Inside the New Basketball League Paying High Schoolers Six-Figure Salaries
Most high school hoops players across Americaâ"if theyâre luckyâ"travel to their games in a yellow school bus. They mightâ"if theyâre luckyâ"compete in front of the local junior college scout. But members of Overtime Elite, the new professional basketball league for 16-to-19-year old stars, arrive in style, to play before a far more influential audience.
On a crisp autumn morning in Atlanta, more than two dozen Overtime Elite (OTE) pros, who make at least six-figure salaries, stepped off a stretch limo bus, one by one. The players entered the brand-new 103,000 sq.-ft. facility built by Overtime, a five-year-old digital sports media startup that developed a huge following after posting Zion Williamsonâs high school dunks on Instagram. Waiting for them at OTEâs inaugural âpro dayâ: some 60 pro scouts, including reps from 29 out of 30 NBA teams, sitting along the sideline and behind the baskets. They leafed through the scouting packet provided by OTE, which included information like the wingspan and hand width of each player plus advanced statistics on their performances during preseason scrimmages, whispering to one another about which ones they were excited to see.
Emmanuel Maldonado, Ryan Bewley, Bryce Griggs, Jalen Lewis of Overtime Elite taking a quick break from warm ups at the practice courts at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIME Players stretch next to practice courts at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEAs the leagueâs coaching staff led players through NBA-style drills, the scouts eyed Amen and Ausar Thompson, a set of rangy 6-ft. 7-in. twins from Florida who skipped their senior year of high school to join OTE. The brothers made clever dribble moves, before driving down the lane to throw down thunderous dunks. âThe Thompson twins are obviously top talents,â says ESPN draft guru Jonathan Givony, who was also in Atlanta for the OTE pro day. âThose guys are ready to be seriously considered as NBA draft picks.â
OTE made a strong first impression, but the evaluators universally agreed that not all of the 26 OTE players in the gym were bound for the NBA. Given the supply of global talent chasing that dream, and the precious few spots available, elementary math suggests such an outcome is all but impossible. The coaching came across as high-level. Anton Marshand, a scout for the Cleveland Cavaliers, expects to make frequent trips to Atlanta this season. âFor us to be able to evaluate them now and see their growth over time, thatâs the key,â says Marshand. âItâs a pro environment.â
Amen Thompson (#1) of Team OTE on the show court at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIME Ausur Thompson and Amen Thompson chat after practice. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEOTE is launching at a landmark moment in the history of American sports. For decades, talented teenagers in fields like acting and music could monetize their unique gifts by signing lucrative, life-changing financial agreements. But archaic rules and attitudes largely kept athletes from doing the same, preventing them from cashing in until they reached major pro leagues like the NFL or the NBA. Those restrictions are now going the way of the peach basket. In June, the Supreme Court captured these shifting assumptions concerning athletic amateurism in a ruling that prevents the NCAA from capping education-related benefits. In a scathing concurring opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that the business model of the NCAA, an organization that has long kept college athletes from being paidâ"despite the millions in revenue many of them generate for their institutionsâ"would be âflatly illegal in almost any other industry in America.â About a week later, the NCAA, with public opinion and the highest court in the land turning against its outdated notions of amateurism, relented, and allowed college athletes to profit off their names, images and likenesses.
Read More: Why The NCAA Should Be Terrified Of Supreme Court Justice Kavanaughâs Concurrence
Naturally, businessesâ"many of them upstart tech platformsâ"have stepped into the fray, hoping to turn a profit by helping young athletes cash in on new opportunities. Brands like Icon Source, INFLCR and PWRFWD are promising to open up sponsorship opportunities, build social media presence and sell the merchandise of college athletes. A company called Opendorse aims to connect athletes with sponsorship opportunitiesâ"not unlike, say, how Uber connects drivers with riders, or Airbnb matches hosts and vacationers. With the loosening of name, image and likeness, or NIL, restrictions, Opendorse expects to quadruple its annual revenue in 2021 to more than $20 million. Tim Derdenger, a professor at the Carnegie Mellon Tepper School of Business, estimates that the NIL market for college athletes alone could reach more than $1 billion in five years.
But by betting on the popularity of high school basketball players, Overtime is taking a more radical, and potentially transformative, approach. Overtimeâs pitch to players: forget college basketball. OTE promises to pay six-figure salaries and offer access to high-level coaching and skill development in a sports-academy setting, to prepare athletes for a pro career. OTE has also hired teachers and academic administrators so that players can secure their high school diplomas. The operation has financial backing from an All-Star investor lineup, which includes Jeff Bezosâ Bezos Expeditions fund, Drake, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian and a slew of NBA players like Kevin Durant, Carmelo Anthony and Trae Young. In March, Overtime raised $80 million.
Players take classes at a WeWork space in the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta. Andrew Hetherington for TIME Bryce Griggs and TJ Clark leave the locker room on to the OTE practice courts in Atlanta. Andrew Hetherington for TIMESigning with OTE isnât a decision players take lightly. Under current NCAA rules, athletes with OTE contracts are classified as professional players who have forfeited any eligibility to play college basketball, an enterprise that, despite all its flaws, is a proven path to lifelong educational benefits and the NBA. If an OTE player does not make it to the NBA or secure a professional gig overseas, Overtime is pledging to kick in $100,000 to pay for a studentâs college education. âYou canât beat that,â says Bryson Warren, a would-be high school junior from Arkansas whoâs eligible for the 2024 NBA draft. âAt the end of the day, I can still be a doctor and make NBA money.â
For some, however, the OTE deal sounds almost too good to be true. At pro day, the same scouts who looked up to the ceiling of OTEâs airplane-hangar-size structure in wonder, asked the same question: How is OTE going to survive? The sports landscape is littered with failed professional leagues. Overtime has spent millions on a school, a coaching and basketball operations and performance staff rivaling that of NBA teams, not to mention salaries and housing for its players and a massive new structure.
Dan Porter, Overtimeâs CEO and co-founder, has heard all the skepticism. âEveryone wonders, Whatâs the business model?â he says. Porter points to OTEâs late-October opening weekend of games as a sign of the leagueâs promise: he says OTE content generated 23 million views, and 8.8 million total engagements, across social media.
Jai Smith of Team Elite makes his pre-game entrance on the inaugural night of games at the show court at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEWhatâs more, now that top prospects can sign lucrative sponsorship deals while at proven collegiate powers like Duke, Kentucky, and Kansas, OTE may have to increase salary offers, further driving up its costs. And if Overtimeâs marketing prowess helps the players build enough of a social media following to make OTE profitable, will that focus on building brands deter from their athletic development? OTEâs bottom line alone canât thrive; the company needs to produce NBA draft picks. âWe told kids when we recruited them,â says OTE director of scouting Tim Fuller, âour national championship is when you shake [NBA commissioner] Adam Silverâs hand.â
A lot is riding on OTEâs fate. Success has potential to create economic empowerment and more options for young, mostly Black athletes who for far too long have been funneled into a system that mostly enriches white coaches and administrators, but not them. It could spawn copycats across sports (with the unintended consequence of further igniting the hyperspecialized, hypercompetitive $19 billion youth sports feeder system that often offers parents a false sense of their kidsâ pro potential). OTEâs failure, however, might not cost just Bezos and Drake a rounding error of their overall wealth. Much worse, this disruptive idea could derail dreams.
A new modelOTE placed its recruiting call to Troy Thompson in the spring, at a fortuitous time. Troyâs twin sons, Amen and Ausar, had just played nearly 30 games over five weeks on the AAU circuit, where overuse injuries are becoming more common. The boys, who were based in Florida, had traveled to Illinois, Wisconsin, Arizona, Missouri and Georgia during this swing. They were able to showcase their ability, but the twins barely had time to practice on the all too common travel sports grind. Were they actually improving? âOTE called right when my mind was going, âO.K., Iâve got to find a way to slow this thing down,ââ says Troy.
The OTE offerâ"a six-figure salary, plus the emphasis on player development in an academy settingâ"sounded attractive. âItâs like weâre getting to fast-forward their dreams,â says Troy, who works in security. Ausar was on board. Amen, however, took a little more convincing. âHeâs hardheaded,â Ausar says of his twin brother, who was sitting next to him during an OTE postâ"pro day brunch of pancakes, shrimp, lobster, grits and potatoes, served at a Georgia Tech off-campus apartment complex that houses the OTE players. (It abuts a golf course, and includes a leafy courtyard and a pool.) Amen was looking forward to chasing another high school state title. He had always dreamed of playing college basketball, even as a âone-and-doneâ player who enters the NBA draft after freshman year. Kansas, Florida, Auburn and Alabama had already offered the twins basketball scholarships, and Kentucky had reached out with interest. âItâs just what Iâve known,â Amen says of college basketball. âAnd itâs shown to be proven.â
After âa million conversations,â says Amen, he was on board. He ultimately thought he had outgrown scholastic competition. In Atlanta, the Thompsons mention to TIME that they have just missed their final high school homecoming. But Amen insists heâs still going to prom. âIâm just going to walk in,â says Amen. He quickly realizes party crashing wonât be so simple. âAs soon as I left the school, they didnât let me shoot in the gym anymore,â says Amen. âSo, actually, I will need to have a date [from the school] to prom.â
Adjusting to Atlanta took some time. At first, Troy says, his sons complained about the OTE curfew. According to OTEâs dean of athlete experience and culture, former 10-year NBA veteran Damien Wilkins, during the week players must be in the residence building at 10 p.m., and in their apartments at 11 p.m. But Amen and Ausar have gotten accustomed to the rules, and they insist they have no regrets about forgoing their senior year of high school, and the potential to win a national championship in college, to join OTE.
Troy believes them. âI guess theyâre loving it where they are,â he says. âBecause, guess what? Dad hardly ever gets a phone call.â
The OTE weekday starts around 9 a.m. when the players arriveâ"on the limo busâ"at school. (Starting in early November, classes will be held at the OTE facility; before then, while building construction was being completed, the classes took place at a WeWork space in Atlantaâs Buckhead neighborhood.) On an October day, one group of students are solving radical expressions in math; in social studies, a trio of players listen to a lecture about English colonial labor systems. A skeleton stands in a common area: the science teacher is reviewing anatomy. Students work on their âpersuasive essays,â which they must turn into a 30â"60 second commercial spot. Ausar, reading from a marble notebook, touts the benefits of water aerobics: âWho doesnât love fun times in the pool?â Amen has picked stretching. âRemember, stretching over stress,â Amen says, snapping his fingers and pointing to the camera.
Players take classes at a WeWork space in the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta. Andrew Hetherington for TIME Overtime Elite players relax between classes at the WeWork space. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEAcademics last around 3.5 to 4 hours a day, before the players grab lunch and head to basketball practice. Class sizes are small: the student-teacher ratio rarely exceeds 4 to 1. OTEâs academic head, Maisha Riddlespriggerâ"Washington, D.Câs. 2019 principal of the yearâ"has heard too many times for her liking the assumption that OTEâs academic component serves as window dressing. âI think that comes from this deficit mindset that you canât be an athlete and a scholar at the same time,â says Riddlesprigger.
Veteran educator Marcus Harden, OTEâs senior administrator for academics and development, admits he worried that these high school juniors and seniors with healthy bank accounts and pro basketball ambitions would tune out classwork. And while some OTE players are more invested in school than othersâ"fighting student phone-scrolling habits in class is an ongoing battleâ"Harden insists that overall, the students have exceeded expectations. âWe would be negligent if we sent them out into the world with fake diplomas,â says Harden. âEven with the short day, I can say weâre doing this with integrity.â
For the sake of students who might not make it in basketball, OTE must deliver on this promise. Still, former NBA player Len Elmore, a Harvard Law School grad and current senior lecturer at Columbia Universityâs sports management program, worries that even if the players who get injured or donât pan out do return to college, they still might be worse offâ"savings accounts notwithstanding. âCome on, weâre talking about 17- and 18-year-olds who now have fizzled out at their dream,â says Elmore. âAnd now you expect them to go to a college that they were recruited by, or that they could have been recruited by, and enroll and go to class and watch other guys playing college basketball, knowing that they could have done that? That to me could also create some mental health issues.â
âItâs litâWhen Porter, the OTE CEO, was head of digital at superagency WME in 2016, he spotted a shift in the way Gen-Z and younger millennials consumed sports content. Young people were less interested in sitting in front of a TV to watch live basketball or football games. They craved stories, personalities and highlights. They wanted it on demand, on their mobile devices, specifically on the social media platforms that spoke best to them, like Instagram. Porter co-founded Overtime late that year, focusing at first on high school basketball. A proprietary technology allowed videographers to shoot clips in gyms across the country and upload them to the cloud; the companyâs social media editors fired off their favorite highlights. Williamson, who despite being built like an offensive lineman could throw down 360-degree slams on his comically inferior schoolboy competition, emerged as Overtimeâs first star.
The company built a young digitally-native cult following that has grown to more than 50 million followers across Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube and other platforms. âIf you are an ESPN or a traditional publisher, you canât appeal to a young audience with a bunch of traditional sports programming,â says Porter. âYou also canât go on your accounts, and be like, âItâs lit,â and a bunch of 50-year-old guys who are looking to figure out who they are going to start on their fantasy team are like, âI donât understand what this is.ââ
Read more: As College Athletes Finally Start Cashing In, Entrepreneurs Big And Small Also Look To Score
Overtime has since branched out into e-commerce, as well as longer-form programming, like a documentary about current Chicago Bears rookie quarterback Justin Fields that lives on YouTube (and attracted some 426,000 views). Blue-chip companies like Gatorade, McDonaldâs and Nike have advertised on the platform; Rocket Mortgage sponsored a post in which Miami Dolphins rookie wide receiver Jaylen Waddle looks for houses in South Florida. When Overtime was recruiting former Sacramento Kings and Philadelphia 76ers exec Brandon Williams to run OTEâs basketball operations, Williams, who was previously unfamiliar with the brand, knew he needed to consider the offer when his 10-year-old son gushed over the Overtime stickers that were sitting on his deskâ"he told Dad Overtime was kind of a big deal. Later, when some little kid spotted Williams wearing an Overtime shirt at an airport, the boy curved his hands into an âOââ"a reference to the Overtime logoâ"as if approving Williamsâ youth cred.
Bryce Griggs of OTE with the ball during the inaugural night of games in the show court at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIME The OTE bench watches the game at the show court at the OTE arena Andrew Hetherington for TIMEA few factors coalesced to give birth to Overtime Elite. For one thing, Porter got weary of hearing feedback from college basketball programs that they appreciated Overtime giving their recruits exposure on the high school level, since the schools could then capitalize on their popularity. âIâm like, âThatâs good for you, but thatâs not very good for me,ââ says Porter. An Overtime-branded league could keep personalities in the companyâs ecosystem and give the startup a valuable piece of intellectual property. And the experience of another early Overtime star, current Charlotte Hornets point guard LaMelo Ball, opened Porterâs eyes. Ball spent one of his high school yearsâ"and part of the season he would have typically spent in college before becoming eligible for the NBA draftâ"playing overseas in Lithuania and Australia. He became the third overall pick of the 2020 NBA draft, and won last seasonâs rookie of the year honors. To Porter, Ballâs experience proved that talented players were willing to try a different path to the NBA.
Former NBA commissioner David Stern, who passed away in January 2020, initially told Porter and Overtimeâs other co-founder, Zack Weiner, that they were crazy. Overtime already had a compelling core business, and Stern knew from experience the hassles of running a sports league. But Stern eventually came around to the idea; his son, Eric, is one of OTEâs investors. Overtime Elite has signed multiyear, multimillion-dollar sponsorship agreements with Gatorade and State Farm. Both companies have prominent signage at the 1,100-seat âOTE Arena,â which is also part of the 103,000-sq.- ft. structure in Atlanta. OTEâs showcase court, which hosted its first set of games on Oct. 29, features LED lights and a Jumbotron. Topps is producing trading cards for OTE players; Porter says that âhundreds of thousands of dollarsââ worth of cards have already sold, and that they should start appearing in Walmart, and hopefully Target, in December or January. Some NFT initiatives are sure to follow. OTE is not live-streaming games yetâ"Porter wants to create scarcity and buzzâ"but the content team is creating a mix of highlight packages and an episodic behind-the-scenes docuseries on the players.
Overtimeâ"which has yet to turn a profitâ"expects annual revenue to reach up to $300 million in five years, with Overtime Elite bringing in about a third of that haul. The company, and its investors, are betting that Overtimeâs built-in brand notoriety and audience will differentiate OTE from other upstart sports leagues that have failed. âWe donât have that same kind of cold-start problem,â says Porter.
âDunk lines for contentâBut the high stakes arenât limited to Overtimeâs bottom line. Players are placing their futures in the companyâs hands, which puts the onus on OTEâs basketball development staff to ensure that, at worst, each player receives at least a lucrative pro offer overseas. The players do have impressive tools at their disposal. During one practice, for example, a biomechanical engineering Ph.D. rushes to tuck a microchip into the shorts of a few players: this technology allows OTEâs four-person analytics and data science team, led by applied math PhD. and former Philadelphia 76ers researcher Ivana Seric, to track how far and fast players move during practices. This information allows the coaches to better control wear and tear. Cameras atop each shot clock on the OTE practice courts can show, for example, how far to the left or right players are missing their shots. They can adjust accordingly. A 10-person on-court coaching staff, led by former UConn coach Kevin Ollie (who won the 2014 menâs national championship with the Huskies) fans out at four different baskets during practice, allowing players to work on team concepts, like defending screens and pick-and-rolls, and individual skills (they take ample corner threes and floaters, both key tricks of the NBA trade).
Like any upstart, however, OTE has experienced hiccups. When Porter came to visit the academic session, a couple of players were unafraid to point out to him that the flimsy boxed roast beef and cheese sandwiches served for lunchâ"they may have fit it at the Fyre Festivalâ"were subpar nourishment before practice. âThis looks scary,â Porter admitted, eyeing the sandwich. âI wouldnât eat it.â
OTE launched in March, and settled on Atlanta as its home in May, meaning the facility, which comes chock-full of amenities like two oversize bathtubs for recovery and a playersâ lounge and NFL-size weight roomâ"as well as classroom and office spaceâ"needed to be constructed in five months. A few days before OTEâs opening games Halloween weekend, Ollie shouted instructions at practice over hardhatsâ drilling; construction detritus forced one door to remain open, allowing a cool Georgia draft to accompany the players on the practice floor.
Kevin Ollie, Head Coach and Director of Player Development of the OTE coaches Team Elite during the inaugural night of games at the show court at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIME Young fans in the stands watch the action at the OTE arena. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEWhile OTE deserves credit for executing its vision so quickly, it could be trying too much too soon. âTheyâre kind of building the parachute after they jumped out of the plane here,â says Dr. Marcus Elliott, founder and director of P3, a southern California-based sports science institute that provides advanced biomechanical analyses of elite athletes.
Ollie was unhappy with this teamâs effort at the first practice after pro dayâ"and let the players know it. The energy was far from NBA-level, he told them. This scolding didnât stop some of the players from lining up near a basket afterward, to show off their leaping ability for Overtimeâs ubiquitous cameras. âDunk lines for content,â said an OTE staffer who was looking on.
Dunk lines for content. You probably couldnât find a more fitting phrase to encapsulate the year 2021 in sports media and culture. Or a more spot-on reminder that kids are placing their basketball gifts in the hands of a digital marketing juggernaut. âI see the potential of this disruption to lead to a much more just and better world for these young athletes,â says Elliott. âBut I also see lots of peril. Itâs not about getting paid 100 grand to play as a 16- or 17-year-old. Itâs about getting your second or third contract in the NBA. And those are challenging and sophisticated blueprints to put together. And so the fact that their DNA has nothing to do with development, thatâs concerning.â
A player hangs onto the net at the OTE practice courts. Andrew Hetherington for TIMEOvertime insists all incentives align. The company has hired experts like Ollie and the data scientists because the growth of OTEâs business hinges on the Thompson twins, and others, achieving their basketball dreams. After practice, Amen watches film with an OTE assistant coach; Ausar takes part in a small group shooting session that ends at 6 p.m. They both know that to make it to the next level, they must improve on their outside shooting. âIâm going to be in the gym,â says Ausar. âI have nothing better to do. I donât do anything in Atlanta. I just chill in my room and watch basketball.â Amen and Ausar have talked to each other about backup careers; they both believe theyâd be solid hoops commentators. But that can wait. When asked where they both see themselves in two years, neither brother hesitates. Nor do any of the OTE players when asked about their futures.
âThe NBA.â
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