MotoGP appointed CAA Sports as its exclusive global sponsorship agency, effective immediately, while CAA's parent WME Group simultaneously divested its sports marketing arm 160over90 for $500M. The twin moves separate MotoGP's commercial representation from a division WME no longer operates.
The exclusive mandate covers all global sponsorship inventory for the MotoGP World Championship, including title rights, track-side assets, broadcast integrations, and hospitality packages across 20 rounds in 2027. CAA Sports replaces MotoGP's previous in-house structure and assorted regional consultants. WME sold 160over90 to private equity firm Shamrock Capital, exiting sports marketing to focus on talent representation and media production. The $500M sale closed three weeks ago; the MotoGP appointment was announced today.
The timing is operational, not symbolic. MotoGP's current title sponsorship with crypto platform Crypto.com expires December 2026, creating an 18-month sales window before the 2027 season opener in Qatar. CAA Sports inherits that renewal negotiation plus inventory previously carved out for regional deals—TISSOT timing, DHL logistics, Michelin tyres. Those partnerships run through 2028 but contain renewal windows opening mid-2026. The portfolio is worth approximately $180M annually at current rates, per two sponsors familiar with rate cards. CAA's brief is to push that figure past $250M by adding a second-tier sponsor category and globalising hospitality sales, which today remain fragmented across national promoters.
For CAA, this is the fourth marquee motorsport property signed since 2023, following mandates for Formula E's title sponsorship, the IndyCar Series paddock club, and NASCAR's international media rights. The firm now controls sponsorship sales for two of the top-five global racing series by reach. That concentration matters for sponsors sizing multi-property activations: an energy drink or airline can now negotiate MotoGP, Formula E, and IndyCar inventory through one agency, simplifying approvals and often securing volume discounts. One multinational sponsor already active in Formula E confirmed his team is reviewing a MotoGP add-on specifically because CAA can bundle paddock access and media across both.
WME's exit from sports marketing is cleaner than it appears. The firm acquired 160over90 in 2021 for $160M, betting it could cross-sell athlete clients into brand strategy work. That integration never scaled; clients wanted representation or marketing, rarely both. Selling for $500M after three years delivers a 212% return and lets WME redirect capital toward Endeavor's UFC expansion and IMG's hospitality infrastructure. Shamrock Capital, the buyer, already owns CSM Sport & Entertainment and gains 160over90's college athletics portfolio, which includes 14 Power Five universities. The sale did not include any racing properties; those expired or transferred before closing.
MotoGP's commercial model has lagged Formula One's by structural choice, not oversight. Liberty Media's F1 centralised sponsorship sales in 2017, capturing $1.2B annually by 2024. MotoGP, owned by Dorna Sports and Liberty's rival investor group, kept regional deals decentralised to preserve promoter relationships in markets like Spain and Italy, where local brands pay premiums for home-race activation. The CAA mandate centralises inventory without alienating promoters because CAA will staff regional offices in Barcelona, Bologna, and Kuala Lumpur, maintaining local sales relationships while standardising rate cards globally. The model mirrors CAA's work for Formula E, which moved from $60M to $110M in sponsorship revenue over three years using the same structure.
The assignment includes digital and data licensing—a category MotoGP has monetised poorly. Current deals with betting platforms and fantasy providers generate under $15M annually; CAA will pitch a unified data package combining live telemetry, historical race archives, and rider biometrics to gaming operators and broadcasters by mid-2026. Formula One's equivalent package, sold by Sportradar, generates $80M yearly. MotoGP's reach is smaller, but CAA's thesis holds that gaming operators will pay $40M-plus for exclusive data if it includes betting-feed integration, which MotoGP has not previously offered.
What to watch: CAA's first sponsor pitch deck circulates in July, targeting automotive and tech brands that skipped MotoGP's last sales cycle. The Crypto.com renewal negotiation begins in September; if that partnership does not extend, expect a formal title sponsorship RFP by November with a decision before year-end. Regional promoters in Italy and Spain will renegotiate their local inventory carve-outs by Q3 2026, and those terms will set the precedent for how much autonomy remains outside CAA's global mandate. Shamrock Capital's $500M acquisition of 160over90 closes fully in August; watch for client defections to CAA or Wasserman if integration stumbles.
MotoGP's 2027 calendar adds a second U.S. round in Las Vegas, creating a new sponsor hospitality opportunity CAA will price aggressively. The Vegas race has no legacy inventory commitments, meaning CAA controls the entire commercial stack from the start. That makes it the cleanest test of whether centralised sales can actually move the revenue line, or whether MotoGP's sponsor base simply does not scale the way Formula One's has. The answer determines how much CAA's other racing clients pay attention.
The takeaway
CAA Sports takes MotoGP's **$180M** sponsorship mandate as parent WME exits sports marketing for **$500M**; centralised sales model targets **$250M** by 2027.
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