Advertising, Marketing and Entertainment Law Practice

JUNE 2011

This article is being contemporaneously published today on the Sports Agent Blog BEIJING (sportsagentblog.com) and is reproduced with the publisher’s permission

CHARLOTTE Business Moves Your NBA Player Should Make As Soon As He’s Drafted CHICAGO The NBA draft is right around the corner and whatever number your player is picked, he’s going to have GENEVA to pick up not only his game, but also his business skills, unless he wants to end up as one of the 60 percent of NBA players who are broke within five years of retirement. Some pro athletes have it down, HONG KONG and I have been privileged to provide legal counsel to a number of professional athletes who have their act together. But no matter who your player is, they each face similar issues, and what separates them is HOUSTON how they handle the pressure. So before your player signs his first big shoe deal, here’s a list of business moves that he should make. LONDON #1: Get Extra Insurance and a Will LOS ANGELES Your player needs to look into getting life, primary and umbrella coverage, and disability insurance, as MOSCOW well as a will. While the death of your player is unlikely, it’s not unheard of, as more than 100 NBA, MLB, and NFL athletes have died during their careers. Without a significant life insurance policy on top NEW YORK of the minimal one that may be provided to all players under the league’s collective bargaining agreement, death would mean financial ruin for those who will soon depend upon his income. This is especially true NEWARK if there’s a lockout, when benefits could be rescinded or suspended. When the NFL’s Darrent Williams was murdered, the life insurance coverage provided under the league’s collective bargaining agreement PARIS was insufficient to provide for his two kids, causing the Broncos to establish a fund for fans to help provide for his kids’ futures. SAN FRANCISCO Your player also needs a significant primary and umbrella liability policy, which will provide protection SHANGHAI from the lawsuits he may be hit with now that he’s a professional. If he’s using social media, make sure the policy covers claims like libel, which are not always included. WASHINGTON, D.C. And since he hasn’t yet built up his bank account, a disability policy should be considered to protect him www.winston.com from a career-ending injury leaving him broke. Your player may not get the same treatment as the NBA’s Jay Williams, whose contract was voided from a career-ending motorcycle injury, yet the were kind enough to pay him out. This is especially true given the pending NBA lockout, because with no guaranteed contract available during the lockout, an injury during an informal workout or other activity could leave your player with no future income and no health insurance.

Finally, remind your player that a will likely only costs a few thousand dollars, but can prevent disastrous consequences. For example, when the Redskins’ Sean Taylor died without a will, only his daughter inherited, leaving the rest of his relatives that had previously relied on his income with nothing. When Steve McNair died without a will, he left his family with no access to his $19 million estate for more than a year.

#2: Play Defense With Money

Given the high income/short career span of your pro athlete, a conservative investment approach is the way for him to get and stay rich. Many athletes are enticed into alternative investments either by friends, family, or new acquaintances. Unfortunately, these investments are unlikely to make 50 Cent money, so 2

any opportunity should be vetted by an advisor who is highly qualified return more than 800 other cybersquatted athlete domain names to NBA and, most importantly, who has no stake in the outcome. At the very players like Danny Grainger and Jared Dudley. Ask the ex-New England least, your player should set aside only 10 to 15 percent of his liquid net Patriot Rodney Harrison, who had an imposter use his Twitter handle worth for these higher-risk investments. Learn from Rocket Ismail, who to pick a fight with the Jets’ Kerry Rhodes without Rhodes realizing it. lost millions on investments like Rock N’ Roll Café, a music label and a Or the Miami Dolphins’ Davone Bess, whose Twitter imposter hosted a cosmetics procedure. fake chat and even got the Tennessee Titans’ Chris Johnson to agree to a footrace. #3: Limit Risk on Endorsements Once the brand is under control, your player needs to avoid messages that If your player decides to have an ownership stake in a corporation make him fodder for Deadspin and TMZ. Every post effectively constitutes he’s endorsing, make sure that the company he’s investing in provides a press release, so they should be vetted carefully. The WNBA’s Cappie insurance and agrees in writing to defend legal claims on his behalf. And Pondexter learned that lesson after her offensive Tweets about the Japan if the product is high-risk, like a nutritional supplement or new-fangled tsunami. So did the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Rashard Mendenhall, whose sports device, make the company provide a legal opinion vetting the four-year Champion endorsement deal was recently terminated after his legality of the product and its marketing claims, since federal law says offensive Bin Laden Tweets. As did both Gilbert Arenas and Reggie your player may be personally liable for his endorsements. At a minimum, Bush, when Arenas was fined by the NBA for Tweets about sexting and he should be very careful about representations he personally makes about Bush was publicly criticized when he Tweeted how much he was enjoying the product or that the company attributes to him. Both Shaq and Lamar the NFL lockout. And if your player is too busy to post his own messages, Odom learned this from the class-action lawsuit they are currently facing make sure that whoever is posting on his behalf is overly cautious. Learn for their endorsement of Power Balance bracelets, which alleges that from Braylon Edwards of the New York Jets, who was sitting in jail after they should have known there was no reasonable basis for the marketing an arrest while someone embarrassingly tweeted “Good Morning World!” claims they made about the product’s benefits. under his Twitter account. #4: Add Value to an Existing Foundation #6: Use A Corporation Properly It’s likely that your player has no time, isn’t an expert in running a There is value to your player in setting up an LLC or corporation, although charitable organization, and that his pet cause is probably already being the true value lies in knowing what benefits the corporation actually served by a qualified, well-run organization. If true, he may be better provides and in using the corporation properly. Many set up a corporation served helping out pre-existing organizations, rather than creating his mistakenly thinking that its some sort of tax shelter, but its main purpose own. There are obviously positive exceptions, like is actually to shield the player’s personal assets from lawsuits. However, Charities and the Foundation, but starting and maintaining a that protection will only be available, if the player keeps the corporation in foundation costs hundreds of thousands of dollars and requires navigating good standing with the state and observes other legal formalities, actually complicated law. In a best-case situation, it will likely be years before enters into business deals through the corporation, pays his staff via the your player’s foundation makes a significant difference, and at worst, corporation, has his cars owned by the corporation, and generally doesn’t he’ll end up like ex-Cub Sammy Sosa, who was awarded MLB’s Roberto treat the corporation like a personal piggy-bank. While that all sounds Clemente Man of the Year award for charity work and only one year later, totally obvious, more often than not, we see players fail to abide by these his foundation faced allegations of misuse of funds. simple rules. #5: Get His Online House in Order So good luck to your player on draft day. But remember, what’s really Given that more Americans get their news from the Internet than from important is not the deal they make today, but what they do over the newspapers or radio, it’s critical for your player to establish an online coming years that will shape their future. brand. Having a lawyer stop the online imposters and cybersquatters is a great way to start. Ask Chris Bosh, who sued when he got tired of not being able to use his dot-com and not only won it back, but also offered to

Brian Heidelberger is a partner and Chair of the Advertising, Marketing, and Entertainment Law Practice at Winston & Strawn LLP, a global law firm, and has provided legal advice to a myriad of professional athletes, including Dwayne Wade, Luol Deng, Donovan McNabb and , and represented Chris Bosh in his 2009 cybersquatting case ([email protected] & www.winston.com/bheidelberger).

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© 2011 Winston & Strawn LLP