19 Pro Athletes Caught Stealing Millions of Dollars + How It Will Impact Sports
Two recent developments of athletes getting greedy and the consequences for their actions.
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Last week, I wrote about an investor screwing 3 NBA players out of $7.7 million.
As terrible as this is…an NBA player ripped millions of dollars away from fans this past week which is MUCH worse in my opinion.
And it doesn’t get better:
A few months ago, 18 former NBA players were found of scamming the NBA’s healthcare system out of $2.5M.
I hate reporting negative news about the business of athletes x sports. But I have to expose the dark before the light can shine through.
Let’s dive in👇
A Million Dollar Rug Pull
Earlier this week Sacramento Kings point guard De’Aaron Fox botched an NFT project and fans appear to be left holding the bag.
The 24-year-old launched the project “SwipaTheFox” in January. It was promised to be “high-utility”, meaning that his biggest fans would receive benefits in the real world beyond the digital collectible.
The NFTs were sold for .085 ETH, which at the time was roughly $250 based on ETH’s $3,100 average.
With 6,005 selling out, the sales alone likely generated over $1.50 million. Fox would also get 10% royalties on every secondary sale.
After the project shut down, Fox promised NFT holders who purchased more than five (roughly $1,300) a signed jersey, which holds about a $100 market value.
They didn’t want to hear it…
Several fans on Discord were fired up with one saying “refund everyone if you’re truly sorry. You make $30m a year plus endorsements”.
The website used to launch and mint the NFTs is now offline along with the social media accounts made for the project along with the Discord.
My Takeaway
This isn’t a good look for De’aron Fox, crypto, athletes, or the Web 3.0 space.
Fox might have gotten away with an easy million dollars, but he tarnished his reputation and made it much harder for future athletes to monetize their name, image, and likeness (NIL).
NFTs are a great way for athletes to build a more loyal fanbase and provide them with access to your time and resources.
I, more than most, want athletes to get what they deserve monetarily.
But when players like Fox do these kinds of things it makes it much harder and places them into the “only an athlete” bucket.
Imagine all of the benefits if he would have actually done the project right:
Fox would have made more than $1.5M thanks to secondary sales
Purchasers would have become super-fans
Trust would have been built in this space and more athletes would have been able to monetize via NFTs
NBA Players Stealing Millions
This story is a few months old, but ties into the narrative around athletes taking advantage of their platform and why others are resistant to giving them more.
18 NBA players were charged in October with pocketing about $2.5 million illegally by defrauding the league's health and welfare benefit plan in a scam that authorities said involved claiming fictitious medical and dental expenses.
The health care scheme was carried out from 2017 to 2020.
Each defendant made false claims for reimbursements that ranged from $65,000 to $420,000.
The prosecutors have travel records, email, and GPS data that prove the former NBA players were usually far from the medical and dental offices at the times when they were supposedly getting treated.
Adding insult to injury, the 18 players combined to make $343 million in their NBA careers - not even counting outside income or endorsements.
Greed got the best of them.
Final Thoughts
Athletes are closer than ever before to becoming wealthy, and not just rich.
Look at what Kevin Durant is doing.
He’s made over $350M in the NBA, but has several of his own business ventures and is trying to build generational wealth, instead of just spending it all.
So that leads me to my next point.
What about the 18-year-old college athletes becoming millionaires thanks to NIL legislation across the NCAA?
Are they going to be greedy and follow in Fox’s footsteps?
Or are they going to make smart financial decisions that benefit them and their family for life?
We all know these players are “more than an athlete” — with many of them making very smart business decisions such as Steph Curry, Tom Brady, and Kevin Durant — but players that make poor/greedy decisions are what’s plateauing this next movement.
Thanks for reading!
Blessings and Peace,
-AP
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