NBA

Breakdown1-13
Narrative Watch: The Hunt for Crypto's Killer App
As a Brooklyn Nets player tokenizes his contract, are income share agreements poised to break out as one of crypto’s killer apps?
Breakdown1-13

Brooklyn Nets player Spencer Dinwiddie (Tdorante10/Wikimedia Commons)
NBA Player's Contract Tokenization Plan Can Move Forward: Reports
Spencer Dinwiddie intends to begin selling tokenized shares of his contract starting Monday, Jan. 13.
Brooklyn Nets player Spencer Dinwiddie (Tdorante10/Wikimedia Commons)

Golden 1 Center
NBA's Sacramento Kings to Reward Loyal Fans With Crypto Tokens
Based on the ERC-20 standard, the Kings Token will be a first for a U.S. professional sports team.
Golden 1 Center

Spencer Dinwiddie image via Erik Drost / Wikimedia Commons
NBA Says Basketball Player Can't Tokenize His Contract After All
Spencer Dinwiddie took a shot at tokenization, but the National Basketball Association blocked him.
Spencer Dinwiddie image via Erik Drost / Wikimedia Commons

Spencer Dinwiddie image via Erik Drost / Wikimedia Commons
Spencer Dinwiddie Could Decentralize Pro Sports – If Accredited Investors Want In
Brooklyn Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie aims to raise $13.5 million by tokenizing part of his NBA contract. Will investors take the shot?
Spencer Dinwiddie image via Erik Drost / Wikimedia Commons