Representing Athletes Of All Sports, Shapes And Sizes
SMWW Agent Advisor May Have New Favorite Sports But...
Who knew that arm wrestlers and table tennis players needed sports agents? SMWW Agent Advisor Ward Coffman of course! After all, at SMWW, we've represented badminton players, bodybuilders, a female football player, surfers, blind mushers, mountain climbers, javelin throwers and many others! SMWW agent advisor Ward Coffman is currently representing Olena Sowers, the #1 ranked table tennis player in the world in the under 14 division, as well as Travis Bagent, the #2 arm wrestler in North America. Sowers and Bagent are two examples of very non-traditional clients in very different sports, but who demand the same representation as athletes in the NFL, NHL or NBA.
The big three -- football, basketball and baseball, along with hockey, soccer and a few others - is where most agents probably envision their clients coming from. However, as Coffman has demonstrated with Sowers and Bagent, the field of athlete management is constantly growing and evolving. New clients are emerging from unconventional sports and competitions, and it's up to the agent industry to recognize that the basic needs of all athletes are universal.
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2005 NFL Draft
Why Didn't My Son Get Drafted?
Good college football players typically aren't used to having the odds stacked against them. Many were the best on their high school and college teams, and most believe an NFL career is likely if not imminent. Being cut or not picked at all just isn't something they think about. But the reality is that no matter how good a player may be on the collegiate level, playing pro ball is a long shot. Unfortunately, year after year, draft after draft, many NFL hopefuls fail to grasp this concept.
Roughly 2% of all Division 1 players get the opportunity to play professionally. Even if they do get drafted or signed as a free agent, only 1% of Division 1 athletes make a professional team. That is excluding Division 2 players or the NAIA.
The NFL is an exclusive club and you have to be special or have unique athleticism to make it. Thousands of athletes have the physical ability to play in the NFL but lack the mental makeup scouts look for. That, along with versatility, is what separates those who get cut from those who stick around.
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