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UC Berkeley Suspends Stadium Naming Rights Deal With FTX

The 10-year deal is the latest to fall through in the wake of the crypto exchange’s bankruptcy filing.

California Memorial Stadium (Kilfmuny/Wikipedia)
California Memorial Stadium (Kilfmuny/Wikipedia)

The University of California Berkeley has suspended its football stadium naming rights deal with FTX, a representative of the athletic department confirmed in a statement to CoinDesk.

The deal was originally planned for 10 years and lasted just 450 days. The sponsorship was inked in August 2021 for $17.5 million. It was paid entirely in cryptocurrency and was the exchange’s first partnership in college sports. With the deal, Cal's football stadium was named FTX Field at California Memorial Stadium.

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A UC Berkeley spokesperson declined to comment on which cryptocurrencies were a part of the deal. The end of the partnership comes on the heels of FTX’s bankruptcy filing submitted last week.

While FTX logos have been removed from the sidelines of the school’s football field, the logo remains prominently on the front page of the athletic department’s website.

Screenshot from calbears.com
Screenshot from calbears.com

The crypto exchange, which spent heavily on sports-related partnerships in the past two years, has seen several of its sponsorship deals fall through in the wake of its collapse, including its 19-year, $135 million stadium naming rights deal with the National Basketball Association’s Miami Heat and $210 million esports partnership with gaming brand TSM.

Earlier this week, videos of a grounds crew wiping the FTX logo from the football field made the rounds on Twitter, indicating movements to remove the partnership had begun before the school’s official statement.

On Nov. 11, a representative from the school’s athletic department called FTX “a great partner for Cal Athletics,” saying it was monitoring the situation closely.

Eli Tan

Eli was a news reporter for CoinDesk who covered NFTs, gaming and the metaverse. He graduated from St. Olaf College with a degree in English. He holds ETH, SOL, AVAX and a few NFTs above CoinDesk's disclosure threshold of $1000.

Eli Tan