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Watchen Nyanue handles strategy for Chicago Sky WNBA team.

Four alums minding their business in sports

For all their entertainment value, sports can be big business.

Austin Brown 鈥07, a sports agent who has helped negotiate more than $2.6 billion in free-agent deals, can tell you that. So can Bill Rasmussen 鈥54, founder of ESPN.

Sports also can be a labor of love. So says Dianna Minnick Boyce 鈥88, an uber-volunteer who occasionally gets paid for her work. Or, as in the case of Watchen Nyanue 鈥05, a marketer for the WNBA team Chicago Sky, they can grow on you.

Here are the stories of these four DePauw alumni, who made sports their business:

DIANNA MINNICK BOYCE 鈥88

Dianna Minnick Boyce learns to spin a basketball

For winter term in January 1987, DePauw junior Dianna Minnick Boyce worked for the committee organizing the Pan Am Games, which would take place in Indianapolis the following August.

As it turned out, 鈥渕y first dipping-my-toe-into-the-water for an event like that just opened a can of worms that has been ongoing since then.鈥

Not only did her winter-term job let her see if such work appealed to her, but it began a long-time connection with leaders of the Indianapolis Sports Corp. Since then, she has been a frequent volunteer with the civic organization, which seeks to advance Indianapolis through sports, and 鈥渢hen a few times in my life I鈥檝e been able to combine the passion that I enjoy as a volunteer with my daytime job.鈥

While working in the mayor鈥檚 office under Stephen Goldsmith, Boyce worked on the organizing committees for the 1997 and 2000 NCAA Final Four events. Several years later 鈥 during which Boyce continued volunteering 鈥 Indianapolis was chosen to host the 2012 Super Bowl. 鈥淥f course I was intrigued,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 said all along, I am all in to serve in any volunteer capacity you want.鈥

In early 2010, the organizing committee was having trouble finding a communications director, and the its head leaned on Boyce. She agreed to take the job if she was given flexibility for a while, 鈥渨ith a full understanding that in the last six months I am in the office, sleeping there, whatever it takes.鈥

In 2019, she was working as senior director of corporate communication for The Finish Line Inc. and volunteering for the 2021 NBA All-Star game when the corporation organizing it tapped her to be its vice president. The game, set to take place in February, was cancelled last November because of the COVID-19 pandemic, then moved to Atlanta to minimize travel for its production crews.

Indianapolis was awarded the 2024 game, and Boyce will again be involved in organizing it. Meanwhile, Pacers Sports and Entertainment named her its associate vice president for digital, and she worked on the recent March Madness events as part of her day job and as a volunteer. 聽

鈥淚鈥檓 not an athlete; I鈥檓 a wannabee athlete,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was never good on the court or on the field, but I was always good on the sidelines or behind the scenes (doing) the elements that help bring off those events, but not necessarily the ones in the spotlight. I didn鈥檛 need the spotlight.鈥

(Photo: Boyce, right, learns to spin a basketball at the NBA All-Star Chicago Equality Lounge in February 2020.)聽

WATCHEN NYANUE 鈥05

Most people who work in sports, Watchen Nyanue will tell you, 鈥渉ave wanted to work in sports their entire careers. They鈥檝e always worked toward that.

鈥淚鈥檓 not that person.鈥

Watchen NyanueAs a marketing consultant to an organization that partnered with the Chicago Sky, she had gotten to know some high-ranking folks with the Windy City鈥檚 Women鈥檚 National Basketball Association team, and they had come to know her skills. So when, right before the 2017 season began two business-side employees left, they asked her to help out for a season.

鈥淚 literally thought I would help them get through the season and then I would be back to doing whatever it was that I wanted to do,鈥 she said. 鈥 鈥 Fortunately for me, I didn鈥檛 have to have a deep understanding of the game. I had to have a deep understanding of the business, which I had.鈥

She came to realize that 鈥渨omen鈥檚 sports are amazing鈥 but that marketing a WNBA team is tough. For one thing, 鈥渕ost people have opinions about women鈥檚 sports but they haven鈥檛 actually sampled the product,鈥 she said. 鈥 鈥 Once somebody has been to a WNBA game, it鈥檚 hard to kick them out of the arena.鈥

For another, shortly after the season ends, WNBA players scatter to play in other countries, making it impossible to tap them to do interviews and participate in marketing events.

Still, the work is invigorating, Nyanue said. 鈥淚 am someone who gets bored very easily and so, if I don鈥檛 have something that is continuously challenging me, I check out.鈥 The WNBA, founded in 1996, is still in its infancy, she said, so 鈥渢here are so many problems to solve or challenges to solve, and that keeps the job interesting.

鈥淚鈥檝e worked for a bunch of other, well-known companies, but they鈥檙e all well-oiled machines 鈥 whereas with this, to me, it鈥檚 an opportunity to be part of the foundation of something.鈥

Nyanue鈥檚 path has been anything but ordinary. She was eight when her family emigrated from war-torn Liberia. Her parents 鈥渒new nothing about navigating America and so, if I was going to be successful, it would take the intellectual capital and the resources of other people who were not my blood,鈥 she said.聽

She came to DePauw via the Posse Foundation and, 鈥渋f that鈥檚 not an example of mentorship and reaching back, I don鈥檛 know what else is.鈥 She majored in communications, secretly hoping to be the next Oprah Winfrey but 鈥渢oo chicken to say it out loud.鈥 She interned on the soap opera 鈥淒ays of Our Lives,鈥 where he met Bill Hayes 鈥57 (鈥渉e was so nice鈥) and worked at Comedy Central and Yahoo!

鈥淚 remember being like, man, 鈥榙id I go to DePauw to become someone鈥檚 assistant? I鈥檝e got a degree! Do they know that the liberal arts prepare m for x, y and z?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淣ow looking back, if I didn鈥檛 have those first few years, I would be in a world of trouble in this leadership role.鈥

Nyanue passes along such advice through her company, I Choose the Ladder, which creates professional development workshops and events for clients鈥 employees. Until recently, she was the Sky鈥檚 senior vice president for marketing partnerships, but she stepped back to become head of strategy, which requires less of a time commitment. She also is studying for an MBA at the University of Chicago.

鈥淭here is no career experience that is wasted,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 know how you鈥檒l end up using the things you learn in class or the things you learn as an assistant.鈥

(Photos: Amber Del Rio and Conrad Piccirillo)聽

BILL RASMUSSEN 鈥54

Bill Rasmussen, founder of ESPN

To this day, when he speaks on a campus, Bill Rasmussen tells young people, 鈥渄on鈥檛 ever, ever be afraid to ask questions. You should always be curious. Never be complacent; always ask questions.鈥

That鈥檚 one of the lessons he learned over his years of taking risks and acting on ideas, even when others discouraged him. The other lesson: Be willing to pitch an idea. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not going to kill you; we know that. They鈥檙e probably not going to swing at you. They鈥檙e probably going to be really gentlemanly and polite about it.鈥

He used those ideas early in his career, when he was working in advertising at Westinghouse Electric Corp. in New Jersey in a job his father-in-law helped him land. After observing that materials often arrived too late for advertising campaigns or meetings, Rasmussen pitched the idea that he鈥檇 quit to start a company and guarantee shipments would be on their way within 24 hours.

The plan was a success, but the broadcast bug kept nipping. Even before coming to DePauw in the early 1950s, he envisioned a career in sports 鈥 either playing baseball or broadcasting. Having served in the Air Force shortly after his 1954 graduation, he was too old, he said, to try to progress through the minor leagues. So broadcasting it was.

He left the shipping company after three years and landed a series of jobs in broadcasting, often having to cajole the boss into devoting more time to sports 鈥 or even allowing Rasmussen, hired as a weatherman at one station, to talk about them at all. In 1974, he went to work as communications director for the Boston Whalers hockey team but was fired four years later 鈥 along with everybody else who could be blamed for their miserable season.

Without a job, he got to thinking: If he could persuade owners to let their games be broadcast live on radio or TV, he could create excitement and drive people to want to go to games. He considered a 30-minute sports show but, before long and with involvement of his son Scott 鈥86, thought much bigger: a 24-hour sports station. One by one, he won over team owners, and ESPN went on the air Sept. 7, 1979.

Rasmussen and ESPN have had some family feuds over the years 鈥 he was forced out early on 鈥 but they鈥檝e made up, so much so that ESPN invited him to pump up employees in several cities during celebrations of its 40th anniversary. At 88, 鈥淚 hope we鈥檙e doing the same kind of discussion 10 years from now, on my 100th birthday or ESPN鈥檚 50th anniversary,鈥 he said.

Meanwhile, having been diagnosed with Parkinson鈥檚 disease in 2014, he is working with the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson鈥檚 Research to raise awareness of the disease and encourage people who think they may have it to seek help.

鈥淕o ahead and ask,鈥 Rasmussen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 OK.鈥

AUSTIN BROWN 鈥07

Sports agent Austin Brown

He came to DePauw with a plan to follow his father into finance. He briefly worked at J.P. Morgan as an investment banking analyst and, during law school at Washington and Lee University, handled investment management and mergers and acquisitions for a New York law firm.

But Austin Brown 鈥渁lways found myself getting drawn back to basketball in some way, shape or form since it has given me so much of my life.鈥

Brown had been a standout basketball player at DePauw, a four-year letter winner remembered mostly for his midcourt, game-winning shot that won the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference championship in 2006, was made ESPN鈥檚 鈥淧lay of the Day鈥 and merited his appearance on SportsCenter. As a senior, he was named to the all-Southern Athletic Conference鈥檚 first team.

In the summer before he entered law school, Brown, who had majored in communications and minored in economics at DePauw, interned at a sports agency 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 where I really had sort of a lightbulb moment where I was like, wow, I think this is really something I could do and be really good at.鈥

He was right. After getting his law degree in 2013, Brown joined CAA Sports, where his team has negotiated more than $2.6 billion in deals for free agents and represented 28 first-round picks, including Zion Williamson, the No. 1 pick in 2019. He has been included on Forbes鈥 鈥30 Under 30鈥 list and Sports Business Journal鈥檚 鈥淔orty under 40.鈥澛

Brown played a variety of sports as he was growing up, but 鈥渂asketball is truly a team sport and, at least for me, I intersected with so many different people from different walks of life, different backgrounds, different beliefs, and that really, really helped me.鈥

The experience, he said, 鈥渄irectly translates to what I do today.鈥

Before the pandemic grounded him, he traveled 20 to 25 days a month to watch his clients play, keep tabs on their progress and make sure 鈥渢hat they鈥檙e getting everything they need in their career and they feel like they鈥檙e on the trajectory they want to be on.鈥

Brown said he tries 鈥渢o be the agent I would want my agent to be if I were a player. 鈥 I have a profound respect and I feel a deep sense of responsibility for my clients, making sure I鈥檓 always honest with them. I鈥檓 working as hard as I possibly can for them to get them everything they could possible need, so they can take care of their families long after their playing days are over. It鈥檚 in my DNA. It鈥檚 what makes being an agent so rewarding. It鈥檚 tough, but it鈥檚 rewarding to know that you鈥檙e playing a piece in helping somebody achieve a dream that very few get to achieve.鈥

(Photo: Brown, right)

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