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Playoffs Could Mean Big Bucks For Some Texas Programs

Everyone knows that football is king in Texas. Let it be known that the king is getting paid.

According to a report in the Dallas Morning News, a quartet of schools in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex have brokered formalized sponsorship deals with either Nike or Under Armour worth a minimum of $15,000. Three of the four are worth $30,000 or more, and at least one has a kicker that will provide a benefit valued at $15,000 if it finishes the 2015 campaign ranked in one of the national rankings, the USA TODAY High School Sports Super 25 chief among them.

Perennial state and national powers Allen, Cedar Hill, Southlake Carroll and DeSoto are the programs in question, and while it’s important to note that none of these deals incorporate direct cash infusions, the goods that are provided to the schools drive a major bottom line difference for the schools themselves.

The benefit is not hard to understand: The budget for football programs is limited, with junior varsity and freshman teams often left to make do with all hand-me-down equipment while varsity teams replace only the essentials. With exclusive deals with Nike and Under Armour providing hundreds of free uniform sets, the schools surveyed by the Morning News freed up substantial funds to disperse across other levels of the football program and other athletic programs altogether.

“Football budgets are not huge budgets,” Southlake Carroll athletic director Darren Allman told the Morning News. “The budgets that are set in our district – and really across the state – they are really there to accommodate maybe a small number of helmets and shoulder pads, and soft goods that you have to replace every year: shorts, t-shirts, socks and other things that don’t last. Things that you hope will last more than a year and will be passed down [to sub-varsity teams], a lot of those costs are passed over to booster clubs, because the budgets can’t carry all the cost.”

Beyond the financial benefits, all of the programs surveyed by the Morning News also spoke of a prestige factor that boosted the profile of their programs due to a partnership with a major brand. More specifically, Cedar Hill’s athletic director gushed about how Under Armour had worked with the school to activate its sponsorship around the team and facility’s needs, while DeSoto officials spoke to Nike engineers working with school sprinters to customize equipment for their needs.

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Content Source:usatodayhss.com

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