Sport is no longer just a media buy. It’s now a live, data-driven AdTech ecosystem. From reactive creative to AI-powered sponsorships, brands are monetising the moment, not just the match, writes MAD//Sports' Ben Phillips. 

Look at the Red Roses and Lionesses rewriting the rules of the game, or the Ryder Cup producing global drama. These aren’t just sporting fixtures they’re cultural moments. And in those decisive seconds the try, the penalty, the putt that changes everything attention is worth more than a standard 30-second spot. That’s exactly where sport and AdTech are now colliding.

For years, live sport has been the ultimate “appointment to view.” But the advertising model around it has barely moved: fixed slots, broad “sports fan” targeting, and a heavy dose of guesswork. Thanks to live data and smarter tech, we’re now shifting from buying space to buying moments.

Data is the new playmaker

Every kick, pass or serve generates a data point. Companies like, Sportradar, Stats Perform and Genius Sports built billion-dollar businesses capturing it. What used to power betting markets or coaching is now fuelling advertising.

Take Sportradar’s ad:s platform, which pipes live sports data into social video ads so creative can change instantly as the game unfolds. Or PubMatic’s new AI-powered Live Sports Marketplace, launched this year, which packages “moments” a goal in football, an ace in tennis, as programmatic ad units. That’s not just smart targeting. That’s emotion, monetised in real time.

Football is full of playmakers like Jack Grealish, (who scored Everton's brilliant last minute winner yesterday), but is data giving even him a run for his money?

Beyond the 30-second slot

Broadcasters are leaning in too. Sky Media has launched its Sports Marketplace, giving brands programmatic access to live ad inventory across Sky Sports and TNT Sports. At the same time, Sky, Channel 4 and ITV have joined forces to create a unified self-serve ad marketplace, extending addressable inventory across both linear and streaming.

The upside is clear. Rights holders can unlock new inventory without interrupting play. Brands get to fuse their message with the most dramatic moments of the game. Add in AI-driven sponsorship measurement from the likes of Relo Metrics using computer vision to track every logo exposure and suddenly you’ve got a model that’s faster, sharper and far more accountable than anything we had five years ago.

This isn’t just advertising in sport. It’s sport becoming advertising infrastructure.

The pressure of real time

Of course, it’s not that easy. Triggering ads in “real time” is a brutal technical challenge. Data needs to be captured, processed and rendered into creative in milliseconds. Latency becomes the stress test and not everyone will pass it.

There’s also the fan experience to think about. Too many overlays or ad swaps risk breaking immersion. The challenge for broadcasters and rights holders is finding that balance — unlocking new value for brands while keeping the game sacred for fans.

The bigger convergence

So yes, the convergence of sport and AdTech is real. Live data, programmatic marketplaces, virtual overlays, AI measurement the building blocks are here and being stitched together at speed. The shift is clear: from buying inventory to buying moments.

A static logo in the background might create recall. But a brand message that lands in sync with the defining play of the match? That’s resonance at another level.

And here’s the challenge for rights holders; to make their assets work harder. Leagues, federations and associations are sitting on huge untapped value. The task is to turn media strategies into growth strategies building incremental revenue streams that can be channelled back into supporting the future of sport. It’s a challenge we’ll be exploring in the weeks ahead.

What’s next?

Expect more partnerships between leagues, platforms and tech providers. Expect experiments in Virtual Production, AR, VR and streaming-only rights, where data triggers are as valuable as the broadcast itself. And expect advertisers to demand clearer links between emotional spikes and business outcomes.

Because the fan of the future won’t just be a “target segment.” They’ll be a real-time signal. And the winners will be the brands and platforms brave enough to move at the speed of the game.

Get in touch with Ben if you want to know more about, or be a part of, MAD//Sports at MAD//North & MAD//Fest London 2026