AZEVEDO SIGNS
LANDMARK CONTRACT
by Eric Velasquez, USA Water Polo, December 14, 2004
LONG BEACH, Calif. -- The Tony Azevedo (Long Beach, CA/Stanford/Long
Beach Shore) sweepstakes came to an end when the popular U.S. water
polo driver signed a landmark, professional contract with Bissolati
Cremona (Italy) that will place him among the top 10 of paid players
in the sport. The 18-month contract was inked just over a week after
Azevedo played his final collegiate match for Stanford University.
Azevedo’s incentive-laden deal could be valued at up to $275,000,
more than doubling the amount of any previous salary hauled in by an
American player. The contract includes room, board and transportation
while in Italy and includes bonuses for performance. It is the heftiest
known deal dished out to a first-year player in professional water polo
to date. Azevedo also has a bevy of sponsors waiting to court him with
endorsement opportunities in the European market where he is fast becoming
a household name.
Azevedo’s contract places him in an elite class of six-figure
players, including Hungary’s Tamas Kasas, Serbia and Montenegro’s
Aleksandar Sapic, both regarded to be among the best players in the
world. USA center Ryan Bailey is reported to earn in the neighborhood
of $100,000 for his new club team in Moscow.
“It’s amazing and something that my dad’s always talked
about,” said Azevedo, 23. “For me, it’s another step
toward winning a gold medal in the U.S. I want to see how good I can
get by playing with the best players in the world year round.”
Azevedo, who played his first Olympic Games as an 18-year-old in Sydney,
has been aggressively pursued by several teams abroad in anticipation
of his graduation but NCAA eligibility rules prohibited Azevedo from
signing with any club up to this point. His new club will be star-heavy,
boasting a roster that includes, among others, Croatian sensation Dubravko
Simenc, two-time Italian Olympian Leonardo Sottani and Hungarian standout
Zolt Varga. The team will be coached by Marco Baldinetti, the skipper
who led the famed Club Pro Recco (Italy) to the European Club title
in 2003.
“Tony’s contract means more than just dollars and cents,”
said Eric Velazquez, USA Water Polo Director of Media Relations. “It
shows that he possesses a star-quality that people are attracted to,
that he is one of the best to ever play the game and that he deserves
to be mentioned in the same class as the rest of the A-List athletes
in the Olympics. This is a huge step forward for Tony and for our sport.”
Azevedo prides himself on being an ambassador to the sport and is looking
at his good fortune as an opportunity to enhance the sport’s image
here at home.
“I’m hoping that people will look at this and see that water
polo may be bigger than they give it credit for…that this is something
that they should look into more,” he said. “I hope that
it influences more kids to play and more people to come out and watch.”
Azevedo will join his team after the winter break on January 10, catching
on at the midway point of the season.
About Tony Azevedo
Tony Azevedo is regarded as one of the game’s most prolific scorers.
In Athens, he was the second-highest scorer of the tournament with 15
goals, including three three-goal performances. In 2003, Azevedo led
all scorers with 33 goals at the Pan American Games and was first with
12 goals during the FINA World League. In June of 2003, Men’s
Journal named Azevedo as the world’s seventh-best male athlete
ahead of American sports icons Lance Armstrong, Alex Rodriguez, Tiger
Woods and Roy Jones, Jr. Azevedo led the U.S. in scoring with 14 goals
at the 2001 World Championships despite playing with a ruptured eardrum
and tossed in 13 goals in his Olympic debut as an 18-year-old.
The Azevedo That Almost Wasn’t…
The world of water polo almost never knew Tony Azevedo. When he was
four, Azevedo suffered a fall that severed his trachea and esophagus,
leaving inhaled air to spill into the surrounding tissues. The condition,
known as the guillotine effect, claims the life of nine out of 10 victims
on average. Azevedo’s heart stopped beating on the operating table
for a period of four minutes before doctors were able to revive him
they warned his parents that he was likely to have suffered some brain
damage and that they could count on him being on respirators for the
rest of his life. Today, he is a graduate of Stanford University with
a degree in international relations and is one of the world’s
best athletes. Azevedo’s miraculous recovery was swift and his
case is still used as an example by physicians in training at that hospital.