Weekly Roundup: Business of Athletes, Sports, & NIL (September 11-17)
The Profluence Pod š - A podcast by Andrew Petcash

Audio Timeline:1:30 - Feel good stories* Steph Curry donates 25 million meals and MJās financial literacy course3:30 - Business of Athletes* Former NBA star Pau Gasol has invested in Colvin, a flower marketplace based in Spain. * Arena Club, a new sports card collecting platform co-founded by Derek Jeter, has officially launched.* Perch, a weightlifting camera and data startup, has raised a $4M funding round that includes an investment from Miami Dolphins cornerback Byron Jones. * Jrue Holiday, Al Horford, Kyle Rudolph, Ndamukong Suh, Rob Dyrdek, and Luke Kuechly have all invested in the $6.5M Series A round of sports nutrition company, Momentous. * Chris Paul has invested in Umaro Foods, a Berkeley-based startup pioneering the use of red seaweed protein in plant-based meats. 8:50 - Name, Image, and Likeness* One of the top collegiate golfers, David Puig, has forgone his senior season to join LIV golf.* Scott Frostās $16M buyout at Nebraska raises questions. * Texas spent $600,000+ on football recruits (in just two weekends). 13:00 - Future of Sports* Bridgestone Golf is partnering with LinksDAO to venture into the world of Web3. * New York Times is bringing advertisements to The Athletic on top of its subscription model.* Concussions among NFL players mandated to wear Guardian Cap equipment dropped by more than 50% this summer compared to the previous three-year average, according to data released Wednesday* A LendingTree survey shows that 41% of us will spend money on sports this fall, at an average of $664 on average. * Ares Management Corporation, a leading global alternative investment manager, announced that it has raised $3.7B of dedicated capital focused exclusively on investing in sports properties. * Cerebro Sports, a basketball data analytics company, has received backing from Mark Cuban who led their pre-seed funding. Interesting StatLast week, I featured where college football players come from ā so letās take a look at where college basketball players come from. Of the 5,510 Division I men's college basketball players, 85% of them come from the United States. California, Texas, and Georgia have produced the most D1 hoopers ā and big cities like Houston, Chicago, LA, Baltimore, and New York City have the highest concentration. Heading to the international sceneā¦Canada is the foreign country with the most players (146), ahead of Australia (66) and Nigeria (42).All in all, basketball is a worldwide sport with the average D1 team having 2.3 players on their roster from a country other than the United States. It makes me laugh when parents think their kid is going D1 just cause he scored 20 points in a high school game ā youāre competing against the world for a spot, not just your local area. Short Passage of The Week:We often think we need a āperfect map of the futureā to get started. What we actually need is āa general direction.āĀ * Big career decisions donāt come with a map, but all you need is a compass.Ā * The right next move is the one that brings you a step closer to living your core values.Ā * In an unpredictable world, you canāt make a master plan. You can only gauge whether youāre on a meaningful path.Sourc