• Loading stock data...
Saturday, December 14, 2024

Why Alexis Ohanian Thinks Women’s Track Is Ripe for Heavy Investment

  • Ohanian’s new track meet will feature the largest prize purse in the sport.
  • Athletes will also receive a cut of the revenues from the event, an unusual arrangement in running.
Sara Diggins/American-Statesman / USA TODAY NETWORK

Any fan is familiar with the rush and confusion of getting into a new sport: You slowly get sucked into a world you knew nothing about. Before you know it, you’re signing up for obscure streaming services to watch faraway events at odd times and following inscrutable social media accounts. Often, you start wondering: Does the way this sport does things make any sense?

Alexis Ohanian, the wealthy Reddit cofounder, serial sports investor, and Serena Williams’s husband, went through the experience recently with track and field. In an interview with Front Office Sports, Ohanian said he spent the past few years going deep into track’s almost quaint culture of posting wars and social media accounts. “There’s such an energetic fan base that’s so engaged online,” he said. “This is the heat that I’m drawn toward. You can’t fake that. If you have this vibrant community online that has its memes and its culture and its in-jokes … you can build a ton.”

Unlike most of his fellow posters and lurkers, though, Ohanian had the money and influence to act on his frustrations.

In April, Ohanian announced the 776 Invitational, named after his venture capital firm. Details were scant, but two items stood out: It would be a women-only track meet, with an enormous prize purse. 

The event announced more details Thursday, including a unique revenue-sharing scheme. There will only be six races—the 100, 200, 400, 800, and 1,500 meters, plus the 100-meter hurdles—with six women each. All participants will take home prize money, with $60,000 for the winner, $25,000 for the runner-up, $10,000 for third, $8,000 for fourth, $5,000 for fifth, and $2,500 for sixth. 

Those may sound like small sums for professional sports, but they’re positively eye-popping amounts of money in track and field. The Diamond League, track’s premier circuit, pays just $10,000 to race winners, and $30,000 at its final meet of the season. Ohanian said it was “wild to see the announcement from World Athletics,” in which track and field’s governing body said it would be making its first-ever cash payments to Olympic gold medalists this summer in Paris.

At the 776 Invitational, 10% of all event revenues will be pooled and split evenly among all the athletes, an arrangement he compared to giving start-up employees equity in a company. That way, “even the most junior employee has skin in the game,” he said. (He added it was incumbent on him and the meet organizers to create an event compelling enough that the athletes were genuinely enthusiastic to discuss it on social media.)

The location, precise date, and full slate of competing athletes have not been announced yet. Austin-based sprinter Gabby Thomas, who won bronze at the Tokyo Olympics in the 200 meters, will be competing; she helped Ohanian come up with the idea for the meet.

At the Business of Women’s Sports Summit in April, Thomas recalled Ohanian asking her, “Can the track be laid out like an F-1 circuit, so it’s not like an oval every time?” She told him that was a “terrible idea,” and Ohanian dropped it, but that’s the spirit he’s bringing to the event.

A year ago, he says, he began asking the top U.S. women in track what he calls “dumb questions” about how their sport works. “And what I found was just, embarrassingly cheap prize money,” he said. “It felt like women’s soccer in 2019, when I saw Megan Rapinoe’s team sell for three-and-a-half million dollars. I was like, ‘Someone is very bad at their jobs’ if that’s all they’ve been able to monetize this with.” (The soccer team in question, the NWSL’s Seattle Reign FC, sold for nearly $60 million earlier this year.)

Thomas has publicly complained about meets being behind expensive paywalls, and Ohanian said that their event will be “accessible,” with an emphasis on “world-class entertainment.” 

Money is rushing into track and field right now as a sport that often struggles to be relevant outside of the Olympics. Investors are hoping to capitalize on both an Olympic year and a sustained post-pandemic running boom in the United States. Earlier this year, legendary sprinter Michael Johnson raised $30 million in seed money for a new track league to start in 2025.

Ohanian compared track’s current moment to where women’s soccer was ahead of the 2019 World Cup: a sport that gets “tons of attention every four years,” and one that is primed to break through otherwise. He joked that people are currently trying to invent other sports—“make fetch happen,” as he put it—while track is sitting right there, underfunded and ready for a cash infusion to make it soar. 

Ohanian made clear he’s not getting into the running business out of the goodness of his heart. Yet he’s also not cutting corners on this meet, promising a heavy investment in production in addition to prize money, and he does not anticipate making money on the first edition of the invitational. 

“In tech, in start-ups … I’ve always been very comfortable with the idea that if you focus on making something that people love, and you can draw the attention, you can draw the engagement, you can draw the interest in the short term, creating a profitable, successful business in the long term is very, very doable,” he said. “The most important thing is doing right by the athletes … when you do right by athletes, everything else tends to fall in line.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Sept 5, 2011; College Park, MD, USA; Maryland Terrapins fans hold up a sign referencing Miami Hurricanes former booster Nevin Shapiro during the first half at Capital One Field at Byrd Stadium.

Biden Commutes Miami Booster’s Ponzi Scheme Sentence

Nevin Shapiro gave Miami athletics millions of dollars in the early 2000s.

The Top-Secret Operation to Create the Army-Navy Football Uniforms

The two-year process includes dozens of employees, NDAs, and military historians.
Mina Kimes and Ryan Clark at NFL draft

ESPN Talent Turns Its Fire on Aaron Rodgers

The network’s NFL talent ripped the QB as ‘hypocritical’ this week.
De'Vondre Campbell

49ers Set to Cut Starter for Refusing to Enter Game: ‘Stupid’ and..

De’Vondre Campbell refused to re-enter the game Thursday night.

Featured Today

Nov 2, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; Detailed view of a Wilson NBA basketball held by a referee during the second half between the Utah Jazz against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena

‘Obvious Weak Point’: Refs Remain an NBA Gambling Concern

A season after Jontay Porter, the biggest risk may not be players.
Nov 2, 2024; Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA; Michigan Wolverines cheerleader runs with a flag before the game against the Oregon Ducks at Michigan Stadium.
opinion
December 7, 2024

College Football’s Billionaire Backer Era Begins

Is this the new normal in CFB recruiting?
LA Galaxy forward Dejan Joveljic (9) celebrates with midfielder Riqui Puig (10) after scoring a goal against Seattle Sounders FC in the second half in the 2024 MLS Cup Western Conference Final match at Dignity Health Sports Park
December 6, 2024

With or Without Messi, Major League Soccer Is Barreling Into the Future

After the Cup final, the league looks to accelerate its growth.
Dec 18, 2022; Lusail, Qatar; FIFA president Gianni Infantino claps during the awards ceremony after the 2022 World Cup final between Argentina and France at Lusail Stadium.
December 2, 2024

FIFA Wants More Matches. Resistance Is Growing Inside the Global Soccer World

Resentment and frustration over expanded schedules is nearing a breaking point.
Jul 24, 2024; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Juan Soto (22) flips his bat after hitting a solo home run against the New York Mets during the third inning at Yankee Stadium.

The Biggest Athlete Contracts Signed in 2024

Juan Soto and Jayson Tatum inked the biggest deals.
Caitlin Clark
December 10, 2024

Caitlin Clark Is Next Up for Taylor Swift With the Eras Tour..

Swift told Clark she and Travis Kelce want to watch the Fever.
Dec 4, 2024; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat forward Jimmy Butler (22) looks to pass against Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) in the first half at Kaseya Center.
December 11, 2024

Heat Open to Jimmy Butler Trades, but Here’s Why Deal Will Be..

The Heat are reportedly “open” to hearing trade offers for Butler.
Sponsored

How UBS Crafts Impactful Partnerships Across Sports, Arts, and Culture

As UBS continues to expand its impressive array of sports and entertainment partnerships, the company solidifies its position as a leader in wealth management.
Aaron Rodgers
December 9, 2024

A Jets–Aaron Rodgers Divorce Could Get Expensive

The Jets could end up with $49 million or more in dead money.
December 8, 2024

Juan Soto Agrees to Groundbreaking $765 Million Mets Deal

Unlike Ohtani’s Dodgers deal, the Soto contract reportedly contains no deferred money.
Oct 26, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Juan Soto (22) reacts after hitting a home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the third inning for game two of the 2024 MLB World Series at Dodger Stadium.
December 8, 2024

Juan Soto’s $700M Question Looms Over MLB Winter Meetings

Soto, Hall of Fame picks, and the draft lottery highlight the gathering.
Luis Severino
December 5, 2024

Mere $67 Million for Pitcher Is Largest Deal in A’s History 

Severino had a strong season with the Mets after a tough 2023.