Federer and His Agent Start Their Own Firm Representing Athletes
In the latest shift in a sports
management business that appears to be trending toward the boutique, Roger Federer has joined
with his longtime agent Tony Godsick and two American investors to form an
agency called Team8.
The company, based in the Cleveland area and headed by Godsick,
will represent the interests of Federer, the 32-year-old Swiss tennis star, who
is one of the world’s highest-earning and most popular athletes. But Team8 also
has signed one of Federer’s main rivals, the fifth-ranked Juan
Martín del Potro of
Argentina, with input from Federer, who spent considerable time with del Potro
on an exhibition tour of South America last year.
Grigor Dimitrov, a rising 22-year-old Bulgarian whom many tennis
experts view as a potential Grand Slam champion, confirmed in an email that he
would also join Team8, effective Jan. 1.
That would give the new agency a strong foothold in both the
present and the future of tennis and would be a symbolic move for the
23rd-ranked Dimitrov, a player who was once nicknamed Baby Fed and whose
flowing, all-court game and one-handed backhand have long elicited stylistic
comparisons with Federer.
Godsick declined to confirm Dimitrov’s signing, but he did make
clear that the intent was not to create another big agency in the mold of the
International Management Group, where Godsick, an American, worked for nearly
20 years before he and Federer left in 2012.
“We’re trying to be a boutique agency that will manage just a
small stable of iconic athletes,” Godsick said in a telephone interview from
the firm’s new offices in Pepper Pike, Ohio, in Cleveland’s eastern suburbs.
“We’re really going to try to be selective here. Some of the other groups, they
look to sign as many players as they can and hope a few of them stick and make
it, and they really go after the juniors. We’re not going to.”
Godsick said that Team8 was also interested in acquiring or
creating events and in representing athletes in sports other than tennis, as
well as entertainers. He said that Federer, who is training hard and testing
new rackets in Dubai after a difficult season in which he dropped to No. 7 in
the rankings, would be a client and not an active partner for now. But Godsick
said the agency had been created in part to give Federer a platform when he
retires.
“I can sell Roger Federer really well, but nobody sells Roger
better than Roger,” Godsick said. “I always joke with him, ‘Look, you’ve been
really successful on the tennis court, but I promise you, you’ll be more
successful when you’re done playing tennis.’ ”
Max Eisenbud, a leading agent with IMG whose clients include Maria
Sharapova and Li Na, said that a big agency had significant advantages in
representing global stars because of global resources and manpower.
“I just don’t think I could manage my global clients on my own,”
Eisenbud said.
Godsick said that he was particularly interested in signing a
leading golfer in the near term.
“I think small is the new big,” he said. “We’re for more of a
personalized approach, and you’ve seen it now with so many different athletes.”
The other investors are Ian McKinnon and the billionaire financier
Dirk Ziff, the eldest of the three brothers who started Ziff Brothers
Investments in 1992 after their father, William, sold his publishing interests.
Godsick, 42, began working with the former No. 1 player Monica
Seles when he was at IMG on a summer internship. He later represented Lindsay
Davenport, Anna Kournikova and Tommy Haas.
Godsick is married to Mary Joe Fernandez, a former French
Open and Australian
Open finalist with whom he has two young children. Godsick began working with
Federer in 2005 when Federer returned to IMG after managing many of his own
business interests for a brief stretch.
Other leading agents expressed surprise that Godsick and Federer
had decided to include other athletes in their project.
“Roger is going to have a legacy and a business that is going to
live on well past his playing days, similar to a guy like Arnold Palmer in
golf,” said John Tobias, president of Lagardère Unlimited Tennis. “I figured
that would be enough, and I had to figure those figures post-career would be so
solid that Tony would be just fine financially. Why he wants to take on
additional responsibility, I’m not sure. I’m guessing it’s because Tony is a
pretty competitive guy.”
Godsick said he had felt the desire to build something new, not
just to manage Federer’s existing business, however lucrative. Forbes reported
that Federer was the second-highest-paid athlete last year, at $71.5 million,
behind Tiger Woods. Godsick and Federer’s move comes as IMG is on the verge of
being sold. It also comes as Federer’s longtime rival Rafael Nadal has left IMG
with his agent, Carlos Costa, and as Costa has reportedly expressed interest in
signing a promising 17-year-old Chilean player, Christian Garin, to a
management contract.
“Certainly with Carlos Costa and Tony Godsick, those are two
big-name agents moving out on their own,” Tobias said. “I get a lot of
questions — ‘Is this the trend?’ I really don’t think so. I think this is a
case of just two employees not entirely happy in their situation with two
incredible athletes to build around. Not everyone has that luxury. I don’t see
that as a trend. If they didn’t have Federer and Nadal, I don’t think they’ve have
taken the risk. Carlos and Tony are both very good agents, but the margins are
very tough in athlete representation.”
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