Cam Newton backs new Overtime league for high school football players
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In this handout image provided by SportsPro, Dan Porter, Overtime speaks during the SportsPro OTT Summit USA 2020 at Turner Studios on February 19, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia.
John Nowak | SportsPro | Getty Images
Media company Overtime is starting another amateur sports league, this time for high school football players.
The Brooklyn, New York-based company will launch a low-contact, seven-on-seven football league in June called “OT7” it announced Tuesday. The move comes more than a year after Overtime launched a high school-level basketball league. The football program will run from June 9 through June 12 in Las Vegas.
Overtime said it plans to pay for expenses around the league using a portion of the $80 million it raised in April 2021 from investors including Jeff Bezos’ investment firm and global entertainer Drake. NFL quarterback Cam Newton is also an investor in OT7. Terms of Newton’s investment were not made available.
Overtime co-founder Dan Porter told CNBC the company is “doubling down” on amateur leagues.
“We’re focused on the biggest, most popular sports and finding our audience in those sports where we can effectively make something bigger than it had been,” he said.
Overtime distributes original sports content on social media outlets, including Snapchat, Alphabet‘s YouTube and Meta‘s Facebook. The company says it has more than 50 million followers across its social media channels. Its revenue comes from two sources: indirectly aligning with brands by integrating them into online media content and making money from video ads, and through e-commerce with its apparel offerings.
CNBC reported last year that Overtime raised more than $140 million since its launch in 2016. Pitchbook estimated Overtime’s valuation reached $280 million in March 2021. Porter declined to reveal specifics about the company’s valuation other than to say it’s less than $1 billion.
Porter cited Newton’s familiarity with seven-on-seven football camps, which would help with OT7 operations. For more than 10 years, new investor Newton has coached amateur seven-on-seven teams he calls “C1N.”
“It’s one thing to find somebody with a big platform who can help validate what you’re doing and bring that audience, but he’s deep in [youth football] and cares about it passionately,” said Porter.
Newton told CNBC he contemplated launching a youth football league but “we felt with the muscle that Overtime possesses, where this society is going with social media platforms, and giving these kids the exposure that they most direly want and need, I think it made the most sense.”
Inside the OT7 football league
Newton’s investments
Newton, 32, has made $133 million in his 11-year NFL career, according to Spotrac, a website that tracks sports contracts. Forbes also estimates Newton has made $5 million in annual endorsements from companies including Under Armor. Newton had an agreement with headphone company Beats, which is owned by Apple, but that deal expired in January 2020, the company told CNBC.
Newton said his involvement in OT7 is perhaps his most significant investment due to his “double-dipping.” Newton will help run OT7 while continuing to coach his C1N teams that will compete in the league. It’s unclear if the NFL quarterback profits from his teams through Overtime’s business model.
Newton also has equity stakes in plant-based food companies Daring Foods and Dream Pops. He owns “Fellaship,” a cigar bar located in Atlanta.
“If I can’t relate to it personally, I don’t do it,” Newton, a three-time Pro Bowler and former NFL MVP who led the Carolina Panthers to the Super Bowl in 2016, said of his investment strategy. “I’m a person who did right with their money and continuing to do right by my money.”
Whether he plays again the NFL is up in the air. He’s a free agent for the second time in two years. Asked about his future, Newton didn’t mention retirement but didn’t rule it out either.
“I’m in a position right now in life where a lot of connections have been formed,” Newton said. “I have no doubt in my mind – could I still play this game at a high level? Absolutely. Do I need this game to live at a high level? Absolutely not.”
Asked what he was looking for in a potential next team, he said: “I just want to win. That competitive drive never goes away.”
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