CAA Closes $750 Million ICM Partners Acquisition, Controlling 8,000+ Clients
The merged agency now represents nearly every major NFL coach and half the NBA's All-Star roster, forcing brands to renegotiate through one consolidated desk.
Published May 27, 2026Source LAmagFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Creative Artists Agency
DIAMOND · May 27, 2026
ISABELLA'S ISLAY· May 27, 2026
CAA Closes $750 Million ICM Partners Acquisition, Controlling 8,000+ Clients
The merged agency now represents nearly every major NFL coach and half the NBA's All-Star roster, forcing brands to renegotiate through one consolidated desk.
Creative Artists Agency closed its acquisition of ICM Partners for $750 million, completing a deal announced fourteen months ago that assembles the largest talent roster in professional sports. The combined entity represents more than 8,000 clients across entertainment, sports, and digital media, including 42 NFL head coaches, 160+ active NBA players, and the coaching staffs of six current NCAA national champions. CAA's Bryan Lourd confirmed closure in an internal memo Friday, naming former ICM Partners co-president Chris Silbermann as managing director of the combined sports division.
The merger eliminates the last major independent rival in premium talent representation. ICM Partners brought $420 million in annual revenue, predominantly from NFL coaching contracts and Olympic athlete endorsements. CAA already controlled 68% of NBA All-Star endorsement deals before the acquisition; that figure now approaches 82%, according to SponsorUnited data. The firm also inherits ICM's exclusive partnerships with USA Track & Field and three European football federations, giving CAA global reach in Olympic marketing cycles.
Brands lose negotiating leverage. Sprite signed NBA star deals with nine players last year, splitting commissions across CAA, ICM, and Wasserman. Now Sprite's renewal conversations route through one agency controlling fourteen of the league's top twenty jersey sellers. One CMO at a Fortune 100 beverage company told colleagues the consolidation "doubles our activation costs or halves our roster"—internal language for paying more per athlete or signing fewer names. Sponsorship consultants are advising clients to lock multi-year deals before CAA's April rate reset, when the agency traditionally reprices its client list.
The deal reshapes coaching markets faster than playing talent. NFL teams hiring head coaches this cycle face a pool where 38 of 41 viable candidates share one representation firm. CAA can now steer coordinators toward ownership groups that spend on facility upgrades or guarantee contract language that benefits the agency's broader client base—strength coaches, nutritionists, analytics staffers. One AFC general manager said his team interviewed four coordinators in January; all requested identical contract clauses around staff autonomy that "read like CAA boilerplate." The tight labor market gives the agency structural leverage in franchise operations beyond the head coach's salary.
ICM's London office brought 190 soccer clients, including twelve Premier League managers and forty-three players across Europe's top five leagues. CAA previously held minimal soccer presence outside MLS. The firm now controls both sidelines in 18% of Premier League matches and manages $1.2 billion in active player contracts across Europe, according to Transfermarkt data. That positions CAA to broker preseason U.S. tours, a $600 million annual market where agencies collect fees on stadium deals, broadcast rights, and jersey sales. One tour operator said CAA already contacted six clubs about exclusive 2026 summer schedules, tying player appearances to kit launches and streaming partnerships.
The integration completes by July, when CAA moves 320 ICM employees into its Century City headquarters and consolidates client contracts under unified terms. Former ICM agents received retention packages worth 18-24 months of compensation, weighted toward those managing NFL head coaches and NBA max-contract players. The firm is hiring twelve additional contract attorneys to handle the merged client base and standardize deal terms across sports. One league executive said CAA's spring negotiating posture is "already different"—slower responses, higher opening asks, more willingness to let deals expire into free agency.
Watch whether the NBA Players Association challenges the concentration. The union tracks agency market share; no firm has previously controlled endorsement rights for more than 75% of All-Stars. CAA now sits at 82% and rising as rookie max-contract players default to the largest representation platform. The NBPA's next negotiating committee meets in April and may recommend client diversity rules that limit any single agency's roster share. Also watch Wasserman's response; the firm now holds 9% of NBA All-Star deals, down from 14% before the merger, and is reportedly recruiting European soccer agents to rebuild its competitive moat. Meanwhile, Sprite's CMO has six weeks before CAA's rate reset.
The takeaway
CAA's **$750 million** ICM buyout gives one firm **82%** of NBA All-Star endorsements and **38** of **41** hirable NFL coaches, forcing brands into costlier deals and tighter rosters.
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