Trick Williams, who left South Carolina football in 2018 without an NFL contract, won WWE's United States Championship on Saturday night, capping a five-year climb through the developmental system that now supplies TKO Group Holdings with $1.3B in annual WWE segment revenue.
Williams, 30, never appeared in an NFL game after going undrafted. He signed with WWE's Performance Center in Orlando in 2019, worked under the ring name Trick Williams through NXT brand programming, and collected the mid-card singles title that historically precedes main-event pushes. The U.S. Championship has launched careers for John Cena, Bobby Lashley, and Austin Theory before their transitions to premium pay-per-view cards that drive WWE's $1.4B in annual media rights.
The playbook is deliberate. WWE's recruitment pipeline now targets college athletes with name recognition but limited pro sports upside—players who carry dormant fan bases into a scripted environment where injuries are controlled and career longevity extends past 30. TKO's investor presentation in September noted that 62% of WWE's current roster entered through collegiate athletics, up from 48% in 2018. Williams fits the mold: recognizable school, physical frame, zero NFL tape to compare against.
The timing matters for TKO's content calendar. WWE's next media rights cycle begins in October 2025, when Raw moves to Netflix under a $5B, ten-year deal that requires WWE to deliver 52 live three-hour broadcasts annually with talent depth that justifies subscription retention. Williams now sits in the rotation that fills undercard slots on premium events and anchors mid-tier streaming exclusives. His South Carolina roots also unlock sponsor conversations in the Southeast, where WWE has underperformed relative to NASCAR and college football in local ad buys.
Williams' rise also reflects WWE's shift away from independent-circuit veterans who demand creative control and toward controllable talent molded in-house. The Performance Center model—$100M facility opened in 2013—produces workers who wrestle WWE house style, follow script direction, and accept merchandise revenue splits that favor the promotion. Former NFL players Titus O'Neil and Baron Corbin followed similar paths, though neither achieved the main-event status that would move pay-per-view buys. Williams' early merch sales will determine whether he gets that shot.
Watch whether Williams appears on Raw before WrestleMania 41 in April. A call-up to the flagship show would signal WWE sees him as a top-15 draw worth building storylines around, which directly impacts TKO's ability to command premium ad rates from Netflix. Separately, South Carolina's athletic department has quiet conversations underway about NIL partnerships with former players who made it in WWE—if Williams gets a merch line, expect the Gamecocks to want a cut.
Williams defends the U.S. title next at a house show in Greensboro on February 8. The opponent hasn't been announced, but the venue matters: Greensboro Coliseum seats 22,400 and WWE uses it to test whether mid-card champions can headline B-market stops without discounting tickets below $45 face value.
The takeaway
TKO's **$5B** Netflix deal needs depth; ex-college athletes with zero NFL tape fill the undercard at controlled cost.
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