• Loading stock data...
Friday, April 19, 2024
  • -
    days
  • -
    hours
  • -
    minutes
  • -
    seconds

JuJu Smith-Schuster Launches Athlete-Led Gaming Organization

  • Smith-Schuster has been active in the gaming community, streaming regularly on Twitch to his more than 184,000 followers.
  • The 23-year-old was previously a member of popular esports organization FaZe Clan.
Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster is taking his involvement in gaming a step further, launching his own organization.

Known as Team Diverge, the organization says it is the world’s first athlete-led gaming entertainment and lifestyle company. It will aim to “live at the intersection of sports, gaming and culture, cultivating creative content and unique fan experiences leveraging our unique roster of crossover talent.”

It is not Smith-Schuster’s first foray into the gaming and streaming industry. An avid gamer, the 23-year-old was an honorary member of FaZe Clan, creating content and merchandise with the gaming organization as well as briefly living in its Los Angeles content house.

He also has a partnership with HyperX, which creates gaming products like headsets, keyboards and hard drives. He launched a limited headset with the company earlier this year.

Smith-Schuster is also an active user of Twitch, where he has more than 184,000 followers. He gained further attention on the platform when he played Fortnite in 2018 with Tyler ‘Ninja’ Blevins and rappers Drake and Travis Scott — a stream that garnered more than 600,000 concurrent viewers, which remains a record for a single streamer on the platform.

“In creating my own organization instead of joining one of the big established ones, I know I chose a different path than most in my position would do,” Smith-Schuster, who will serve as the organization’s CEO, said in a statement.

Team Diverge has signed “several rising content creators across several titles,” and says that it will also recruit athletes, musicians and celebrities who will also help drive the broader content and events strategy for the organization.

“The gaming community has grown immensely in recent years. You’ve seen collaborations with athletes in traditional sports with these popular gaming organizations, but to some degree they have become stale and repetitive,” said Karan Gill, the organization’s co-founder and chief operating officer. “TD is going to take athlete involvement in gaming to a completely different level. These guys won’t just be ambassadors or honorary members, they are going to be centerpieces to the team’s identity.”

The organization plans to launch its own gaming house in the spring of 2021, and will look to have its talent there during the NFL offseason. It will also launch its own streetwear-inspired apparel line.

NFL Players to Join Madden NFL 21 Championship Series Programming

NFL Players to Join Madden NFL 21 Championship Series Programming

Engagement and viewership numbers soared for the Madden NFL 20 amid the…
August 25, 2020

Smith-Schuster has his own clothing company, Team Juju, and has partnerships with brands like Adidas and MeUndies.

While professional athletes have long been linked to video games, athletes such as Smith-Schuster, Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Blake Snell and Minnesota Timberwolves forward Karl Anthony Towns have increasingly turned to Twitch and other platforms in recent years to play games and connect with their fanbases.

That only increased during the pandemic as league and team activites were paused. Several leagues, such as MLB and the NBA, also held athlete-focused tournaments in their respective games, while numerous athletes also held charity game streaming fundraisers.

Some, like Smith-Schuster have taken that a step further and joined, invested in, or created gaming organizations. Philadelphia 76er Ben Simmons is one of four NBA players to have an investment in FaZe Clan, while budding star Bronny James – son of LeBron James – has also joined the organization.

European soccer stars Antoine Greizmann and Mesut Ozil also have their own esports teams, while Kevin Durant and Michael Jordan are just some of the other well-known names who have purchased stakes in gaming organizations.

“I’m not just trying to be a popular figure in gaming for myself; I’m trying to build a special organization that is a platform for others,” Smith-Schuster said.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NBA’s Lifetime Ban Highlights Surge in Gambling-Related Incidents

The NBA’s lifetime ban on Jontay Porter marks a crescendo of escalating incidents across the industry.

To Sum Up Current Commanders, Coyotes Situations: It’s Complicated

The Commanders hire a Capitol Hill insider as the team continues its stadium pursuit.

For Caitlin Clark and Other Rookies: Now a 29-Day Sprint to WNBA Debut

The league regular season starts swiftly after college basketball ends.

O.J. Simpson Lawyer Says He Won’t Shield Estate From Goldman, Brown Families

The executor of Simpson’s will had previously said the Goldmans would get ‘zero.’
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

Why Ian Rapoport Lives for the NFL Draft’s Chaos

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

Women’s Basketball Finally Has a TV Deal to Match the Excitement. Now What?

A lucrative new media-rights contract could rectify problems of the past, but the future of March Madness media rights is anyone’s guess.
Mar 16, 2024; Washington, D.C., USA; North Carolina State Wolfpack forward DJ Burns Jr. (30) cuts the net after defeating the North Carolina Tar Heels for the ACC Conference Championship at Capital One Arena.
April 6, 2024

How Two College Seniors Helped DJ Burns Cash In on a Final Four Run

Two college seniors are facilitating deals for NC State’s big man.
Mar 31, 2024; Portland, OR, USA; NCAA officials measure the three point line while coaches from the Texas Longhorns and NC State Wolfpack watch with referees in the finals of the Portland Regional of the NCAA Tournament at the Moda Center center.
April 1, 2024

NCAA Has No One to Blame for Latest Women’s March Madness Transgressions

NCAA is still making avoidable mistakes three years after a complete overhaul.
Nov 16, 2015; Bloomington, IN, USA; General view of the championship banners at Assembly Hall prior to the game between Austin Peay and Indiana.
March 31, 2024

How to Make It in Basketball: Become a Manager at Indiana

Inside the Hoosiers’ unglamorous, profoundly rewarding incubator for basketball’s biggest names.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers
Sponsored

How Daily Fantasy Sports Solved NBA Fantasy

The remarkable growth of the #1 Discord sports server in the world.
Oct 5, 2021; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, points to the lettering outside of the museum Tuesday.
February 28, 2024

How Do You Keep Negro Leagues Baseball History Alive? Put It in a Video Game

Negro Leagues Baseball Museum attracting increased donations, visits from ‘MLB The Show.’
February 29, 2024

Electronic Arts’ Layoffs Signal Ongoing Evolution, Struggles

The company is set to make a second major round of staff cuts in the last year.
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
Sony-Playstation-Demo-Booth
February 27, 2024

Sony to Lay Off 900 From PlayStation Team After Missed Sales Target

Cuts come amid a tough stretch for the gaming industry.
EA Sports
February 15, 2024

EA Sports: Summer Release for Long-Dormant College Football Video Game

Ed O’Bannon’s historic lawsuit led to the shuttering of EA Sports’ popular college games.
Gatorade
February 14, 2024

Was the Gatorade Color Compromised Before Super Bowl LVIII Kickoff?

Multiple gambling companies saw a sharp spike in the color purple prior to Sunday’s kickoff.
Reba McEntire Super Bowl
February 12, 2024

Reba McEntire Repeated ‘the Brave’ in the National Anthem, Sending Prop Bettors Spiraling

BetMGM paid bettors on both the over and the under.