The Polish Olympic Committee removed Zondacrypto branding from its Warsaw headquarters this week, eight months into a sponsorship that has delivered signage but not the €1.3 million in athlete bonuses the cryptocurrency exchange promised after the Paris Games. The logos came down without ceremony. The bonuses remain outstanding.
Zondacrypto signed a four-year deal in March 2024 worth a reported €5 million, positioning itself as the exclusive cryptocurrency partner through the Milano Cortina 2026 winter cycle. The agreement included performance bonuses for Paris medalists—€50,000 per gold, €30,000 per silver, €20,000 per bronze. Poland won ten medals in Paris. The math is straightforward. The cryptocurrency exchange has paid none of it, according to two people familiar with the committee's finance operations.
This matters because Olympic committee sponsorships carry sovereign flavor. When a national Olympic body puts a logo on its building, it signals institutional comfort. Removing it signals the opposite. The Polish committee joins a lengthening list of sports properties navigating crypto partner failures—from the ATP's quiet exit of multiple exchange deals to FTX's $135 million Miami Heat arena naming rights collapse. The pattern is consistent: promises scale with market caps,履行 scales with regulatory pressure.
The timing creates operational friction. The committee is six months from its Milano Cortina team selection window, when athlete relations matter most. Unpaid Paris bonuses sit in budget lines as accounts receivable. Meanwhile, Zondacrypto has reduced its Polish headcount by 40% since September, per two former employees, while its trading volumes fell 68% year-over-year in Q4 2024 according to data aggregator Kaiko. The exchange did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
What complicates the picture: Polish law treats Olympic committee sponsorships as quasi-governmental arrangements, requiring parliamentary sport subcommittee visibility on deals above €2 million. The Zondacrypto agreement cleared that threshold. The signage removal suggests the committee is creating documented distance before formal termination, which would trigger disclosure requirements and likely questions about due diligence on a four-year crypto commitment signed during a bear market.
Three specific items to track: First, whether the committee files for arbitration before the February 28 sponsor payment deadline in its standard contracts, which would make the dispute public record. Second, which replacement partners emerge—two Western European banks have approached the committee about presenting partnerships, per one board member. Third, how Milano Cortina athlete selection proceeds without clarity on Paris bonus payments, which several winter sport federations have cited in private conversations as affecting their own sponsor negotiations.
The logos are gone. The contract remains active. The committee's annual financial disclosure is due March 15.