25 Athletes Who Would Have Made Way More Money in Today’s Era

There was a time when athletes played for pride, peanuts, or whatever endorsement came with a car dealership and a handshake. But in today’s world of max contracts, NIL deals, brand empires, and billion-dollar streaming rights, the financial game has changed dramatically—and these legends would be raking it in.

From global superstars who helped grow their sport to generational talents whose earnings never reflected their impact, these athletes were born just a few decades too early. If they had played in today’s era of massive contracts and media-savvy stardom, their bank accounts would be overflowing.

25. Mia Hamm

Mia Hamm in Intel uniform with headset
Flickr

She was the face of women’s soccer before the sport had any real financial backing. In today’s era of global endorsements and massive NWSL growth, she’d be a brand empire all on her own.

24. Bill Walton

Bill Walton
Wikipedia

Between his talent and charisma, he’d have been a marketing dream today—assuming his body cooperated. With today’s sports medicine and player rest strategies, he might’ve stayed healthy enough to cash in big.

23. Dominique Wilkins

Dominique Wilkins
Wikimedia Commons

He dunked like Zion and scored like KD, but never got the financial love his game deserved. The NBA’s social media era would have turned him into a global sensation and top-tier sneaker deal guy.

22. Nancy Lieberman

Nancy Lieberman
Wikipedia

She was decades ahead of her time, playing men’s pickup games and dominating women’s hoops. In today’s WNBA era, she’d have signature shoes, brand deals, and media gigs lined up.

21. Eric Dickerson

Eric Dickerson
Flickr

With his style, speed, and swagger, he was built for the modern marketing machine. Toss in some modern RB contracts (while they still exist) and he’d be raking in the millions.

20. Reggie Miller

Reggie Miller
Wikipedia

The king of clutch threes in a league that didn’t fully appreciate the three-pointer yet. In today’s pace-and-space NBA, he’d be swimming in max contracts and podcast sponsorships.

19. Florence Griffith Joyner

Florence Griffith Joyner
Wikipedia

FloJo was fashion-forward and blazingly fast—basically a walking, running billboard. In today’s influencer-driven world, she’d have deals with every brand from Nike to Vogue.

18. Pedro Martínez

Pedro Martinez
Openverse

Electric on the mound, charismatic off it, and always appointment viewing. In the era of sports streaming and personality-driven branding, he’d be a media mogul and a pitching coach on TikTok.

17. Allen Iverson

Allen Iverson (Philadelphia 76ers)
Openverse

He was already a cultural icon, but imagine AI in the player empowerment era. Between fashion, tattoos, and raw authenticity, he’d have brand partnerships coming out of his cornrows.

16. Mary Lou Retton

Mary Lou Retton
Wikipedia

America’s sweetheart during the 1984 Olympics, she lit up the gymnastics world. With today’s Olympic marketing machine and NIL deals, she’d be flipping all the way to the bank.

15. Ken Griffey Jr.

Ken Griffey Jr.
Openverse

He was cool before athletes were allowed to be cool. Today, with bat flips celebrated and baseball trying to be fun again, The Kid would have the highest Q Score in the sport.

14. Magic Johnson

Magic-Johnson-Large
Photo by Kip-koech

He still did okay for himself post-retirement, but as a player in the age of social media and streaming deals? Magic would’ve had a billion-dollar empire before his rookie deal ended.

13. Bo Jackson

Bo Jackson
Youtube | Duke Wilson 14

Two-sport legend with freakish talent and a mythic aura? In today’s content-first sports landscape, Bo would be printing money on and off the field.

12. Lisa Leslie

Lisa Leslie
Wikipedia

She was the WNBA’s first true superstar and deserved a far bigger financial spotlight. With the league growing and brands finally investing, she’d be the face of it all.

11. Charles Barkley

Charles Barkley (Phoenix Suns)
Openverse

Chuck talks the talk now, but he also walked the walk back then. In a modern era where personalities drive engagement, he’d be cashing in with endorsements, shows, and maybe a podcast or two.

10. Steve Nash

Steve Nash (Phoenix Suns)
Openverse

Crafty, unselfish, and built for highlight reels. In the modern NBA where guards dominate and offensive stats explode, Nash would be getting paid like a Silicon Valley CEO.

9. Jackie Joyner-Kersee

Jackie Joyner-Kersee is jumping
Wikimedia Commons

One of the most dominant athletes ever, but her financial impact never matched her greatness. Today, with expanded visibility for women’s sports, she’d be a crossover star and motivational speaking mogul.

8. Randy Moss

Randy Moss holds a football, a commemorative jersey
Wikimedia Commons

He already had “straight cash, homie” energy. But today’s deep-ball-obsessed NFL and social media culture would have turned him into a global icon with an endorsement roster to match.

7. Serena Williams (Early Career Years)

Serena Williams playing a tennis
Flickr

Before she was a billion-dollar brand, Serena was dominating in an era that didn’t pay women tennis stars what they deserved. If her early years had aligned with today’s market, her earnings would’ve been even more astronomical.

6. Barry Sanders

Oct 25, 1992; Tampa, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; Detroit Lions running back Barry Sanders (20) in action against Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive backs Darrell Fullington (27) and Milton Mack (21) at Tampa Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Lou Capozzola-USA TODAY NETWORK
Lou Capozzola-Imagn Images

He walked away in his prime, but in today’s running back-thirsty fantasy football world, he’d have fans—and sponsors—begging him to stay. With modern marketing and social platforms, his highlight reels would never stop going viral.

5. Martina Navratilova

 Martina Navratilova
Wikipedia

Her career spanned generations, but her prime came before the true explosion of tennis prize money and global endorsements. In today’s world, she’d be dominating both courts and brand boards.

4. Larry Bird

Feb 13, 1987; Portland, OR, USA: FILE PHOTO; Boston Celtics guard Larry Bird (33) in action against the Portland Trailblazers at Memorial Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: USA TODAY Sports
Imagn Images

He didn’t care about flash, but that wouldn’t stop today’s brands from throwing money at him. A legendary career, a quiet mystique, and a meme-worthy trash talk game? That’s marketing gold.

3. Jerry Rice

Jan 28, 1990; New Orleans, LA, USA; FILE PHOTO; San Francisco 49ers Receiver#80 JERRY RICE in action during Super Bowl XXIV against the Denver Broncos at the Superdome. The 49ers defeated the Broncos 55-10.Mandatory Credit: Photo By USA TODAY Sports © Copyright 1990 USA TODAY Sports
RVR Photos-Imagn Images

The GOAT wide receiver did all his damage before wideouts were paid like franchise QBs. With today’s fantasy football obsession and endless highlight clips, Rice would be both the best and the richest.

Read More: 15 NFL Players Who Were Born a Decade Too Soon

2. Tiger Woods (Pre-2005)

Jun 2, 1997; Dublin, OH, USA; FILE PHOTO; Tiger Woods tees off on the tenth hole during the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports
Matthew Emmons-Imagn Images

He did pretty well, but if you drop peak Tiger into today’s sports business environment, he’d be the highest-paid athlete on the planet—by far. Between YouTube swings, streaming deals, and brand collabs, there’d be no competition.

Read More: 15 Golfers Who Would Have Thrived in Today’s Distance-Obsessed Era

1. Michael Jordan

June 5, 1998; Salt Lake City, UT, USA; Chicago Bulls guard Michael Jordan in game two of the 1998 NBA Finals against the Utah Jazz at the Delta Center.  Mandatory Credit: Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY
Robert Hanashiro-USA TODAY via Imagn Content Services, LLC

Yes, he’s already the gold standard. But if you put MJ in today’s NIL, social media, and global branding era from day one? The man wouldn’t just be rich—he’d own every platform, every product, and probably a second NBA team.

Read More: The 10 Biggest Celebrity Endorsement Deals of All Time

Related Articles
Jun 12, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; American professional wrestler Tiffany Stratton reacts after throwing out a ceremonial first pitch before a game between the New York Mets and the Washington Nationals at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
Tiffany Stratton’s Hilariously Off-Target First Pitch at Mets Game Goes Viral
WWE star Tiffany Stratton’s wild first pitch at the Mets game goes viral with fans flooding social media...
Read More
Jun 12, 2025; Berea, OH, USA; Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders (12) listens to a play call during mini camp at CrossCountry Mortgage Campus. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images
Browns Could Cut Ties With Shedeur Sanders Before Training Camp Begins
With a crowded QB room, Shedeur Sanders may be the odd man out in Cleveland as training camp looms. Would...
Read More
Iowa Cubs' Owen Caissie (17) makes his way to the dugout on Friday, March 28, 2025, at Principal Park in Des Moines.
Cubs’ No. 2 Prospect Heats Up in Triple-A Launches 3rd Straight Homer
Cubs’ No. 2 prospect Owen Caissie blasts his third consecutive HR in Triple-A, showing why he's a rising...
Read More

As an Amazon Associate, The Quick Report earns from qualifying purchases.

Part of the Castaway Studios media network.