Three years ago, The Undefeated featured Adisa Bakari, a former Division I-AA football player and founder of The Sports & Entertainment Group, a D.C.-based sports agency that represents some of the top athletes in the NFL and professional boxing.
After three seasons and realizing that a playing career wasn’t in the cards, Bakari mapped out a successful plan to represent athletes.
For African American sports agents like Bakari, the NFL represents a unique opportunity to represent athletes of color.
The most recent demographics show that 70 percent of the NFL’s approximately 1,700 players are Black.
Over three days, beginning Thursday, about 256 young men were selected by NFL teams in the 2020 draft. What’s more,The Washington Post reported that for the first time in NFL history, more than half of the players selected in the first round of the draft were represented by Black agents.
It is the first round that guarantees those players million-dollar contracts and generation-altering wealth.
Seventeen of the 32 selections Thursday night counted African Americans among their representatives. (More than one agent represents some players.) The scattered remote locations did nothing to diminish the significance of the milestone for a group of elite African American agents, most of them younger than 40.
They all say they’ve dealt with what they describe as implicit bias when making their pitches to families of all colors.
“I don’t think families entertained having an African American agent for a long time,” agent David Mulugheta, who led the list with four first-rounders, told The Post.
“People look at a young Black kid and think, ‘What can he really do for me?’ I still get that to this day, to be honest with you, and I’ve been in the business for a while. I think you have a lot of players now who feel they don’t have to go with the status quo.”
The newspaper broke down the agents in their selections (agents and the players):
“Eugene set the tone for all Black agents,” Lynn said.
Mulugheta added that “seeing him told a lot of people that you don’t need to be an athlete to stay involved in sports. Growing up, I never saw a Black agent, so that wasn’t something I saw as possible, but once I was leaving college, that’s when I found out about Eugene Parker.”
You need to be a member of NASTYMIXX to add comments!
Join NASTYMIXX