Kansas has landed a jersey sponsorship that goes well beyond a typical patch deal.
The school is set to put the XRP logo on every Kansas uniform after striking an eight-figure agreement with Ripple, the crypto company behind XRP and led by KU graduate Brad Garlinghouse. The deal is reportedly worth $30 million over five years, or $5 million annually, and it has been in the works for months.
That number stands out immediately because it is far larger than the Big 12’s new jersey-patch partnership with Monster Energy, announced Tuesday. It also tops the value of KU’s FNBO court sponsorship. The FNBO logo is around $1.5 million annually, with the figure increasing by about $100,000 each year.
Kansas’ release described the agreement as the first crypto deal on the jersey of any major college program, and it arrives not long after the NCAA allowed schools to sell space on game uniforms.
The XRP patch will appear on all 16 Kansas teams and every program at KU. Multiple companies were involved in the bidding, and Kansas and Ripple spent months working through the patch design so it fit both brands’ needs. The green look some might have expected was not part of the final result.
There is more to the partnership than just the uniform patch. Ripple is also funding financial and technology education programs for KU athletes and the wider campus, while helping create a pipeline that connects Kansas graduates with tech jobs.
Garlinghouse has already been a major supporter of Kansas. His name is on Garlinghouse Plaza through the Gateway project, and he was an early backer of KU’s NIL efforts. Before many KU fans knew his name, he also helped create a program linking KU students to Silicon Valley and funded blockchain research in 2019.
The deal also gives Kansas a revenue stream that does not come from fans. Ticket prices are not going up, and no additional premium seating is being carved out. At a time when schools are paying players directly and Kansas is still carrying stadium debt, the school is looking to make money from one of its most valuable assets.
It is also a distinctly Kansas arrangement: a partnership with a Jayhawk alum that is designed to help the university and its students for years.
With the Big 12’s Monster Energy patch also set to appear on jerseys, Kansas will likely have two sponsor logos on its uniforms. That kind of setup has been normal in the NBA since jersey patches arrived in 2017, and it looks like college sports may be headed the same direction. Kansas, for now, is ahead of the curve.
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