Baker Mayfield Makes High-Profile Ownership Move In Oklahoma City

Baker Mayfield, along with other sports luminaries, embarks on an ambitious venture to transform Oklahoma City's sports landscape with a new soccer franchise and state-of-the-art stadium.

Baker Mayfield is heading back to Oklahoma City in a different kind of homecoming.

The Buccaneers quarterback is joining a high-profile investor group behind Oklahoma City’s newest pro soccer expansion club, putting his name alongside some major sports and business figures in a project centered around a new stadium and a broader entertainment district.

Mayfield is part of a group that already includes Russell Westbrook, former USMNT forward Jozy Altidore, Denver Broncos linebacker Nik Bonitto, entrepreneur Nick Gross and the Chickasaw Nation. The new additions also include Jalen Williams and Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, giving the ownership circle even more star power.

For Mayfield, the move comes with a personal angle. He played college football at Oklahoma, and he described the state as a place that shaped him.

"Oklahoma made me who I am, as a player and as a person. The state shows up for its teams, and that energy is going to translate to professional soccer,” Mayfield said about his alma mater and how thrilled he is to be an investor now.

The timing also makes sense from a business standpoint. Mayfield is in the final year of his contract with the Bucs, and he is listed among the league’s lower-paid franchise quarterbacks at $33.3 million Average Annual Value (AAV), which puts him in position for a deal that could climb to at least $50 million.

The soccer club itself is part of a larger buildout in Oklahoma City. The new stadium is being constructed as a 10,000-seat venue designed by Populous, the architecture firm behind Vegas' Sphere and Camden Yards. It will feature a lightweight canopy and fully programmable exterior LED lighting, and it is set to become the home of Oklahoma City’s professional soccer team when the club begins play in the USL Championship in 2028.

The franchise is the former OKC Energy FC operation and is currently going through a rebranding process through a fan-vote initiative. The stadium is being built to USSF requirements, but it is also intended to host concerts and a future United Football League expansion team.

Beyond the stadium itself, Echo is developing 60 surrounding acres into a cultural, hospitality and entertainment district meant to link downtown OKC, the new convention center and the Thunder’s upcoming $900 million arena.

“Jalen, Baker, and Sydney each bring a unique platform and an authentic belief in what we are building here,” Westbrook said of the latest additions to their investor circle. “Together with Russell and Jozy, this investor roster reflects a level of conviction in Oklahoma City’s future you rarely see assembled around a single project.”

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