Key Takeaways
- Arkansas basketball has insured its entire roster through a new Lloyd’s of London-backed policy that costs 3% of each NIL deal
- The 32 Group policy returns 100% of payment to donors if a player suffers season-ending injury before January 15, or 50% between January 15 and February 15
- An estimated $2-3 billion in combined revenue sharing and NIL payments across power conference programs currently operates without injury protection
- The insurance model emerged after Arkansas walk-on Lawson Blake tore his Achilles two days into Calipari’s tenure, prompting concerns about donor confidence
- Former Memphis player Travis Long co-founded 32 Group specifically to address what Calipari calls “booster fatigue” in college athletics
From Walk-On Injury to Market Solution
When John Calipari arrived at Arkansas in spring 2024, he inherited a basketball program with just two returning players. Two days later, one of them, reserve walk-on Lawson Blake, tore an Achilles tendon during a workout and missed the entire 2024-25 season.
The injury itself was unfortunate but routine. Calipari’s response was not.
“What if we had just given him a million dollars and then he got injured and was lost for the season?” Calipari said. “What would the person who gave that million feel? How would you go back to that person and ask for more money?”
The question drove Calipari to spend nearly a year developing a solution. His former Memphis player Travis Long, working with partner Steve Stelmach, launched the 32 Group as a New York-based insurance agency backed by Lloyd’s of London. Calipari has no ownership stake in the company but became its first major client.
How the Coverage Works
The insurance structure is straightforward. For 3% of an NIL or revenue-share agreement, 32 Group provides injury protection to schools, collectives, businesses, or individual boosters funding college athletes.
A $1 million player contract costs $30,000 to insure. If that player suffers a season-ending injury before January 15, the funding entity receives a full refund while the athlete continues to receive their contracted payment. Injuries occurring between January 15 and February 15 trigger a 50% reimbursement.
The model separates athlete compensation from donor risk. Players get paid regardless of injury status, while funders recover capital they can redirect to other roster needs or the following season.
“When I first heard the idea, I couldn’t believe it didn’t already exist,” Stelmach told ESPN. “I can’t believe every university and every collective doesn’t have this in place.”
The Uninsured Billions in College Sports
Stelmach estimates power conference schools collectively distribute over $1 billion in direct revenue sharing, with an additional $1 billion to $2 billion flowing through NIL collectives and business partnerships. None of that capital carried injury protection until 32 Group entered the market.
The gap exists because the entire system is barely two years old. Revenue sharing became permissible in 2024. NIL collectives emerged in 2021 but have only recently begun operating at eight-figure scale for major programs. Traditional athletic insurance covered scholarships, not market-rate athlete compensation.
“We are building the bus as we are driving down the highway,” Stelmach said.
Arkansas has fully insured its roster for the current season. Calipari reports uniform response from the program’s major donors: “They say, ‘Thank you.’ They were already thinking about it.”
The 66-year-old coach noted that significant donors became wealthy by protecting investments, not accepting unnecessary risk. “People who are rich enough to be a part of this are rich for a reason. They don’t throw their money away. This is a way to protect the donor.”
Addressing Donor Retention in the NIL Era
Calipari coined the term “booster fatigue” to describe the sustainability challenge facing college programs. Under the previous scholarship model, athletic department fundraising followed predictable annual cycles with clear facility and program targets.
NIL transformed major boosters into quasi-payroll departments funding six and seven-figure athlete contracts. The model depends on continuous donor renewal, but lacks the stability of traditional employment relationships or professional sports contracts.
“In 2025, if you aren’t thinking about your money people, then you might be doing it all wrong,” Calipari said. “The relationship can’t be just one-way.”
The insurance mechanism aims to preserve donor confidence by demonstrating financial stewardship. A $1 million commitment lost to injury without recourse might discourage future giving. The same commitment with 97% of capital protected creates different risk calculus.
Calipari has consistently moved ahead of industry norms throughout his career. At UMass, he scheduled midnight games to secure ESPN coverage. At Memphis, he recruited one-and-done prospects before the strategy became widespread. At Kentucky and Arkansas, he created television productions and hosted NBA-style pro days for players and recruits.
He views booster insurance as the next logical business adaptation. “He believes booster insurance provides a measure of respect that will keep donors coming back and investing in the team. He suspects that as the novelty of NIL wears off, raising funds will become increasingly difficult.”
Market Expansion Beyond Arkansas
The 32 Group is already in discussions with several other programs about implementing similar coverage. Stelmach expects adoption to accelerate as athletic directors and collective operators recognize the dual benefit of athlete protection and donor retention.
“These are legitimate business transactions made by legitimate businesspeople,” Stelmach said. “They don’t walk into their businesses and it’s not insured. Neither should this.”
The model could extend across all college sports where significant NIL or revenue-sharing deals exist. Football programs operating nine-figure budgets present the largest potential market, but the same logic applies to baseball, softball, volleyball, and other sports where individual athletes command substantial compensation packages.
The structure also addresses a practical reality: college athletes, unlike professionals, lack union-negotiated disability provisions or guaranteed contracts. Insurance creates financial continuity for all parties when injuries occur.
Strategic Implications for College Athletics
The emergence of athlete compensation insurance marks another step in the professionalization of college sports. Programs now manage payroll, negotiate contracts, handle donor relations, and protect investments against loss, functions indistinguishable from professional franchises.
The 3% premium rate suggests insurers view college athlete injury risk as manageable and predictable. Lloyd’s of London, one of the world’s most established insurance markets, backing these policies indicates institutional confidence in the model’s actuarial soundness.
For programs competing at the highest level, the coverage may become standard practice. Athletic directors will likely face questions from major donors about whether roster investments carry protection. Collectives without insurance could struggle to attract seven-figure commitments compared to competitors offering risk mitigation.
The broader question is whether NIL and revenue-sharing systems remain sustainable without such protections. Calipari’s instinct that donor enthusiasm may fade as novelty wears off reflects concerns throughout college athletics about long-term funding stability. Insurance won’t solve fundamental questions about athlete compensation models, but it addresses one practical barrier to donor confidence.
As Stelmach noted, this represents business basics applied to a new industry. The surprise is not that someone created the product, but that it took this long to emerge.
via: ESPN
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