The NBA's Los Angeles Lakers in September announced Bibigo, a South Korean food brand, had become the team's new jersey sponsor. The deal is reportedly worth more than $100 million over a five-year period.
Typically, that amount of money is what corporations spend on naming rights for arenas or stadiums, not three-inch patches on player uniforms.
While NASCAR drivers have donned sponsors' logos on their uniforms for decades, the concept of teams using player uniforms as advertising space is fairly new with major professional sports leagues in the U.S., and it's gaining ground.
Both the Minnesota Timberwolves and Wild announced partnership deals in the fall for jersey and helmet ad placements. The Wild are fielding inquiries for jersey sponsors.
"We've already had brands reach out to us, unsolicited, so we know there's demand," said Carin Anderson, Minnesota Wild's senior vice president of corporate partnerships and retail management. "It creates a brand new opportunity for us at an unprecedented level as it related to a marquee asset."
The Minnesota United has had a deal with Target Corp. for jersey sponsorship since it joined Major League Soccer in 2017, said Bryant Pfeiffer, the team's chief revenue officer.
Some of the biggest leagues in the U.S., however, have been slow to adopt that form of advertising. Major League Baseball has not approved helmet or jersey advertising, leaving the Twins unable to venture into jersey or helmet deals.
The NFL does not yet allow teams to sell jersey patches or helmet decals ads for game-day jerseys. Teams can, however, sell ads for practice jerseys.