As we have discussed, in modern football, a player’s influence stretches far beyond what they do on the pitch. Social media has turned top players into global marketing machines. Some have bigger online followings than the clubs they play for. Their posts reach millions instantly, across every continent. This kind of exposure is incredibly valuable for brands, especially those looking to tap into young, engaged, international audiences.
As a result, elite players are courted by all kinds of companies. But not all endorsement deals are created equal. Some industries are a natural fit for footballers: performance gear, hydration products, health supplements, or recovery tech. Others face more resistance. Gambling companies, alcohol brands, and fast food chains are still eager to work with players, but the conversations start very differently. These brands often need to pay a significant premium to get in the room.
‘Embarrassment Tax’
This extra cost is sometimes referred to by agents and marketers as the “embarrassment tax.” It’s not an official term, but it captures the reality well. When a footballer agrees to promote a betting app or a fast food chain, they are associating their image with something that doesn’t align with how they live, or how their audience expects them to live. These industries are often seen as unhealthy, irresponsible, or out of step with elite performance culture. So the brand has to compensate for that tension.
For example, a sportswear brand like Nike or Adidas can offer a deal built around performance and excellence. The player doesn’t need to explain it. The partnership makes sense on its own. The same goes for companies like WHOOP, Gatorade, or Gymshark. These are brands that speak directly to the athlete’s lifestyle. They support recovery, nutrition, training, or personal development. When a player posts about these products, it feels authentic. Fans trust it.
That’s not the case with fast food, alcohol, or gambling. Even if the player personally enjoys the product, the public messaging becomes much harder to control. The media scrutiny is sharper. Parents and younger fans may feel disappointed. Some sponsors may even back away from a player who appears too closely linked to vice industries.
Because of this, when brands from these categories want a deal, they often have to offer two to three times the typical endorsement rate. It’s not just about securing visibility. It’s about buying permission to sit next to someone whose reputation could be damaged by the association. It’s also about making the player feel the risk is worth taking.
In simple terms: if a partnership doesn’t align with how a player trains, eats, or presents themselves publicly, the price to make it happen goes up. And that price is not just financial, it’s reputational too.
The Role Model Dilemma
Footballers operate in a unique space where their responsibilities stretch beyond performance. They are not only judged by how they train or play, but also by how they behave off the pitch, what they say in interviews, and what products they endorse. Whether they like it or not, footballers are role models, especially to younger fans who mimic their behaviour and idolise them.
This creates a constant balancing act when it comes to commercial deals. Promoting a hydration drink, recovery app, or protein supplement reinforces the disciplined lifestyle required at the top level. These choices feel responsible. They align with what parents want their kids to see and with the values clubs and leagues try to promote.
On the other hand, associating with brands that sell gambling, fast food, alcohol, or even controversial fashion items can raise uncomfortable questions. Is this something a professional athlete would actually use? Is it setting the right example? These questions are amplified for players who hold captaincies, represent national teams, or have foundations focused on youth or community work.
From the player’s side, it often comes down to weighing short-term gain against long-term brand equity. A lucrative one-off campaign might make financial sense in the moment, but what’s the cost to credibility? Could it affect future partnerships? Could it alienate part of their fanbase? In an era where players increasingly think like entrepreneurs, many are starting to see their personal image as a long-term asset, something to protect, not just monetise.
Endorsing the wrong product might not just bring online criticism. It could damage trust. And in the age of social media, trust is everything.
Real-World Examples
Wayne Rooney provides a sharp example of the changing tone around commercial deals. Early in his career, he had major mainstream sponsors like Coca-Cola. But after off-field issues and a dip in public perception, those partnerships fell away. Coca-Cola dropped him in 2011 following personal controversies. In the years that followed, Rooney signed with 32Red, a gambling sponsor, during his spell at Derby County. The deal reportedly included the player wearing the number 32 shirt, drawing attention to the brand every time he played. It was a clever marketing play, but also a clear shift in the type of deals available to him as his image changed.
Jack Grealish, now one of England’s most visible football stars, represents the new generation of marketable athletes. His £1 million Gucci deal in 2022 showed his appeal in the fashion and lifestyle space. But later, his campaign with McDonald’s stirred up debate. For a player celebrated for his fitness, physique, and peak performance, promoting fast food seemed off-brand to some. It didn’t stop the campaign, but it did create noise, proof that even charismatic players can’t endorse anything without scrutiny. Still, the financial reward and national reach likely made the deal hard to turn down.
Cristiano Ronaldo gave perhaps the most visible statement on athlete-brand alignment in recent memory. During a Euro 2020 press conference, he removed two Coca-Cola bottles from the table in front of him and lifted a bottle of water instead, saying “Agua!”. The gesture was subtle but symbolic. It aligned perfectly with Ronaldo’s reputation for clean living and body optimisation. The fallout was immediate—Coca-Cola’s market value reportedly dropped by $4 billion. More importantly, it reinforced how seriously athletes like Ronaldo take brand image. He has built his commercial empire on fitness, luxury, tech, and performance, avoiding the so-called “embarrassment tax” altogether.
Ronaldo’s move wasn’t just about health, it was a business signal. By refusing to endorse something that didn’t match his personal brand, he preserved long-term value and set a precedent. That kind of thinking is now becoming the norm among football’s top earners.
Pros and Cons: From the Player’s View
Pros
High financial upside
Controversial or off-brand categories tend to offer the biggest cheques. Gambling companies, alcohol brands, and fast food giants often operate with massive marketing budgets and fewer restrictions on what they can pay for talent. These deals can be worth double or even triple what a sportswear or fitness brand might offer, particularly for a short-term campaign or one-off activation. For players not on top-tier wages or in the later stages of their careers, this kind of money can be a game-changer.
Broader market reach
Partnering with brands outside of the sports or fitness ecosystem can help a player reach new demographics. A fast food campaign might introduce them to mainstream TV viewers, casual fans, or family audiences. A nightlife or fashion collab could boost their relevance with older consumers or audiences who follow culture more than football. These deals can serve as entry points into lifestyle branding, entertainment, or even post-football opportunities.
Diversification of image
For players looking to position themselves as more than athletes, especially those eyeing music, fashion, media, or business ventures, controversial deals can help reshape public perception. A calculated partnership can signal boldness, personality, or individuality, especially if managed correctly and balanced with more traditional campaigns.
Cons
Reputation risk
A poorly judged endorsement can quickly become a PR headache. Once a player is publicly associated with a controversial brand, it’s hard to walk it back. Fans remember, the media amplify it, and screenshots live forever. One wrong move can cut through months or even years of careful brand-building, particularly if the product being pushed contradicts the values the player is known for.
Audience backlash
Younger fans and parents are often sensitive to who their kids look up to. A player promoting a gambling app, for example, might receive direct criticism not just online but at matches or community appearances. Fans want authenticity and consistency, if a player trains hard, eats well, and talks about discipline, then promotes late-night takeaway food or beer, the disconnect is obvious.
Loss of future opportunities
Endorsing one controversial brand can quietly close doors with others. Family-friendly sponsors, tech companies, or high-end lifestyle brands may avoid players who have previously worked with alcohol or betting firms. Even if those partnerships are profitable in the short term, they can block access to longer, more valuable brand relationships in the future. Clean brands want clean reputations, and some won’t risk the association.
Club and sponsor tensions
It’s not just fans and media who care. Some clubs have commercial guidelines or internal policies that frown upon or restrict certain endorsements. Players have to consider how a deal might sit with their team’s main sponsors, especially if there’s potential for brand conflict or moral misalignment.
Conclusion
Endorsements today are no longer just about cashing in, they’re about building something bigger. Players are now thinking like brands themselves. Every deal they sign and every product they promote shapes how they are seen not just now, but long after their playing days are over.
This is why many players and their agents are far more selective. They understand that not all visibility is good visibility, a3d not every offer is worth the money. For brands in controversial or “off-brand” categories, the cost of entry is high because the risk is higher. These companies aren’t just paying for reach, they’re paying to rent credibility.
For the player, it comes down to clarity. What do they stand for? What do they want to be known for? The most successful commercial careers are built when those answers are clear, and every deal reflects them.