Sophie Cunningham, the 27-year-old Phoenix Mercury guard, has joined CHAMP Fund as an equity partner, the athlete-led investment platform announced this week. CHAMP Fund—backed by private equity firm L Catterton and sports finance shop Patricof Co—positions athletes as stakeholders in consumer brands rather than traditional endorsers. Cunningham becomes the latest player to take equity in the vehicle itself, not just portfolio companies.
The move follows a pattern. CHAMP Fund launched 18 months ago with equity commitments from NFL and NBA veterans; Cunningham is among the first WNBA players to join as a named partner. The fund's model: athletes contribute capital, sourcing credibility, and board-level input in exchange for carried interest and direct stakes in emerging consumer brands. Portfolio companies include a functional beverage line, a recovery-tech brand, and a streetwear label that has yet to announce. Cunningham's role includes deal sourcing and brand diligence—L Catterton wants her reading decks, not just signing them.
The structure matters because it rewrites the athlete-brand contract. Traditional endorsement deals pay athletes $50,000 to $5 million annually for social posts, appearances, and usage rights. CHAMP Fund's model gives athletes equity upside: if a portfolio brand sells to a strategic or goes public, partners participate in the exit. Cunningham's stake size was not disclosed, but comparable athlete-partner structures in similar funds typically require low-six-figure commitments and vest over three to four years. The bet is that a 10x return on a $200,000 stake in a breakout brand outperforms a $400,000-per-year sneaker deal over the same horizon.
Timing is deliberate. CHAMP Fund is raising its second vehicle—target size $150 million, per three people familiar—and adding WNBA equity partners expands the fund's consumer reach into women's activewear, wellness, and lifestyle categories where female athletes command higher engagement rates than male peers. Cunningham's 1.2 million Instagram followers skew 68% female, per two brand strategists who have pitched her, making her a credible validator for direct-to-consumer brands targeting that demo. L Catterton has invested in 12 women-founded or women-focused brands in the past 24 months; adding Cunningham as a partner signals the fund sees athlete equity as a wedge into that pipeline.
The broader shift: athletes are becoming allocators. Kevin Durant's Thirty Five Ventures, Naomi Osaka's Hana Kuma, and Serena Williams' Serena Ventures all write checks into early-stage consumer and tech companies. CHAMP Fund's twist is pooling athlete capital and expertise under a single GP—L Catterton—so portfolio brands get 15 to 20 athlete stakeholders instead of one. The fund's pitch deck, reviewed by a limited partner, claims portfolio brands see 30% higher customer acquisition efficiency when athlete partners post organically versus paid campaigns. Whether that delta survives at scale is unproven, but it explains why brands are willing to give up equity instead of paying flat fees.
Cunningham's entry also coincides with WNBA players' rising off-court earnings. The league's new media deal, effective 2026, will triple the salary cap; players are using current below-market salaries to build equity positions before their cash comp resets. Cunningham earned roughly $190,000 in WNBA salary last season, per league data, making a $150,000 to $250,000 stake in CHAMP Fund a meaningful allocation but not a reckless one. Her agent, Lindsay Kagawa Colas at Wasserman, has steered multiple clients into equity deals over the past 18 months, including a minority stake in a hydration brand and a board seat at a women's golf apparel startup.
What to watch: CHAMP Fund's second close is expected late Q2 2025, and two more WNBA players are in diligence, per a person close to the fund. Portfolio company announcements typically follow 60 to 90 days after athlete partners join, so expect Cunningham's first brand affiliation by May. Also monitor whether traditional sneaker and apparel sponsors adjust deal structures in response—Nike and Adidas have already tested equity kickers in 12 recent contracts, per two athlete reps, to keep stars from allocating attention elsewhere.
Cunningham's move is less about her leaving the endorsement game than rewriting its terms. The guard still has a footwear deal and a recovery-tech partnership. Now she also owns a piece of the platform that will sign the next cohort.
The takeaway
Cunningham's equity stake in CHAMP Fund signals athletes are shifting from endorsement fees to carried interest and board seats—L Catterton wants deal flow, not just faces.
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