• Loading stock data...
Monday December 23, 2024

Clay Travis Bets Big On Outkick The Coverage’s Future

  • After years of building ‘Outkick the Coverage’ by himself, Clay Travis is expanding its editorial, podcast, and video offerings with several new hires.
  • Travis expects the rebound of gambling to play a major role in Outkick’s value, and is seeking “a little bit of everything” as the site expands.
Photo Credit: Fox Sports

Clay Travis is expanding Outkick the Coverage, the site founded in 2011 by the television and radio personality. The goal for the site, according to the co-star of FS1’s weekday sports betting show “Lock It In,” is to cover everything from college and pro football to gambling and pop culture.

“We’ll be doing a little bit of everything. We’ll be doing podcasts more significantly. We’ll be doing Periscopes, Facebook [videos]. We’ll be doing a lot of written content. I think there will be audio, video, and written components, “ said Travis.

That will include expanding beyond Travis as well, with a goal to hire five to 10 staffers. Recently, the site hired Ryan Glasspiegel, Bobby Burack, and Michael Shamburger from sports news blog The Big Lead.

“I expect it to be a multimedia, full-service company where people are able to come and spend time during the course of their day and, hopefully, get a little bit smarter than they otherwise would be,” Travis said.

With that expansion, Travis has big aspirations for Outkick in light of recent sports media acquisitions. 

Casino operator Penn National Gaming acquired 36% of Dave Portnoy’s Barstool Sports for $163 million, plus the right to become Barstool’s exclusive gaming partner. At the time of the Penn deal, Barstool said it generated nearly $100 million in annual revenue from events, ecommerce, digital and audio advertising, licensing and subscriptions. The site also has a devoted following with an active interest in gambling. 

Meanwhile, Bill Simmons sold The Ringer and its growing network of nearly 40 podcast titles to Spotify for $200 million. Ringer podcasts generate over 100 million downloads a month.

READ MORE: ESPN+ Subscribers Face 15-Month Wait for ‘The Last Dance.’

But, compared to those more established media brands, Outkick will have to make up ground and carve out an identity, which Travis hopes to do with the new hires and a renewed focus on gambling expertise.

Starting with traffic: Barstool drew 7.92 million unique U.S. visitors in March, while The Ringer drew 1.14 million, according to ComScore. Outkick is not listed on the ComScore rankings. Both Barstool and the Ringer also have mature businesses outside of content alone, including events, merchandising, licensing and podcast advertising.  

According to Travis, Outkick generates millions of video, podcast, and page views a week, adding that podcast traffic for the Outkick radio program on Fox Sports Radio grew 25% to a new record in April. However, he declined to provide exact figures.

Travis owns 100% of Outkick, which he said is profitable, and is financing the new hires out of pocket. He’s also open to an equity investment into the company. 

“I’m open to anything that makes good financial sense. I never like to say no to anything,” he said. “We’ve had lots of people ask before. As we grow larger and larger I’m sure more will ask. But no plans to do anything other than producing good original content and continuing to grow.”

READ MORE: Cost-Conscious ESPN Looking Internally for ‘MNF’ Talent

Travis is placing a bet that sports betting will help to drive the company’s growth. The Nashville native’s home state of Tennessee could go live with legal online sports betting as early as July, according to The Action Network. Once live sports return, sports gambling is “going to be huge,” predicted Travis. 

“I think there’s a very high likelihood we’ll have a strong relationship with one of the big sports gambling companies in the future,” he said.

Travis is a controversial, combative figure in sports media. But the author of “Republicans Buy Sneakers Too: How The Left is Ruining Sports with Politics” is not worried about people hating him.

“I tend to think that most of what I say is pretty reasonable. I think there’s a great demand for sort of reasonableness right now,” Travis said. “But I also understand that some people hate me. I’ve always said if you hate me, tell me as many people as you possibly can. I want people who love me to say the same thing. But really the reason why the audience has grown is people care – one way or the other.”

Linkedin
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

How MLB and Fox’s World Series Strategy Is Paying Off

Emphasis on more aggressive camera angles and in-the-moment interviews.

ESPN’s Chris Fowler Could Test Free Agency In 2023

If ESPN doesn’t pay to retain him, Fox Sports could swoop in.
NASCAR-Cup-Series

NASCAR Races Back With 4% TV Growth in 2022

NASCAR has bounced back in 2022, averaging more than 3 million viewers over 37 races this season. That’s a 4% increase over last year.

MLB, NFL Poised To Make Sports TV History Thursday Night

For first time, teams from same opposing cities play on same night.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

Are Legacy Games Hurting NFL Thanksgiving?

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

Commanders Sale Could Hit $7B, Durant Wants In

A Washington Commanders sale could be wrapped up by the spring.
November 6, 2022

How the Astros Won the World Series Without Breaking the Bank

The Astros won the World Series with underpriced talent.
November 5, 2022

ESPN College GameDay Means More to Schools Than a Saturday Morning Spotlight

Schools reap ‘immeasurable’ benefits when the ESPN bus rolls into town.
kyrie-irving-nike
November 4, 2022

Nike Suspends Relationship With Kyrie Irving Over Antisemitism

After several days of silence, the brand has dropped Irving.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world with Jobbio.
Sr. Account Manager
Miami Heat
Miami, FL
Director of Ads
Nike
Portland, OR – Hybrid
Sports Journalist
CBS Sports
New York City, NY

Becky Hammon to Join ESPN as Studio Analyst for 2022-23 NBA Season

Hammon will contribute to a large variety of ESPN shows.
Women's-Sports-Network-logo-athlete
November 2, 2022

A Network Dedicated to Just Women’s Sports Launches

The network has support from 12 professional women’s sports leagues.
November 2, 2022

New Big 12 Media Deal To Pay Schools $31.6M Average Annual Value

The average annual value per school is comparable.
November 2, 2022

Report: Women’s Sports Viewership, Interest Continue to Surge

The increased interest is at least in part due to broadcaster investment.
Amazon - OTE
November 2, 2022

Amazon Snatches Another Exclusive Sports Media Deal With OTE

The partnership is a sensible marriage between two sports products looking to capitalize on a younger fan base.
November 1, 2022

After Strong Viewership Start, World Series Must Compete With NFL

TV viewership for Phillies-Astros is up 4% over first two games.
November 1, 2022

NWSL Championship Draws League Record Viewership

A record 915,000 watched the Portland Thorns claim their third title.
exclusive
October 31, 2022

Sources: NBA Preparing To Sell $1B Exclusive Package Of Streaming Games

The NBA’s poised to sell exclusive package in next media rights negotiations.