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* Tiger Woods, not surprisingly, ranks first, earning just under $100 million ($92 million of which is from endorsements), followed by fellow golfer Phil Mickelson.
* Lebron James ranks third, earning $42 million. Will his endorsement income--which is already $28 million a year--go up should he leave Cleveland next summer for the Knicks?
* Three of the top 10 earning atheltes are NBA players who jumped directly from high school to the NBA (Lebron, Kevin Garnett, and Kobe Bryant), while four other prep-to-pro stars are also in the top 32 (Dwight Howard is #13, Jermaine O'Neal is #20, Rashard Lewis is #30, and Amare Stoudemire is #32). Allen Iverson, who was my more celebrated classmate at Georgetown University for two years, and
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* Tom Brady, despite his enormous celebrity, is only #28 on the list, earning $18 million a year between salary and endorsements. For what it's worth, his wife--super model Gisele Bundchen--is reportedly worth $150 million.
* The Manning Brothers are both in the top 50: Peyton is #10 while Eli is #43.
A sports law related point: While player-agents, who in the NFL, MLB, NBA, and NHL are regulated by the respective players' association, typically receive a small commission percentage of a player's contract with a team (depending on the players' association in question, the agent usually receives a 2 to 4% commission), their cut of an endorsement contract tends to be higher (in the ballpark of 10 to 20%). As a result, the difference between income from a player contract and income from an endorsement contract matters a great deal to an agent. It also means that agents who represent endorsement-attracting players tend to see their earnings go up considerably.
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