World Cup Stars Turn 17 Million New Followers into Six-Figure Brand Deals
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 30
World Cup Stars Turn 17 Million New Followers into Six-Figure Brand Deals
2 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 30
Summary
Cape Verde goalkeeper Vozinha jumped from 50,000 Instagram followers to 17.4 million after a 0-0 draw with Spain, creating the kind of audience experts say can quickly attract lucrative sponsorships.
Six-figure payments for sponsored posts are possible once athletes reach millions of followers, as brands treat social-media reach as a direct form of commercial currency.
New Zealand defender Tim Payne showed the same dynamic can come without on-field heroics: an influencer-driven campaign lifted him from about 5,000 followers to nearly 6 million in days.
Media scholars say the shift reflects a sports economy increasingly built around viral clips and signature moments rather than sustained performance over a full match.
That attention can fade just as fast, leaving players with a short post-tournament window to convert sudden fame into longer-term media, endorsement or entertainment careers.