Logology

Why Colleges Are Recruiting Student Athletes with Personalized Logos

USC designed logos for its entire men’s basketball roster, while Texas and Oklahoma produced them for its incoming 2020 football players

James I. Bowie
Marker
Published in
4 min readJul 6, 2021

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The use of initials, sometimes combined with athletes’ uniform numbers, is extremely common.

As college sports have become increasingly big businesses in the United States, with many coaches’ salaries measured in millions of dollars and television contracts reaching the billions, the NCAA and its member institutions, the universities that field the teams, have had difficulty in continuing to maintain the façade of amateurism that prevents college athletes from being paid for their efforts. Last week, the NCAA acquiesced to public pressure a bit, changing its rules to allow athletes to start making money from their “names, images, and likenesses” (NIL) in ways that were prohibited before, such as endorsing products or selling t-shirts emblazoned with their faces.

Of all the consequences of these changes, one that’s remarkable from a branding perspective is the sudden appearance of personal logos for dozens of college athletes, who have taken to social media to show off their new symbols. Ironically, this outpouring of graphic embellishments adheres in a way to the NCAA’s vision for college sports; that is to say, a number of these…

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James I. Bowie
Marker
Writer for

Principal at Emblemetric, Sociologist at Northern Arizona University. Data-driven reporting on trends in logo design: Emblemetric.com