How did this new insurance/tech firm come up with the Madden 23 coins the stadium? It might be some good, old fashioned nepotism. In the article from The Pittsburgh Gazette we start to understand how the connection among Acrisure and the Steelers is more than a company buying naming rights."Two years ago, the company acquired the insurance practices of the artificial intelligence firm Tulco LLC, whose the chairman is named Mr. Tull. Tulco was a major majority shareholder of Acrisure in the course of that deal, as per an announcement made that day.

The Mr. Tull, a billionaire film producer, also holds an ownership stake in the Steelers." That's right, Thomas Tull had a company called Tulco which he then sold to Acrisure which made him a part-owner of Acrisure. Tull is also a minority owner of the Steelers. Also, when Acrisure pays an amount to the Steelers, Tull is kind of paying himself. That doesn't seem suspicious to me. It could be that this is normal and I'm just completely confused. I'll take that on myself. To be honest I've felt a bit lost about this topic since I read this line on the website of Acrisure about their benefits for customers.

"Acrisure augments human intelligence with AI-powered technology. Our intelligence-driven approach boosts customer outcomes and accelerates decision-making in areas like insurance services, reinsurance and real estate services, cyber-related services, as well as wealth and asset management. It results in more efficient customer service, faster decision-making and more tailored client solutions."

I'm sure we'll get to know more about Acrisure as time goes by and the company is in the spotlight more. Or maybe we aren't? Or perhaps we'll come to discover that their diversification methods based on AI-powered beta testing of fiduciary calculation for retention and asset growth analysis is spurious. I've fabricated everything in that final sentence, and yet you believed that it was directly from Acrisure, I know it.

Ketchup was much simpler. The Washington Commanders who are great at literally nothing aside from making scandals, released"Commander90 "Commander 90" over the weekend to include another 10 players on their list of the greatest team history in the franchise's history to mark the 90th year of the team.

If you were thinking this would happen smoothly, or delivered in a smooth manner -- then you don't know this group of Washington Commanders. One of the biggest flaws that people noticed was the obvious naivete that was shown in excluding Trent Williams, one of the most outstanding current players on the team and the likes of Kirk Cousins and Robert Griffin III were among the players on the roster. Williams was probably left off because he requested a deal, and following some controversy, the nine-time Pro Bowler were placed on the list.

There's been a lot confusion surrounding Trevor Lawrence's first-round signing bonus and the possibility that the number. top overall pick for 2021 may have lost a massive amount of cash by risking it on cryptocurrency, which , as we've heard has experienced a crash in recent months.

This week there have been various reports that Lawrence lost almost $15M due to his contract. In full disclosure, on our side at SB Nation we did as well . The truth is that Lawrence most likely didn't loose money from his Madden NFL 23 cash. The confusion arises from a pre-draft endorsement deal Lawrence was signed under the name "Blockfolio," and the terms used by the company to announce that they inked Lawrence in the month of April in 2021.

When Lawrence joined Blockfolio they announced the endorsement deal via a press release. The release mentioned the amount they were paying Lawrence as an "signing bonus" likely as a way of trying to sound sporty, saying they were depositing the cash into an account in a cryptocurrency wallet for the QB."This partnership marks the first endorsement deal ever in which a significant signing bonus was paid in cryptocurrency. The bonus was directly deposited to the Lawrence's Blockfolio account and also included Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana."

There's not a thing called"signing bonus" or "signing bonus" when it comes to an endorsement deal. The endorsement contract is all that's needed. The contract is signed in exchange for money or, in the case of buying madden coins,