Oklahoma extended its multimedia rights partnership with Learfield through 2037, adding five years to the existing deal and anchoring the extension around the Sooner Evolution Center, a dedicated NIL operations facility opening this summer on campus. The center will house brand partnerships, content studios, and agent coordination for 600-plus Sooner athletes across 21 sports. Learfield will staff the facility and retain first-look rights on local and regional sponsorship inventory tied to individual athletes.
The extension arrives 14 months into Oklahoma's SEC membership, a conference window that quadrupled media scrutiny and tripled sponsor bid activity for Sooner marks. Learfield's Norman office currently manages $42M in annual sponsorship revenue for the athletic department, a figure that climbed 19% since the conference move was announced in July 2021. The NIL center represents Learfield's first physical campus investment in its 400-plus school portfolio, a shift from the pure-play rights-fee model that defined collegiate multimedia deals through the 2010s.
The Sooner Evolution Center matters because it formalizes what high-revenue programs have been assembling in spreadsheets and Slack channels since NIL legalization: centralized athlete monetization infrastructure that athletic departments control, not collectives or agency networks. Oklahoma is treating the center as capital expenditure—permanent staff, permanent real estate, permanent deal flow—rather than outsourcing NIL coordination to third-party entities that operate outside university budgets. Learfield's willingness to fund the build and staff it suggests the company sees athlete-level sponsorship revenue as a durable margin expansion opportunity, not a compliance headache. The timeline also aligns with the 2026-27 academic year, when the NCAA's proposed revenue-sharing model may allow schools to pay athletes directly from media distributions. If that framework passes, Oklahoma will already have the infrastructure to evaluate which athletes command sponsor premiums and which generate media value through content production alone.
For sponsors, the center creates a single point of contact for multi-athlete activations, a structure that reduces negotiation friction and accelerates deal velocity. Regional brands seeking 8-12 athlete partnerships for seasonal campaigns can now contract through one entity rather than negotiating with individual agents and collectives. For allocators sizing Power Four investments, the extension signals that athletic departments are moving NIL from operating expense to infrastructure investment, a shift that affects valuation multiples on revenue-generating programs. Oklahoma's decision to lock Learfield through 2037 also suggests confidence that multimedia rights partnerships will remain viable even as direct streaming deals and in-house content operations proliferate across college sports.
Watch for coordinator hires at the Sooner Evolution Center by late July, particularly anyone with NFL or NBA player-marketing experience who can price tiered sponsorship packages. Learfield's Q3 earnings in October will likely disclose whether the company plans similar campus facilities at other flagship schools. Oklahoma's next $100M+ capital campaign, expected by early 2027, will reveal whether NIL infrastructure spending qualifies for major-gift fundraising or remains an operational line item.
The 2037 end date positions Oklahoma past the next two SEC media-rights renewals and three NCAA governance overhauls, whichever arrives first.