OSU has its fulltime agent
Posted: Tue Mar 20, 2007 8:56 pm
How convenient is that Conley Sr. is building up his own agency? Looks like he wants some of that Oden $$$$. Now osu football and basketball players will have their personal agent.
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/a ... -1/ZONES04
Conley Sr. starting sports representation business
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By Jeff Rabjohns
[email protected]
Whenever Greg Oden decides to go pro, he'll have the option of turning to a longtime friend for representation.
Mike Conley Sr., who coached Oden in summer basketball and has known the Ohio State freshman phenom since he was in sixth grade, has decided to start a firm.
The company will be called Mac Management Group after the founder's full name, Michael A. Conley.
"I just need to start putting things in place, not knowing what any of the guys are going to do," Conley Sr. said Monday, referring to several college players he knows who are in the position of making decisions about declaring for the NBA draft. "They're definitely going to do something this year or next, so if I'm going to do it, I need to put myself in the position to be ready when the time comes."
Conley Sr. said starting a firm should not be viewed as any indication that Oden has made a decision about whether to go pro this year. Ohio State is in the Sweet Sixteen, and Oden has said he won't make a decision about his future until the college season is complete.
"I have had zero conversations with Greg about this, and I promised (Ohio State coach) Thad (Matta) I wouldn't until after the season," Conley Sr. said.
Conley Sr. has extensive contacts in basketball. His former summer team included Oden, fellow Ohio State freshmen Mike Conley Jr. and Daequan Cook, Duke's Josh McRoberts and North Central High School senior Eric Gordon -- all projected as future NBA players.
"I'm not being presumptuous at all," Conley Sr. said. "Getting into this business is not just for those individuals. I'm competitive. I want to be the best at what I do, and that's not going to stop when I enter the sports management business.
"Hopefully I can attract and share a vision with some of the athletes I know, but also with others and move their careers forward."
Oden is considered a career-making client for an agent.
"He would be incredibly valuable, as valuable as you'd expect the first pick in the draft to be," said ESPN college basketball analyst Jay Bilas, who is also an attorney.
"He's worth tens of millions of dollars. As a big guy, he might not get a shoe deal equal to what LeBron James got because big guys don't tend to sell shoes. But's he's a very marketable young man who will be worth tens of millions of dollars off the court."
Conley currently is executive director of a group helping Chicago's bid for the 2016 Olympics. He previously was in charge of elite athlete services for USA Track and Field and negotiated various contracts, including endorsement deals, in that capacity.
A former high school basketball star in Chicago, Conley Sr. became an Olympic track star, winning a gold medal in the triple jump in 1992.
He said he'll be comfortable negotiating with NBA teams.
"I've negotiated a lot of different things. Almost everything in life is negotiated," Conley Sr. said. "You have to know what it is you're negotiating. You have to know when something's a good deal. Outside of being educated about the process, the same principles exist, and that's putting both parties in a win-win situation."
A 7-foot, 280-pound center, Oden has been projected as the overall No. 1 pick whenever he decides to enter the NBA draft. He was barred from the draft after high school when the NBA changed its eligibility rules.
Oden leads the top-ranked Buckeyes in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and shooting percentage. He missed the first seven games while recovering from a wrist injury suffered as a senior at Lawrence North High School and spent most of this season with the wrist on his shooting hand in a protective brace.
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/a ... -1/ZONES04
Conley Sr. starting sports representation business
Sign up for Star Sports newsletter
By Jeff Rabjohns
[email protected]
Whenever Greg Oden decides to go pro, he'll have the option of turning to a longtime friend for representation.
Mike Conley Sr., who coached Oden in summer basketball and has known the Ohio State freshman phenom since he was in sixth grade, has decided to start a firm.
The company will be called Mac Management Group after the founder's full name, Michael A. Conley.
"I just need to start putting things in place, not knowing what any of the guys are going to do," Conley Sr. said Monday, referring to several college players he knows who are in the position of making decisions about declaring for the NBA draft. "They're definitely going to do something this year or next, so if I'm going to do it, I need to put myself in the position to be ready when the time comes."
Conley Sr. said starting a firm should not be viewed as any indication that Oden has made a decision about whether to go pro this year. Ohio State is in the Sweet Sixteen, and Oden has said he won't make a decision about his future until the college season is complete.
"I have had zero conversations with Greg about this, and I promised (Ohio State coach) Thad (Matta) I wouldn't until after the season," Conley Sr. said.
Conley Sr. has extensive contacts in basketball. His former summer team included Oden, fellow Ohio State freshmen Mike Conley Jr. and Daequan Cook, Duke's Josh McRoberts and North Central High School senior Eric Gordon -- all projected as future NBA players.
"I'm not being presumptuous at all," Conley Sr. said. "Getting into this business is not just for those individuals. I'm competitive. I want to be the best at what I do, and that's not going to stop when I enter the sports management business.
"Hopefully I can attract and share a vision with some of the athletes I know, but also with others and move their careers forward."
Oden is considered a career-making client for an agent.
"He would be incredibly valuable, as valuable as you'd expect the first pick in the draft to be," said ESPN college basketball analyst Jay Bilas, who is also an attorney.
"He's worth tens of millions of dollars. As a big guy, he might not get a shoe deal equal to what LeBron James got because big guys don't tend to sell shoes. But's he's a very marketable young man who will be worth tens of millions of dollars off the court."
Conley currently is executive director of a group helping Chicago's bid for the 2016 Olympics. He previously was in charge of elite athlete services for USA Track and Field and negotiated various contracts, including endorsement deals, in that capacity.
A former high school basketball star in Chicago, Conley Sr. became an Olympic track star, winning a gold medal in the triple jump in 1992.
He said he'll be comfortable negotiating with NBA teams.
"I've negotiated a lot of different things. Almost everything in life is negotiated," Conley Sr. said. "You have to know what it is you're negotiating. You have to know when something's a good deal. Outside of being educated about the process, the same principles exist, and that's putting both parties in a win-win situation."
A 7-foot, 280-pound center, Oden has been projected as the overall No. 1 pick whenever he decides to enter the NBA draft. He was barred from the draft after high school when the NBA changed its eligibility rules.
Oden leads the top-ranked Buckeyes in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and shooting percentage. He missed the first seven games while recovering from a wrist injury suffered as a senior at Lawrence North High School and spent most of this season with the wrist on his shooting hand in a protective brace.