ADVERTISEMENT

The top 10 highest paid athletes in the world

The 10 highest earning athletes in the world took home a combined $941 million each year in wages and sponsorships between June 2018 to June 2019, according to Forbes.

Messi/James/Federer
ADVERTISEMENT

Getty/Mike Lawrie

ADVERTISEMENT

Durant, 31, joined the Nets in 2019 after three seasons with the Golden State Warriors. He signed a four-year deal worth a total of $164 million, though is yet to play a game for his new side due to undergoing surgery on his achilles tendon.

He has as many as 30 sponsorsincluding Gatorade, Beats by Dre, and Nike, the latter of whom he signed a 10-year-old, $300 million deal with in 2014, according to USA Today.

Sue Ogrocki/AP

ADVERTISEMENT

Stephen Curry earned $42 million from his sponsorship deals between June 2018 and 2019. The most recent of those is with Rakuten, who pay him $20 million per year, according to CNBC.

The 31-year-old's $37.8 million annual wage packet made up the rest of his earnings.

Michael Conroy/AP Images

ADVERTISEMENT

James was basketball's biggest baller when it came to cash. In wages alone he earned $36 million between June 2018 and 2019, according to Forbes.

However, his off-court earnings far superseded that the Los Angeles Lakers star earned $53 million from his deals with Nike, Coca-Cola, and Kia Motors.

Ben Margot/AP Images

ADVERTISEMENT

NFL players take home far more in wages than those in the NBA or MLB, and Rodgers is one of the league's biggest earners; his salary for the Packers earned him just over $80 million.

Off the field however, the 36-year-old made a relatively modest $9 million from his endorsement deals with Adidas and Ford, amongst others.

Getty/Steven Ryan

ADVERTISEMENT

The highest earner in the NFL was Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson.

Like Rodgers, he made most of his money in wages, taking home a salary of $80.5 million. And again like Rodgers, he topped that up with $9 million worth of sponsorship deals with Nike, Microsoft, and Bose.

Reuters/Danielle Parhizkaran

ADVERTISEMENT

Roger Federer may not have won a major title between June 2018 and 2019, but he was still tennis' biggest cash cow, mostly thanks to his many profitable sponsorship deals.

Between that period, the Swiss star took home $86 million more than any other athlete in the world from his partnerships with Credit Suisse, Mercedes-Benz, Rolex, and more.

To top it off, he also won $7.4 million in prize money from tournament wins in Dubai, Germany, and his home country.

ADVERTISEMENT

Photo by Getty Images

No other combat sport athlete came close to earning what Mexican boxer Saul "Canelo" Alvarez did over the course of last year.

Alvarez signed a $365 million, 11-fight deal with streaming service DAZN in late 2018, and banked around $50 million from his first two with Rocky Fielding and Daniel Jacobs.

ADVERTISEMENT

Getty/Soccrates Images

Neymar became the world's most expensive ever soccer player in 2017 when he joined Paris Saint Germain for a $263 million fee.

The Brazilian signed a five-year contract worth $350 million, which expires in 2022.

He's also one of most followed sportspeople on social media with more than 200 million followers across Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, meaning brands such as Nike, Gillette, and Red Bull are willing to pay big bucks to have his name and face associated with them.

ADVERTISEMENT

Getty/Marco Canoniero

Ronaldo makes approximately $1 million per post, representing brands such as Clear Haircare, Nike Football, and Six Pad Europe.

That being said, his wages aren't too shabby either he earned $65 million last year.

ADVERTISEMENT

Getty/Soccrates Images

Messi's current contract with FC Barcelona, which expires in 2021, pays him more than $80 million annually.

He also has a long-standing deal with Adidas that earns him $12 million each year, according to Investopedia, whilst his other partnerships with Pepsi and Mastercard see him soar ahead of everyone else as the world's highest paid athlete.

ADVERTISEMENT

See Also:

ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: news@pulse.ug

ADVERTISEMENT