The CHAMP Fund—a 250-plus athlete partnership formed by L Catterton and Patricof Co—closed a $15 million to $20 million equity stake in Rhoback, the performance apparel brand built on collegiate licensing and NIL endorsement mechanics. The deal marks the first major apparel infrastructure investment for the fund since its public launch eighteen months ago.
Rhoback operates 70-plus collegiate licensing agreements and routes roughly 30 percent of revenue through athlete co-marketing deals structured under NIL frameworks. The brand sells quarter-zips, polos, and athleisure staples through direct-to-consumer channels and campus retail partnerships. Revenue growth has tracked enrollment spikes in NIL-adjacent marketing programs at Power Five schools; the company does not disclose topline figures but third-party estimates place annual sales near $40 million as of fiscal 2025. Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham joined CHAMP as an equity partner the same week the Rhoback investment closed—her roster spot gives her downstream economics on the fund's full portfolio, not just this single deal.
The timing reflects structural shifts in how athlete equity gets deployed. Traditional endorsement economics—fixed-fee contracts with performance bonuses—leave athletes exposed to brand downside without upside participation. CHAMP inverts that: athletes contribute marketingreach and co-sign diligence, then share carry on exits. Rhoback's collegiate licensing model creates natural product-market fit; athletes already wear the gear on campus, so the co-marketing asks are lighter than cold-intro endorsement pitches. The fund's $500 million committed capital base allows it to lead rounds in the $10 million to $50 million range, a bracket where traditional sports-focused VCs often pass and where strategic acquirers prefer to wait for proof of scale.
The challenge is execution bandwidth. Rhoback now needs to convert athlete endorsement social impressions into measurable transaction lift—trackable promo codes, co-branded capsule collections, campus event activations that drive foot traffic to retail partners. The CHAMP athlete roster theoretically accelerates that; the question is whether 250 partners dilute individual athlete incentive to push hard on any single portfolio company. Early portfolio exits will clarify the model. Cunningham's involvement signals the fund is staffing up endorsement-heavy verticals—her WNBA peer network skews younger and more digitally native than the NBA and NFL cohorts that anchored CHAMP's initial raise.
Watch for Rhoback to announce 10 to 15 new collegiate licensing deals before the fall semester begins; athletic departments finalize apparel partnerships in May and June to hit back-to-school inventory windows. Expect at least one marquee athlete capsule drop before the college football season kicks off in late August—timing that capsule to homecoming weekends would capture peak on-campus spending. The next CHAMP portfolio add will likely come in Q3; the fund has been circling recovery-tech and hydration brands where athlete co-sign carries clinical credibility.
L Catterton's consumer portfolio includes Sweaty Betty, Hornitos, and Cholula—brands built on mass-premium positioning and omnichannel distribution. Rhoback's DTC-first model with selective wholesale runs the same playbook at a younger demographic. If the NIL licensing infrastructure scales, the exit math starts to look like a Lululemon-for-Gen-Z narrative with built-in influencer economics. The apparel margin structure supports that multiple if customer acquisition cost stays below $30 per new buyer.