Andre Iguodala of the NBA’s Memphis Grizzlies got to invest in Allbirds’ Series-A funding round — here’s how that happened

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A few years ago, Andre Iguodala saw a lot of people in the Bay Area wearing Allbirds, the footwear made of wool that has been called “the world’s most comfortable shoe.” Since he was a highly paid and well-connected basketball player with the Golden State Warriors at the time, he was in a position to meet the people behind the then-near-ubiquitous shoe — and become an early investor.

“He saw the shoes on everyone’s feet in the Bay and was asking people, ‘What are those?’ Allbirds, Allbirds, Allbirds, he heard. He said to me, ‘Have you seen them before?’ ” Rudy Cline-Thomas, his former investment adviser and current business partner, recently told MarketWatch. “He met the founders and realized that not only did they have a popular product, but Tim and Joey understood technology and how to go to market. Nothing stays hot forever, but they understood the essence of execution and could be successful for reasons other than that the shoes were comfortable.”

Cline-Thomas said Iguodala invested in the Series-A round and now owns equity in the company.

Iguodala, 35, has played in the NBA since 2004, after competing as a collegian with Arizona. In 2013 he signed with the Warriors in part because the team played close to Silicon Valley and he was interested in being a more active investor. As soon as he signed with the team, he called as many VC and tech firms as he could to set up meetings, he recently told the Wall Street Journal.

The Springfield, Ill., native signed a 3-year, $48 million contract with the Warriors in 2017 and is currently with the Memphis Grizzlies.

Claudio Lavenia/Getty Images for Fast Company

Rudy Cline-Thomas, founder and managing partner of Mastry, at the Fast Company European Innovation Festival this July.

More athletes today invest in and partner with startups. But Cline-Thomas said that not all athletes — in fact not many people — can be successful VC investors. “Imagine a VC picking up a football and saying he wants to be a professional athlete,” Cline-Thomas said, pointing out it’s just as difficult for an athlete who wants to be a VC investor. “So much goes into it. It takes a lot of time and energy.” He said Iguodala puts in the work, spending a lot of time researching products and meeting with business leaders.

See: NBA analyst Stan Van Gundy on how the league has changed since the ’90s: more billionaire owners — and players who are ‘brands’

Until 2015, Cline-Thomas was an investment adviser, and Iguodala was one of his clients. He left that firm to start Mastry Inc., which specializes in investing in early-stage startup technology, software, consumer and media companies. Cline-Thomas says Mastry has invested in more than 60 companies, including Lime, Allbirds, Uber, PagerDuty, Cloudflare and Casper. He said he works with 30 athletes, mostly from the NBA and NFL. In 2017, he founded the Annual Players Technology Summit with Bloomberg; it brings together leaders in the technology, venture capital and sports communities to discuss tech investing.

Proof of Iguodala’s success, according to Cline-Thomas, is that he is the first active professional athlete to be on the board of a public company — with Jumia JMIA, -1.86%  .

Cline-Thomas said he stresses to athletes that venture investing is extremely risky. Earlier this year, he told Yahoo Finance, “I always say, make a venture investment with money you’re not afraid to lose. Most people do not make money investing in tech, especially from the venture side of things. The biggest proponent that I want to be is telling them not to do it.”

He said Iguodala typically invests between $150,000 and $200,000, but many of the other athletes he works with invest less. VC investments have to return a significant amount because of the inevitable losses, he said, and there’s luck involved. So why do it? “These investments can outperform an entire investment portfolio,” he said.

As Iguodala told MarketWatch in June, he has networked with venture capitalists such as Ben Horowitz, Bill Gurley and Mary Meeker, which led to him gaining stakes in IPOs for PagerDuty PD, +1.91% and Zoom Video Communications ZM, -0.34% . And his tech-sector investments include stakes in Apple AAPL, +1.85% , Netflix NFLX, -0.77%, Google parent Alphabet GOOG, +0.32% GOOGL, +0.37% and Zynga ZNGA, +3.48% .

See: This NBA finals MVP has made a fast break into tech investments

Making a cultural impact

Cline-Thomas and Iguodala aren’t just trying to make money with these investments; they are also trying to teach other NBA players about VC investing because they think it can make a cultural impact.

“There’s a massive amount of wealth creation happening, and players don’t have exposure to it. It’s a cultural situation. If they learn about it, and then their kids learn about it, then there will be fewer African-Americans outside of it. Otherwise, the wealth differential will continue to increase. Athletes have a microphone and can increase exposure to the broader community,” Cline-Thomas said.

Many athletes, he added, “feel fortunate to get access to some of these companies, and empowered from what they learn from their leaders.”

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