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Carter reveals that "Project B," a new international league he consults for, aims to be a truly global product like Formula 1. Rather than directly competing with established leagues like the NBA, it seeks to create a separate, high-stakes global tour that taps into a worldwide fanbase.

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Despite having a global fanbase over four times larger than the NFL (830M vs. 180M), Formula 1's revenue per fan is just $7 per year, compared to the NFL's $127. This massive gap highlights a structural limitation due to less event inventory but also signals a significant growth opportunity, particularly in high-value media markets like the United States.

Formula 1 thumbnail

Formula 1

Acquired·2 months ago

Sixth Street's sports strategy views iconic teams like FC Barcelona or the New York Yankees as global consumer brands, not just local franchises. This "local to global, enabled by technology" lens opens up investment opportunities based on brand value and consumer reach, moving beyond traditional sports team valuation metrics.

Unrivaled positions itself not as a competitor to the WNBA, but as a complementary league that supports the entire ecosystem. By providing WNBA players a domestic offseason opportunity to compete and build their brands, Unrivaled helps raise the profile of the players and women's basketball as a whole.

The NBA fosters a community where marketing leaders from competing teams openly share ideas. Because teams primarily operate in different local markets, they are not direct commercial rivals. This "coopetition" allows them to learn from each other's successes and failures, elevating the marketing of the entire league.

Carter argues the NBA is in the "attention business," competing with all forms of media. Success isn't just about the game, but about creating high-stakes moments, like the play-in tournament, that capture and hold audience attention in a crowded digital landscape.

Unrivaled's teams aren't tied to cities, challenging the traditional sports model. The commissioner's initial concern about fan loyalty was unfounded, as fans quickly adopted team identities like the 'Phantoms.' This strategy allows a new league to build a broad, digitally-native following from day one, unconstrained by geography.

LIV Golf’s CEO avoids direct domestic competition with the PGA Tour by focusing on the massive, untapped international market. He frames this not as a competition but as a completion of the global golf landscape, taking a bet on the 199 countries outside the U.S.

BYD's exploration of entering Formula One is a marketing play to elevate its global brand perception and compete with established Western automakers. Success in a prestigious, European-dominated sport like F1 would serve as a powerful signal of engineering excellence and help accelerate its global expansion.

The motivation for buying a Formula 1 team is not financial return but the acquisition of an unparalleled personal brand and networking tool. Like owning a major league sports team, it instantly redefines one's public identity and provides access to an exclusive global elite, a value that "you can't put a price on."

To build F1's television footprint, Bernie Ecclestone sold the initial European rights for a very low price. However, he included a crucial condition: the 92 public broadcasters had to show every single race, not just their local one. This market-building strategy created a dedicated global fanbase before he later maximized revenue by auctioning the rights.

Formula 1 thumbnail

Formula 1

Acquired·2 months ago
A New Global Basketball League Aims to Emulate F1's Model, Coexisting With Domestic Leagues | RiffOn