Big Ten Program Announces Surprise Uniform Change

Wisconsin's decision to team up with Culver's for a jersey patch sponsorship perfectly aligns a cherished local brand with the Badgers' athletic spirit, paving a new path in college sports promotions.

Wisconsin’s newest jersey-patch sponsor is the kind of deal college sports fans can actually recognize without squinting.

Culver’s will put its logo on the Badgers’ football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey jerseys, the school announced Tuesday morning. For a program trying to lean harder into the commercial realities of modern college athletics, the fit is about as clean as these things get.

“There are few things more quintessentially Wisconsin than Culver’s. This partnership is a natural fit for our jersey sponsorship-it’s a beloved brand among Badgers and a longtime partner of Wisconsin athletics,” Badgers deputy athletic director Mitchell Pinta said in a statement.

That matters because jersey patches in college sports have already started to look like a grab bag of random corporate logos. LSU kicked off this latest wave in February with a deal involving Woodside Energy, an Australian oil conglomerate.

Culver’s is a different kind of move entirely: a fast-casual chain that’s huge in the Midwest, especially in Wisconsin and Illinois, and one that was born in Sauk City, about 40 minutes from Madison. Its headquarters are now in nearby Prairie du Sac.

There are five Culver’s locations inside Madison alone, which makes this sponsorship feel less like a novelty and more like an extension of the local landscape. For plenty of Badgers fans, the postgame Culver’s run is part of the ritual.

The timing also fits where Wisconsin’s athletic department has been headed. Then-athletic director Chris McIntosh told ESPN’s Pete Thamel in November, "Chancellor [Jennifer] Mnookin and I are aligned on significantly elevating investment in our [football] program to compete at the highest level," then-Wisconsin athletic director Chris McIntosh told ESPN’s Pete Thamel in November.

"We are willing to make an investment in infrastructure and staff. As important is our ability to retain and recruit players in a revenue share and NIL era."

Both Mnookin and McIntosh are gone now, but the larger point remains. Wisconsin’s marquee men’s programs have had uneven results in the commercial era.

Luke Fickell is heading into his fourth full season in football with a 17-21 record after going 57-18 at Cincinnati. Greg Gard’s basketball program has been steadier, but the Badgers still haven’t reached the NCAA tournament’s second weekend since the 2017 Sweet 16.

In men’s hockey, Wisconsin hasn’t won an NCAA tournament game since falling in the national championship game to Boston College in 2010.

Jersey patches are not exactly beloved inventions. They turn athletes into, in Eduardo Galeano’s words, “walking advertisements.” But if college sports is going to go down this road, a hometown brand like Culver’s makes more sense than most.

Wisconsin will debut the patches when it opens the football season against Notre Dame on Sept. 6.

And yes, some teams probably ought to stay away from patches altogether. The Fighting Irish are one of them.

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