On Sunday 9 February, the Philadelphia Eagles will be taking on the reigning champs, the Kansas City Chiefs, in this yearâs Super Bowl LIX, looking to exact revenge following their loss in 2023. As fans get their Super Bowl preparations in order, fintechs are also capitalising on the widely publicised event to promote their offerings through partnerships with the athletes. The most recent being the Eaglesâ running back, Saquon Barkley partnering with paytech Ramp.
Sports-fintech partnerships are not a novelty. Big names like Cristiano Ronaldo and Patrick Mahomes have been seen across all sorts of media platforms endorsing Binance and State Farm respectively, with the latterâs commercials famously being played during NFL ad breaks. But how impactful is an athlete-fintech partnership for the company involved?

In Saquon Barkleyâs case, the ad with Ramp was made within a week, before his appearance in the biggest American football game of the year. Speaking on this Diego Zaks, vice president of design at Ramp said: âOne week is a crazy timeline to attempt a Super Bowl ad from start to finish. Weâre lucky in that we have an amazing team of creatives, a culture where makers can make decisions fast, and weâre working with Saquon, the fastest running back out there â so we knew we had a chance to pull it off.â
Barkley is a student of business and technology, and has become increasingly interested in high-growth startups after reading Zero to One, a book focused on startups years ago. When strong Ramp recommendations came through mutual investor connections, he wanted more than just a traditional endorsement deal, leading to the creation of the firmâs first Super Bowl advert.
âTrue partnership requires skin in the game,â said Barkley. âThatâs why I invested in Ramp. I saw firsthand how theyâre powering American businesses to cut costs and achieve a higher level of performance. Thatâs the kind of impact I want to be part of.â

âSeeing Saquon put his teamâs playoff run ahead of an individual all-time rushing record was a masterclass in leadership,â added Eric Glyman, CEO and co-founder of Ramp. âRamp lives by the same playbook. We put our customersâ long-term success first, helping them spend less â even if that sometimes comes at the cost of our own short-term profit. Itâs this long-term orientation thatâs led us to grow faster than nearly anyone while delivering over $2billion in savings for our customers.
âOur shared commitment to long-term value creation made Saquon a natural partner. Weâre both in it for the long game.â
Is this just money talking?

Companies have been endorsing athletes for decades and a lot of the time it is purely for money. Afterall, an athleteâs career can be shortlived, and that time in the spotlight can quickly vanish. However, as
Greg Linnelli, the radio network host for the Tampa Bay Lightning and account strategist at Otter Public Relations, the PR agency in Orlando, notes there are expectations to this.
âUsually for athletes, itâs about the highest pay-check. You only have so many relevant years where you can capitalise on your popularity that you need to take advantage of those opportunities. The exception though can be the top one per cent in sports. Theyâve already been paid quite handsomely so they can be pickier and get behind something they believe in to a degree.
âAfter all, if that product falters, the athlete doesnât lose a ton financially.â
Finding the right partner

For a fintech-sports partnership to truly thrive, money is not enough. Kaveh Vahdat, founder and president of RiseOpp, a fractional CMO services company explains that both the athlete and organisation must share values too.
âA good fintech-sport partnership isnât about slapping a logo on a jersey or running a flashy Super Bowl ad. Itâs about shared values and authentic alignment. The most effective partnerships are where the athlete could be a real customer of the brand. If the fintechâs value proposition doesnât align with the athleteâs personal brandâwhether itâs financial freedom, discipline, or innovationâthe audience will smell the inauthenticity from a mile away.â
A bigger picture
But why are organisations so keen on partnering with players like Barkley? According to Doug Eldridge, who has represented and advised athletes across the NFL and NBA and is also the founder of Achilles PR, the integrated public relations firm, more than anything, athlete sponsorships broaden visibility.
He said: âBecause of the diverse composition of any given fan baseâathletes are able to attract âoutliersâ who might not already be aware, interested, or otherwise involved in a particular market or sector. It all starts with awareness and athletes certainly bring that element to the table.
âAt a minimum, athletes draw eyeballs, which are a prerequisite for interest, much less engagement and investment. The right âathlete ambassadorâ also matters; it needs to be a good fit on every level.â
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