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Why Felix Rosenqvist Is Touting School

If you find yourself this weekend asking if Felix Rosenqvist is an alum of Texas A&M (he’s not), you can thank a unique sponsorship between the racer and university for the upcoming Indianapolis 500.

The driver of the No. 60 SiriusXM Honda signed an agreement on March 28 to adorn the school’s logo on his helmet and driver suit for the entire 16-race IndyCar season. The $60,000 pact states that the branding must be visible from Rosenqvist’s in-car camera that’ll be used on Fox’s IndyCar broadcasts.

It’s the second motorsports sponsorship deal pulled together by R. Ethan Braden, Texas A&M’s vice president and chief marketing officer. Braden said IndyCar and NASCAR saw prime opportunity to connect with a passionate alumni base of over 600,000 Aggies.

“We saw in Felix a top-five IndyCar driver with a terrific following, a terrific reputation,” he said in a video interview. “The placement of our advertisement to create the storytelling on his helmet is novel, because he’s one of the few that have an inboard camera.”

Rosenqvist is starting his second season with Meyer Shank Racing, which is owned by Michael Shank and four-time Indy 500 winner Helio Castroneves. Liberty Media also owns a minority stake.

His car is already an attention-grabber as the livery is adorned by imagery promoting the rock band Creed, which has enjoyed a renaissance of sorts going back to Texas Rangers’ World Series run in 2023. (The multiplatinum record selling group reunited for its “Summer of ‘99” tour last year after splitting up in the early 2000s.)

“[Felix] is a terrific statesman,” Braden said of the Swedish-born driver. “He’s a terrific representative of the sport. He’s invested in veteran and military affairs, and so he’s just a great spokesperson for what we’re about, what we stand for, and why people should care.”

Texas A&M annually boasts of the nation’s largest student bodies with over 79,000 students as of last fall, including 61,000 undergraduates. Yet some officials at the public research university, with its deep military ties, feel the school doesn’t always get the spotlight of SEC peers like Alabama, Florida and in-state rival Texas.

In raising the school’s profile, Braden compared its marketing efforts to the Indy 500 itself. “The first 100 laps of the [Indy] 500 are about getting to the second 100 laps, right?” Braden said. “There’s a lot about grit there. There’s a lot about teamwork. There’s a lot of a culture and collaboration. That’s the story we want to tell.”

The marriage between a university and motorsports is not a new one, as Braden previously put the two together while working at Purdue University in Indiana. NASCAR has marketing deals with several schools, including Alabama. Penn State, Auburn, Maryland and Virginia Tech have also advertised with the stock car racing organization.

Last October, Texas A&M agreed to be the primary sponsor for Stewart-Haas Racing for two NASCAR events at a cost of $160,000. Although Stewart-Haas ceased operations after the 2024 season, the school was pleased enough with the two races that it signed new $275,000 deal with Haas Factory Team, which carried on one of the Stewart-Haas charters.

In motorsports, particularly NASCAR and IndyCar, Braden said that the perception of their audiences being “old, White and Southern” is not the reality he saw when talking with both groups.

Research told Braden that 41% of NASCAR’s fan base is female, and 31% of all NASCAR fans have some connection to the military (veteran, currently enlisted or works adjacent to the military). He also found that “they have an incredible brand affinity that’s as good as any of the sports, frankly, better than any of them, besides maybe the NBA.”

IndyCar doesn’t have the audience that NASCAR has, but Braden said its market is not all that different from the stock car circuit. That said, he wants to see how the Rosenqvist sponsorship—a relatively inexpensive one in his eyes—performs before committing to further marketing through IndyCar.

“It’s a helmet and fire suit sponsorship, an influencer sponsorship at the end of the day,” he said. “I want to see the data. I want to see what we get out of this in terms of our social media following, in terms of earned media exposure, etc.”

In terms of what’s next for Texas A&M’s sponsorships in and out of motorsports, Braden said that its president, four-star retired general Mark Welsh, encourages him to be bold. He also has a certain weekend in mind that will excite the school’s community.

“It’s not lost on me that there’s a very exciting 2026 race in Arlington,” he said of IndyCar’s Grand Prix of that’s scheduled for next March. “The Aggies will show up and show out incredibly well. I do have my eyes on ‘26 in Arlington.”

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