UCF players displayed an eye-catching bit of style during Saturday’s spring game, wearing uniforms with their social media handles on the nameplates.
Instead of their last names, UCF players had their social media names, particularly their Twitter handles, displayed on their backs. That applied to everyone who participated, too.
of college football . pic.twitter.com/QMOcKYwt9k
— UCF Football (@UCF_Football) April 10, 2021
So what was the thinking behind this? Coach Gus Malzahn explained that UCF was embracing the “new age of personal branding,” adding that it was a good way to reach UCF’s younger group of alumni.
“You look at, what, 322,000 living alumni and the average age is 36 — 72,000 [students], and they’re all on Twitter,” Malzahn told reporters. “Some of these big schools, the average age of their alumni is 65, and they’re on Facebook. So we’ve got a big advantage there.”
With the NCAA increasingly backing down on players taking advantages of their names and likenesses, we’re probably going to see more things like this. UCF is getting out ahead of it, which is exactly what a school of its caliber should be doing. They may well reap the benefits of such an approach or at least serve as a template for other schools that might ultimately follow in their footsteps.
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