LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne has a new lucrative NIL deal to her growing portfolio and it’s about partnering with energy drink Accelerator Active Energy through her new Livvy Fund.
Dunne isn’t the only one to benefit from this deal but her teammates as well.
LOUISIANA State gymnast Olivia Dunne has added another lucrative NIL deal to her growing portfolio.
The Sports Illustrated model, 21, has partnered with energy drink Accelerator Active Energy through her new Livvy Fund.
Dunne’s deal will see eight different athletes with the LSU Tigers receive NIL sponsorship.
Per Fox News, the Livvy Fund launched earlier this year to help “connect female student-athletes at LSU with top brands to secure their own NIL deals.”
Livvy is among the most lucrative college athletes currently competing in the country.
She is preparing for her senior year at LSU following a summer of huge change.
Dunne made her modeling debut in May as she was featured in Sports Illustrated’s iconic Swimwear issue.
The New Jersey native has also found love, revealing her relationship with MLB No. 1 overall pick Paul Skenes.
Dunne has previously signed Name, Image & Likness deals with cell phone giant Motorola, EA Sports, Body Armor, Vuori, and American Eagle Outfitter.
Now she’s teamed up with her fellow LSU gym stars to promote a new first-of-its-kind deal.
Dunne’s teammates Konnor McClain, Ashley Cowan, Jillian Hoffman, Chase Brock, KJ Johnson, Haleigh Bryant, Sierra Ballard, and Kiya Johnson will all benefit from the partnership.
She first teamed up with Accelerator earlier this year, joining MLB star Aaron Judge and NFL tight end Travis Kelce on their roster.
Dunne is determined to make her huge social influence count as she heads into her final year at Baton Rouge.
She sat down for an interview with Sports Illustrated as she appeared on the magazine’s October cover alongside Tigers basketball star Angel Reese.
And she opened up on how her goal with the Livvy Fund is to help female athletes monetize their sporting success in college.
Dunne told SI: “There’s definitely an underlying problem, which is that the money needs to go to support women’s sports, because there’s not many [lucrative] professional leagues for women’s sports after college.
“So it’s really important that women can capitalize on it now while they’re in college.
“People definitely discredit what I do. People need to understand that I’ve worked for everything I’ve earned.
“I’ve spent years building an audience, and brands pay me for what they believe is worth the reach of the demographic that I offer.”
Congratulations to Olivia Dunne and her teammates at LSU on bagging this huge NIL deal. They’ve worked hard and deserve all the best deals.
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