal with New Zealand Rugby (NZR) earlier this year.
Toyota is likely to have had some sponsorship budget become available following the end of its TOP sponsorship deal with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which was reportedly worth US$835 million when signed in 2015.
With the partnership announcements of the last quarter spanning cricket, rugby and swimming, as well as soccer, Toyota appears to be focusing predominantly on sports that have historically been associated with more affluent audiences.
At the same time, a big focus of Toyota’s sponsorship strategy, particularly in cricket, has been on grassroots engagement. The logic there is likely that making a difference at the community level will build trust among fans of the sport, who might then consider the brand the next time they’re thinking about making a car purchase.
Get your daily briefing of all the essential news across the sports industry with the SportsPro Daily Newsletter. Subscribe here.
NIL
Dylan Stewart, top 2027 NFL prospect, stays with Gamecocks, lands major NIL deal
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WCIV) — One day after South Carolina received word that star quarterback LaNorris Sellers was staying in town, another star said he plans to return to the fold.
Dylan Stewart, the Gamecocks’ star edge rusher, announced he is returning for his true junior season in 2026, according to Pete Thamel, ESPN’s college football insider.
Stewart has 11 sacks in his two seasons at South Carolina and has forced 6 fumbles. Among ESPN’s draft projections, he appears to be a top prospect for the 2027 NFL Draft.
READ MORE | “South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers stays put, vows stronger return for 2026 season.”
The former five-star recruit and rising SEC pass rusher chose continuity over the transfer portal, agreeing to an NIL deal that places him among the highest compensated non-quarterbacks in college football, according to ESPN’s reporting.
South Carolina’s defense is back in reliable hands, as the Gamecocks ready themselves to bounceback from a 4-8 season.
After the pitiful finish, South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer shook up his coaching staff.
South Carolina is also expected to hire Penn State defensive line coach Deion Barnes as the defensive end and outside linebacker coach.
He’s been Penn State’s defensive line coach the past three years and worked with the line there since 2020. He coached Abdul Carter, Chop Robinson and Adisa Isaac.
BE THE FIRST TO COMMENT
READ MORE | “South Carolina to kick off 2026 football season at home against Kent State.”
NIL
Minnesota Football: Kerry Brown and three other Gophers to return for 2026
Safety Kerry Brown, cornerback John Nestor, and offensive linemen Greg Johnson and Nathan Roy all announced their return to Minnesota next season through the NIL collective Dinkytown Athletes on Tuesday. All four were starters this season and represent key returnees for the Gophers next season.
The announcements are part of Cub Foods’ contribution to Dinkytown Athletes.
These types of announcements have become commonplace in college football today, driven by the introduction of NIL and revenue-sharing agreements, as well as the transfer portal.
More announcements are expected in the coming days and weeks, so stay tuned.
NIL
Unexpected college football program among favorites for $2 million transfer QB
Florida quarterback DJ Lagway, a former five-star recruit and two-year starter, is now in the transfer portal after a 2025 season defined by inconsistency and organizational change in Gainesville.
In 2025, Lagway completed 213 of 337 passes (63.2%) for 2,264 yards, 16 touchdowns, and 14 interceptions, while adding 136 rushing yards and a rushing score.
However, the turnovers and a string of uneven performances contributed to a 4–8 season (2-6 SEC) for Florida and intensified scrutiny on the program’s direction.
Florida dismissed fourth-year head coach Billy Napier on October 19 following a 3–4 start and later hired Tulane’s Jon Sumrall to lead the program forward, a change that has prompted several top players to explore fresh starts.
Several Power Five programs have emerged as early fits for Lagway, with Baylor, LSU, and Miami frequently mentioned by national outlets.
Recently, On3’s Pete Nakos singled out Baylor, noting that home-state proximity and family ties to Waco could make the Bears an appealing landing spot.

A five-star dual-threat quarterback from Willis, Texas, Lagway entered college as one of the top prospects in the 2024 class, ranking as 247Sports’ No. 1 quarterback before signing with Florida in December 2022.
Lagway threw for 4,605 yards and 59 touchdowns as a senior, adding 953 rushing yards and 16 scores on the ground to earn Gatorade National Player of the Year honors.
He drew more than 30 offers from several Power Five programs, including Baylor, Alabama, Georgia, LSU, and Clemson, before committing to the Gators.
From a marketplace standpoint, Lagway arrives in January’s portal with considerable commercial value.
On3’s NIL tracker lists Lagway with an estimated valuation near $2.0 million, and the quarterback already has multiple reported brand partnerships, including Hollister, Red Bull, and Mercedes-Benz of Gainesville.
For Baylor, Lagway would offer a marketable, high-upside option who can start right away, with 2025 starter Sawyer Robertson expected to enter the 2026 NFL Draft.
Read More at College Football HQ
- Major college football team reportedly does not have ‘any interest’ in $2.4 million QB
- No. 1 college football team predicted to sign $2.1 million transfer QB
- Major college football program loses 15 players to transfer portal
- College Football Playoff team has ‘significant interest’ in 4,000-yard QB
NIL
$2.4 million transfer QB reportedly down to three college football programs
Bevies of college football players have made the decision to enter the NCAA transfer portal in the 2026 offseason.
In the weeks leading up to the portal’s opening, quarterbacks have dominated the headlines surrounding the entrants in the 2026 offseason. DJ Lagway, Brendan Sorsby, Dylan Raiola and Josh Hoover are among the most recent entries into the portal at quarterback.
The first well-known entry into the portal at quarterback was Sam Leavitt of Arizona State. Leavitt is entering the portal with two seasons of eligibility left.
The next school Leavitt transfers to will be his third in his college football journey. The 6-foot-3, 225-pounder began his collegiate career at Michigan State for his redshirt freshman season in 2023.
He has passed for 4,652 yards, 36 touchdowns and 11 interceptions while rushing for 810 yards and 10 touchdowns in three seasons. He earned Second Team All-Big 12 distinction and Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year in 2024.
While the portal has not officially opened, three schools have begun to separate themselves in the race for Sam Leavitt. Below is a look at the three schools that appear to be the final choices for Leavitt in the coming weeks.
LSU

Only two of the four quarterbacks to start for Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss were recruited by the Rebels out of high school. Both Jaxson Dart (USC) and Trinidad Chambliss (Ferris State) arrived in Oxford via the transfer portal.
LSU also has a strong track record with quarterbacks transferring in over the last decade, as both Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels won Heisman Trophies two years after transferring in. As it relates to Leavitt, Daniels came to Baton Rouge by way of Arizona State in the 2022 offseason.
Oregon
Oregon has established itself as a destination for quarterbacks out of the transfer portal. Anthony Brown (Boston College), Bo Nix (Auburn), Dillon Gabriel (Oklahoma), and Dante Moore (UCLA) have all transferred to the Ducks and have each won 10 or more games in each season.
Adding to Leavitt’s interest in Oregon is its proximity to his hometown. He is from West Linn, Oregon, a suburb located just south of Portland.
Indiana

Indiana is the final school Leavitt is eyeing. The transfer portal has been crucial to Indiana fielding successful quarterbacks under Curt Cignetti.
The Hoosiers grabbed Kurtis Rourke from Ohio in the 2024 offseason and immediately went to a College Football Playoff the following season. California transfer Fernando Mendoza immediately won a Big Ten Championship and a Heisman Trophy and clinched the No. 1 seed in the 2025 College Football Playoff.
NIL
Missouri DE Damon Wilson II countersues Georgia, setting up a potentially major NIL legal battle
A messy player-school NIL dispute just got messier.
Less than a month after Georgia sued Damon Wilson II for transfer damages, Missouri’s star pass rusher filed a countersuit against Georgia, setting up a potentially precedent-setting NIL legal battle between an athlete and school.
“Recent court decisions have changed the landscape of college football and paved the way for NIL payments,” Bogdan Susan, one of Wilson’s attorneys, told PowerMizzou.com. “What has not changed is that college football players still have only four years of competition to realize their potential and try to achieve their dreams of playing in the NFL. A lot of trust is put into the colleges and coaching staffs. Coaches are not limited to four years of competition. The University of Georgia has been playing football for over 133 years. Damon has four years to play and he spent half of that time at Georgia. Decisions to transfer are not always about money. Stopping a young man from pursuing his dreams by forcing him to pay money that he has not received is just wrong.”
Wilson filed a 42-page complaint in Boone County, Mo. on Tuesday morning, an action first reported by The Athletic, alleging a civil conspiracy involving Georgia and its collective for trying to “penalize Wilson for his decision to transfer.” The defendants named in the suit are the University of Georgia Athletic Association, the Classic City Collective and former Classic City CEO’s Matt Hibbs and Taylor Potts.
The suit alleges Georgia didn’t immediately put Wilson’s name in the transfer portal last January and also lied about his buyout, telling multiple unnamed Power 4 programs that they’d owe Georgia $1.2 million if Wilson transferred to their school.
“UGAA’s actions signal that it is stuck in its old ways. The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade. Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights. 23. No longer willing to endure UGAA’s harassment campaign and ready to hold UGAA and CCC accountable for their tortious interference with his business expectations when he entered the portal and chose to transfer, their breach of the Term Sheet’s Confidentiality Agreement, and UGAA’s efforts to tarnish his reputation as he pursues his lifelong dream of playing in the NFL, Wilson brings this action.”
Wilson’s claim hinges largely on the document signed by the player, the Classic City Collective and Hibbs and Potts. The involved parties signed a term sheet. Wilson’s suit claims the term sheet is not binding.
“The Term Sheet stated that it ‘preced[es]’ a ‘full License and Option Agreement,’ and specifically provided: ‘In the event the parties agree to this Term Sheet, then they shall work cooperatively to set forth these terms in a full legal contract including all the standard provisions of NIL licensing agreements.’ The Term Sheet further stated that Wilson ‘should seek legal counsel before finalizing the full License and Option Agreement.'”
The suit claims that Wilson, as part of a group of Georgia players, “without counsel present and with UGAA employees telling him that time was of the essence.” The suit alleges not only that Wilson signed the term sheet under pressure, but that the full binding contract was never presented, much less signed.
“The parties thus never executed a legally binding agreement containing any of the provisions in the Term Sheet,” the suit states.
The suit further claims that UGAA and the Classic City Collective violated the term sheet’s confidentiality agreement “by disclosing one or more of the Term Sheet’s provisions to sympathetic news outlets and affiliates to tarnish Wilson’s reputation.”
This is believed to be the first time a school and an athlete have taken each other to court over an NIL issue. The resolution could depend on whether or not Wilson’s NIL agreement with Georgia’s collective was a binding contract.
The UGAA lawsuit against Wilson recently filed seeks liquidated damages of $390,000. Wilson’s countersuit claims those funds are not liquidated damages, but instead penalties for transferring from Georgia.
“A penalty provision masquerading as a “liquidated damages” provision is unenforceable,” the filing reads. “It makes no effort to reasonably quantify damages that are difficult to ascertain, and it serves only to penalize Wilson for his decision to enter the transfer portal.”
Wilson’s suit also alleges defamation against UGAA, referencing a statement from Chief Marketing Officer Steven Drummond made to ESPN: “When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same.”
The suit clams “UGAA’s statement implies that Wilson is dishonest in his business dealings and his profession, impairing his ability to enter into future NIL agreements, and harms his reputation.”
Wilson was one of the top edge defenders in the SEC in 2025, recording 9 sacks, tied for third-most in the SEC, and 49 total pressures, second-most in the SEC. He is currently expected to play for Missouri in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl on Saturday. He has not declared his intent for next season. He has until January 14 to enter his name into the NFL Draft as an underclassman.
This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
Cody Goodwin covers the Missouri Tigers for PowerMizzou and 247Sports. Follow him on Twitter/X at @codygoodwin.
PowerMizzou.com publisher Gabe DeArmond contributed to this report.
NIL
Georgia, Ex-Football Player Suing Each Other in NIL Dispute
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoSoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoBlack Bear Revises Recording Policies After Rulebook Language Surfaces via Lever
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoDonny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoHow Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoDavid Blitzer, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoJR Motorsports Confirms Death Of NASCAR Veteran Michael Annett At Age 39
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Elliot and Thuotte Highlight Men’s Indoor Track and Field Season Opener
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoRick Ware Racing switching to Chevrolet for 2026
-
Sports2 weeks ago
West Fargo volleyball coach Kelsey Titus resigns after four seasons – InForum
-
Sports2 weeks ago#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match





