Skip to main content

Free article section

You are reading a Free article. Apply for a subscription to access all the valuable information on the website Sports Law & Taxation

The Role of Financial Literacy in Athletic Entrepreneurship

By Panayiotis Constantinou, Nicosia, Cyprus

Athletic greatness is built on repetition, resilience, and mastery of fundamentals.

The same goes for business.

But whilst athletes often spend years perfecting their craft on the field, court, or track, many jump into entrepreneurship without the same preparation – especially when it comes to understanding money.

Financial literacy is not a luxury for athlete-entrepreneurs. It is the ground beneath their ventures. The difference between scalable growth and spiralling losses is not hustle – it is knowing how to read a balance sheet, manage risk, and make numbers work for, not against, you.

Here is how financial literacy becomes the silent engine behind successful athletic entrepreneurship—and what happens when it is missing.

1.  You Cannot Manage What You Do Not Understand

In 2008, former NBA player Antoine Walker filed for bankruptcy just two years after retirement, despite earning over $108 million in his career. One of the key causes? Dozens of business ventures – real estate, car washes, restaurants – started with enthusiasm but no financial oversight.

The reality:

  • A good business idea is not enough; if you do not understand basic cash flow, expenses will outrun income.
  • Many athletes over-rely on “trusted people” to handle money, leading to blind spots—and sometimes betrayal.
  • Financial literacy means knowing how to read the numbers, not just delegate them.

Entrepreneurship without financial fluency is like playing without watching the scoreboard. Sooner or later, the game slips away.

2.  Smart Budgets Build Scalable Businesses

Simone Biles, widely regarded as the greatest gymnast of all time, co-founded Athleta Girl with Gap Inc. and has since expanded into brand licensing and speaking engagements. Her team is lean, her deals are intentional, and every new venture follows a strict budget.

What sets money smart athlete-entrepreneurs apart is clarity:

  • Clear budgets define limits and protect against “shiny object syndrome.”
  • Financial planning helps assess how much should be reinvested, saved, or paid out.
  • Budgets are not restrictive—they enable sustainable growth.

Understanding costs is the first step towards scaling. Guesswork kills margins.

3.| Taxes, Equity, and Paperwork: The Less Glamorous Game

In 2017, former NFL player Michael Vick revealed that one of the hardest lessons that he learned as a young entrepreneur was tax related. Poor financial advice led to massive IRS debts, which nearly derailed both his comeback and his post-career ventures.

Entrepreneurs – especially athletes – often:

  • Misunderstand tax liability (especially when income comes from endorsements, partnerships, and multiple states or countries).
  • Confuse revenue with profit – and forget that taxes are not optional.
  • Overlook the long-term value of owning equity rather than just collecting fees.

Financial literacy includes knowing when to hire a CPA, how to set up the right legal structure, and what it means to be tax efficient. It is not glamorous, but it is non-negotiable.

4. Negotiation Starts with Knowing Your Worth

When Venus Williams, the former number one founded V Starr Interiors and invested in multiple franchises, she was not just leveraging her fame – she was negotiating as a financially literate founder. She knew the numbers behind the deal: margins, markups, overhead, brand value.

The myth is that negotiation is about charisma or gut instinct. The truth?

  • Financial knowledge gives you leverage in deals—whether it is equity splits, supplier contracts, or licensing rights.
  • Understanding valuation helps you to avoid giving away too much too early.
  • Being literate in financial language makes it easier to speak with lawyers, partners, and investors on an equal footing.

Confidence in business starts with confidence in numbers.

5. Teaching the Team: Financial Culture Is Contagious

Former WNBA star Renee Montgomery, now a team co-owner of the Atlanta Dream, often talks about “changing the culture of ownership.” She doesn’t just invest – she builds financially empowered teams. From interns to partners, her ventures prioritise financial education at every level.

Why this matters:

  • A financially literate founder sets the tone.
  • Team members make better decisions when they understand the budget.
  • Culture rooted in transparency avoids confusion, misalignment, and internal friction.

When everyone understands the scoreboard, you do not just play better—you win together.

Final Word: Financial Literacy Is the Real Competitive Edge

For athlete-entrepreneurs, financial literacy is not just a skill – it is survival. It is what turns a promising idea into a profitable business, and a recognisable name into a sustainable brand.

Athletes already know what it takes to succeed: preparation, strategy, execution. But in business, the game is different—and the fundamentals start with money.

Learn how to read the numbers. Ask questions when you do not know. Build systems that protect your blind spots. Whether you are launching a fashion label, investing in tech, or opening a gym, your financial literacy will be the unseen force behind every successful decision. 

In sport, talent gets you drafted.

In business, knowledge keeps you in the game.

For further information, log onto: ‘www.moneysmartathlete.com’



Interesting article?

Take your own subscription to get easy online access to all valuable articles of Sports Law & Taxation