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Sports Edge · Intelligence Desk MACALLAN 1926

Oklahoma extends Learfield through 2037, opens $8M Sooner Evolution NIL center

Five-year extension ties multimedia rights to on-campus athlete commercialization infrastructure as SEC schools standardize NIL operations.

Published June 13, 2026 Source Sports Business Journal From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Oklahoma Athletics
GOLD · June 13, 2026
MACALLAN 1926 · June 13, 2026

Oklahoma extends Learfield through 2037, opens $8M Sooner Evolution NIL center

Five-year extension ties multimedia rights to on-campus athlete commercialization infrastructure as SEC schools standardize NIL operations.

Oklahoma and Learfield IMG College extended their multimedia rights partnership through 2037, a five-year add-on anchored by the launch of the Sooner Evolution Center, an on-campus NIL facility designed to centralize athlete brand work. The deal keeps Learfield as OU's exclusive rights holder for corporate sponsorships, radio broadcasts, and stadium signage across 21 varsity programs while adding formal NIL infrastructure as a contractual deliverable.

The Sooner Evolution Center opens this fall adjacent to the football complex. It includes production studios, content editing bays, meeting rooms for agent sessions, and workstations for brand partnership managers. Oklahoma allocated $8M in athletic department reserves for construction and first-year staffing, according to filings reviewed by SBJ. Learfield will staff the center with four full-time employees—two content producers, one brand strategist, one compliance officer—and provide access to its talent marketplace platform, which connects athletes with local and national sponsors. The deal structure mirrors agreements Learfield recently signed with Georgia and Florida, where NIL support became a formal line item in multimedia extensions.

The move acknowledges that NIL is no longer adjacent to athletic department business—it is the business. Oklahoma's 130 football players and 400-plus total athletes are now revenue participants, and schools that leave NIL logistics to third-party collectives risk losing competitive and commercial control. By embedding NIL operations inside the Learfield relationship, OU routes sponsor dollars through a known entity with established compliance guardrails. It also gives the athletic department visibility into which athletes are signing deals, at what rates, and with which brands—intel that informs everything from recruiting pitches to locker-room equity conversations.

For Learfield, the extension is a hedge. Traditional multimedia rights revenue—radio ad sales, coaches' shows, in-stadium signage—has flattened as digital inventory fragments. Adding NIL infrastructure lets Learfield position itself as the operating partner for athlete commercialization, not just a rights aggregator. Oklahoma is Learfield's third-largest college client by contract value, behind Texas and Ohio State. Losing the relationship to a rival like Legends or Endeavor would have signaled that the multimedia model is losing relevance in the NIL era. This extension says OU believes Learfield can manage both sides of the ledger.

The SEC entry timeline is relevant. Oklahoma joins the conference July 1, 2025, and Alabama, Georgia, and LSU already operate centralized NIL centers with dedicated staff. Texas, OU's incoming rival, opened its Longhorn Foundation NIL Hub in 2023 with $12M in private funding. The Sooner Evolution Center keeps Oklahoma competitive in recruiting battles where facility infrastructure is now part of the pitch. A five-star quarterback choosing between OU and Georgia wants to know which school will help him build a personal brand worth $500K before the draft, not just which offense runs more play-action.

Watch for sponsor activation announcements tied to the center's opening. Learfield typically bundles NIL group licensing deals—think entire offensive lines in regional car ads—into corporate packages worth $250K to $1M annually. Oklahoma's first such deal will signal whether the Sooner Evolution Center generates incremental revenue or just reorganizes existing workflows. Also watch the October SEC Athletic Directors meeting, where league office staff will discuss NIL facility standardization. If Oklahoma's model becomes a template, expect similar Learfield extensions at Arkansas, Missouri, and South Carolina by year-end.

The compliance officer role is the tell. Schools worried about NCAA and state-law exposure are hiring in-house watchdogs, and Learfield is now contractually responsible for keeping OU athletes on the right side of shifting rules. That is either smart risk management or expensive liability insurance, depending on whether the NCAA's enforcement apparatus ever rebuilds credibility.

The takeaway
Oklahoma locks Learfield through **2037** with **$8M** NIL center, signaling multimedia rights now include athlete commercialization infrastructure as SEC schools standardize operations.
oklahomalearfieldnilseccollegiate rightsathlete marketing
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