Wisconsin has found a jersey-patch sponsor that actually feels like it belongs.
Culver’s will put its logo on the Badgers’ football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey jerseys, the school announced Tuesday morning. In a college sports moment that usually feels a little forced, this one lands differently because the brand is already woven into everyday life in Wisconsin.
“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 connection matters. Culver’s was founded in Sauk City, about a 40-minute drive from Madison, and its headquarters are in nearby Prairie du Sac.
There are five Culver’s locations inside Madison city limits, which means this is not some random corporate logo dropped onto a uniform from halfway across the world. This is a hometown brand meeting a hometown fan base.
The move also arrives at a time when Wisconsin’s biggest programs are trying to keep pace in a more expensive college sports world. 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,” and added, “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.”
Mnookin and McIntosh are both gone now, but the broader reality remains. The commercial era has not been especially kind to the Badgers’ flagship men’s teams.
Football has struggled under Luke Fickell, who is entering his fourth full season with a 17-21 record after going 57-18 at Cincinnati. Greg Gard has had more success in men’s basketball, but Wisconsin still has not reached the NCAA tournament’s second weekend since the 2017 Sweet 16 run that included an upset of No. 1 seed and 2026 NBA champion Villanova. Men’s hockey has gone even longer without a breakthrough, with the Badgers’ last NCAA tournament win coming in 2010, when they lost the national championship to Boston College.
Jersey patches are not exactly a romantic development. They turn uniforms into advertisements, the kind of thing Eduardo Galeano famously called “walking advertisements.” But if college sports is going to keep going down this road, Wisconsin at least picked a sponsor that feels rooted in the place and the people wearing it.
The patches will debut when the Badgers open the football season against Notre Dame on Sept. 6.
And yes, some teams should stay away from jersey patches entirely - the Fighting Irish are firmly in that group. Still, if this is the future, Wisconsin has made a pretty sensible first move.
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After His Culvers Shot, Badgers Fans Loved What Came Next
Kam Jones has already given Wisconsin fans a talking point, and not just because of the social media post aimed at Culvers. The former NBA guards joke landed in the middle of the Badgers orbit because the restaurant is a corporate sponsor of Wisconsin athletics, and the reaction from fans quickly turned into the kind of online ribbing that follows a player around long after the post itself.
What made the whole thing stand out was how quickly the basketball world moved on from the joke and into roster housekeeping, with the Bulls officially saying the move was about creating roster space and financial flexibility. Jones is now a free agent, which leaves the next chapter open, even as Badgers fans keep enjoying the timing and the accidental comedy of the moment. [Read more 🡒]
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What happens next will come down to more than talent. Jackson has to show he can turn his size into consistent downhill production, hold up in pass protection and keep progressing through camp, because Wisconsins offense will need reliable depth at halfback if it wants to take advantage of every carry it can create. If he makes the leap, theres a real opportunity waiting. [Read more 🡒]
Nick Boyd Just Got A Real Shot To Stick In The NBA
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The contract gives Golden State flexibility, and Boyd a chance to keep his name in the mix as the summer unfolds. He could end up tied to the Warriors G League setup in Santa Cruz, and if he sticks there long enough, there is even more value attached to the arrangement, but the broader point is simpler: Boyd has earned a real look, and now the next step depends on what the Warriors decide to do with him. [Read more 🡒]
