MIL OSI Translation. Region: Poland –
The NBA Draft is a high-stakes gameâand not just on the court. For top prospects, reputation can mean millions. Agents know this. Thatâs why behind every polished interview and Instagram highlight, thereâs a team working hard to shape the story.
From college stardom to draft night, an athleteâs public image is everything. That includes what shows up on Google. A bad search result? It can drop a prospectâs value or even get them passed over.
Hereâs how agents manage that image, why NIL deals have raised the stakes, and how players are scrubbing the internet before the league ever calls their name.
The Draft Starts with Google
Teams donât just look at tapeâthey look at search. Scouts watch film. GMs check combine stats. But before the final call, execs and ownership teams search names online. They want to know who theyâre draftingânot just what they can do, but who they are.
One scout from a Western Conference team put it plainly:
âBefore we call the pick, weâve Googled everything. If something weird pops up, itâs a red flag.â
That means tweets, Reddit threads, old interviews, police records, and random YouTube clips.
A bad linkâeven if itâs years oldâcan cost a player more than they think.
âWe donât just scout on the courtâwe look at everything,â said Rob Murphy, former General Manager of the Detroit Pistons. âA playerâs online footprint tells us who they are off the court. If something questionable shows up, itâs not just a PR issueâitâs a decision factor.â
Agents Are Managing More Than Contracts
Narrative control is the new defense. NBA agents donât just negotiate deals. They now build brands. They script interviews. They prepare media training. And they work with online reputation pros to shape what people see first. For example, if a prospect once posted something immature or got into a minor issue in high school, agents make sure it doesnât dominate the first page of Google.
Theyâll fill search with:
- Positive press features
- Player-written articles
- NIL brand partnerships
- YouTube workouts or interviews
- Custom highlight reels
Itâs not just hypeâitâs strategy. If teams search the playerâs name and see clean, professional results, they feel more confident making the pick.
NIL Deals Made Image Management Critical
Your face is the product now. Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) changed everything. College athletes can now make money from endorsements, merch, and brand deals before they ever go pro. But that also means brands are looking them up. They want clean, marketable athletes. One dumb tweet, one bad headline, or even one awkward post can kill a deal.
Stat: According to Opendorse, the average NCAA menâs basketball player earns $3,392 per NIL dealâbut top-tier prospects make six figures or more.
Thatâs not just pocket money. Thatâs career-shaping exposure. Athletes who show up well online build stronger NIL deals, attract more media, and land in better draft conversations.
Example: One SEC player deleted his old TikTok account and started fresh during March Madness. Within a month, he signed three NIL dealsâincluding one with a shoe brand prepping for draft week.
Hiding the Embarrassing Stuff
Itâs not always about deletingâitâs about replacing. When something bad shows up in search, most people think deletion is the answer. But Google doesnât work that way. Unless the content breaks the law or violates a platformâs rules, it stays up. So agents and managers use a different approach: suppression.
That means burying the bad stuff under newer, better content. Articles, features, interviews, and SEO-friendly videos are all used to push down the unwanted result. If you want to remove google search result content, itâs usually done by working directly with the sourceâasking the site to take it down or correcting false info. If that doesnât work, content teams flood Google with stronger, positive content so the bad result drops off page one.
What Athletes Can Do Right Now
Start managing your own name early. If youâre a top college player, or even a future one, your search results already matter.
Hereâs what to check and fix:
1. Google yourself
Search your name + basketball, your school, and any usernames. Make note of anything sketchy, old, or embarrassing.
2. Delete what you control
Old tweets, YouTube channels, Facebook photosâtake it all down. If itâs cringey or confusing, get rid of it.
3. Create new content
Start a clean Instagram. Post training clips, interviews, or team content. Add a basic website with your bio, stats, and media links.
4. Ask for help if needed
If something serious shows upâlike a damaging blog post or false articleâtalk to your agent or a media advisor. There are professional teams who can help remove or bury it properly.
The Silent Part of Every Draft
Behind every big pick is a clean Google page. We see the hats. We hear the speeches. But what we donât see is the weeks of online cleanup that happened before a player walks that stage. Top picks have teams working behind the scenesânot just on training and travel, but on reputation. Because once the league calls, the spotlight doesnât turn off. Every fan, reporter, sponsor, and critic will be searching. And whatever shows up needs to be worth the attention.
âI tell my players all the timeâyour name is your brand,â said Oran Spencer, former coach of the St. Ann Academy Wildcats. âCollege scouts might see your highlights, but theyâre also checking your social media and search results. One bad post can undo years of hard work.â
Image Is Everything Now
In todayâs NBA, being draft-ready means more than stats. It means being searchableâand looking sharp when people type your name. Agents get it. Players are starting to get it. And everyone with money on the line is already paying attention. If youâre headed to the pros, clean up now. Because if Google doesnât like what it sees, your draft stock might fall before you ever hit the floor.
The post NBA Draft Secrets: How Agents and Athletes Control the Internet appeared first on The Hoop Doctors.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Please accept our apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.