By Baptiste Cheseaux
Athelo Group
In today’s digital environment, consumers are bombarded with content, making it difficult for brands to stand out. One effective way to break through the sports marketing noise is by partnering with the right sports personalities. These athletes not only reflect the brand’s values but also create strong emotional connections with their audiences.
Recent research in influencer marketing and consumer psychology highlights the growing influence of athlete endorsements on brand trust, credibility, and loyalty. As marketing strategies evolve, trust remains crucial, especially in sports, where the authenticity of a campaign can highly impact its success.
Quick Highlights
- SMART objectives help brands can make more strategic partnership decisions while streamlining the athlete selection process.
- 61% of people trust influencers more when their values align with a brand’s.
- Micro-influencers with 10,000 to 100,000 followers can achieve up to 60% higher engagement rates compared to larger influencers.
- 83% of marketers state that long-term collaborations outperform short-term ones.
- Authenticity drives sales, as 92% of consumers trust influencer recommendations more than traditional ads.

Identifying Brand Goals and Objectives
The first step in selecting the right influencer is understanding your brand’s goals. Are you aiming for increased awareness, loyalty, or promoting a specific product? Knowing your objectives will guide the choice of an athlete who can spark the right kind of engagement.
A prime example of this is Nike’s partnership with marathoner Eliud Kipchoge for the Breaking2 campaign. The collaboration wasn’t just about selling shoes; it was about showcasing Nike’s commitment to innovation and pushing human limits. The 2017 campaign solidified Nike’s credibility in the running community and inspired athletes around the world to strive for greatness.
Athletes vs. Digital Influencers
When it comes to brand partnerships, choosing between athletes and digital influencers comes down to impact. Athletes bring a level of authenticity and deep fan loyalty that influencers can struggle to match. When someone like Serena Williams or Patrick Mahomes endorses a product, fans see it as a genuine extension of their success.
Digital influencers, especially those in niche sports, are rewriting the playbook. Fitness personalities like Noelle Benepe or lacrosse star Paul Rabil have built strong, engaged communities that brands are eager to tap into. In 2022, micro-influencers with audiences between 10,000 and 100,000 followers achieved engagement rates up to 60% higher than top-tier social media celebrities.
Brands aiming to scale visibility fast often find success partnering with athletes who dominate on and off the field. Athletes active in mainstream sports already have exposure across ESPN, brand deals, and global fanbases. Meanwhile, brands looking to foster stronger ties within specific communities are finding that working with smaller influencers can drive more authentic and lasting connections.

The Athlete-Brand Fit
Picking the right sports influencer is about more than just numbers. It starts with making sure the athlete’s values, public image, and the brand’s mission actually fit together. In a 2021 Edelman survey, 61% of people said they trust influencers over traditional celebrities, but only when the partnership feels real and aligned.
When the athlete’s personal brand lines up with the company’s message, the connection hits harder. Athletes with a clear focus use storytelling to show fans what they stand for, which makes them a natural fit for brands that share their values. A partnership that feels forced never works, but when it clicks, fans notice.
A perfect example is the Wow Wipes campaign, where Athelo Group teamed up with athletes like Brisa Hennessy, Zoe Benedetto, Dani Speegle, Kyra Milligan, and Alex Aust. Every athlete lives a high-intensity, on-the-go lifestyle, so showing them using the product felt natural. That authenticity is what made the campaign take off and why followers bought into it.
On a larger scale, Beats by Dre’s partnership with LeBron James proves how powerful a real match can be. LeBron’s work ethic, intensity, and cultural impact synced perfectly with Beats’ brand of performance and street-smart style. When fans saw that connection, it became a social movement.
The Power of Knowing Your Audience
After finding the right athlete, brands must ensure the athlete’s audience matches their target market. A large following isn’t enough if the fans aren’t the right fit. Brands have to look at factors like age, location, and buying habits to make sure the partnership will actually move the needle.
Coca-Cola nailed this during the 2014 World Cup by partnering with Lionel Messi. As an official sponsor of the tournament, Coca-Cola made Messi the face of a campaign built around a $500 million global marketing push. His reach across Latin America, Europe, and Asia helped drive a 5% sales increase in Latin America alone, making it one of Coke’s strongest performances worldwide. Coca-Cola even localized its messaging by country to personalize the campaign everywhere it ran.
The best partnerships happen when brands actually know their audience. Without solid audience data, even the biggest campaigns can miss the mark. A Nielsen report found that only 26% of marketers fully trust their audience data, which shows just how much room there is to get sharper and smarter in building athlete collaborations that actually land.

Why Focusing on Long-Term Partnerships Matters
One-off influencer campaigns create quick buzz, but long-term partnerships build real brand loyalty. When a brand works with an athlete over time, the connection with fans grows deeper and feels more authentic. A lasting relationship turns a brand’s message into part of the athlete’s story.
A prime example of this is Nike’s 27-year partnership with Tiger Woods. This enduring relationship has allowed Nike to not only market products but to integrate Woods’ personal journey into their brand narrative. The star became the face of the Nike Golf brand, representing excellence and perseverance.
This evolution aligns with the broader trend of athletes taking on entrepreneurial roles. Rather than serving as temporary endorsers, many athletes are now seeking equity stakes and long-term involvement in the brands they represent. We’ve seen this with Woods’ creation of TMRW Golf League and Allyson Felix’s women’s footwear brand Saysh, which raised $8 million in Series A funding.
The shift toward deeper partnerships matters for brands too. A Marketing Dive report found that 83% of marketers believe long-term influencer relationships are more effective than short-term deals. Fans stick with athletes they believe in, so long-term partnerships help brands build deeper trust and stronger recognition among consumers.
Partnerships for Lasting Brand Success
KPIs are important, but they are not the full picture. Long-term partnerships often build value over time by turning athletes into authentic ambassadors who shape how fans see a brand. Real success comes when an athlete’s connection with a brand feels bigger than a single campaign.
Looking ahead, brands that want to expand reach and loyalty in sports will need a smarter strategy. Partnering with a sports marketing agency like Athelo Group can help brands move beyond short-term wins and build long-term athlete relationships. Success will depend less on quick sales spikes and more on deeper metrics like sentiment analysis and brand affinity, setting the stage for partnerships that truly resonate with fans.