We've heard the horror stories. Pro athletes blow through millions, the fame fades, and suddenly they're broke. But Cam Newton didn't crash — he just came down from an altitude most people never reach. On an episode of his "4th & 1 with Cam Newton" podcast last year, the former NFL MVP reacted to a viral clip from the Fox reality show "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test." In the segment, filmed during the physically brutal competition, Newton opened up about adjusting to life after football.
We've heard the horror stories. Pro athletes blow through millions, the fame fades, and suddenly they're broke. But Cam Newton didn't crash — he just came down from an altitude most people never reach.
On an episode of his "4th & 1 with Cam Newton" podcast last year, the former NFL MVP reacted to a viral clip from the Fox reality show "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test." In the segment, filmed during the physically brutal competition, Newton opened up about adjusting to life after football.
He rolled the clip, laughed, then addressed it directly. "First and foremost, that's TV, ladies and gentlemen…" he said, explaining that the full conversation wasn't aired. What viewers didn't see, he said, was the deeper context — the shift from NFL stardom to real-life responsibility.
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"I got eight kids," Newton said in the original footage. "It hurts me knowing that I can't provide like I once did. It hurts thinking that I'm Superman, but in reality, I'm just a man."
He Said What He Said
On the podcast, Newton explained exactly what he meant. During his NFL prime, he earned over $20 million in a single season — spread across 17 weeks. "I was making a million dollars in a week," he said.
But replicating that kind of income after football? A different story. "There's nothing that I've created yet that can provide a million dollars a week," he said. He clarified that's not to say he hasn't signed a million-dollar deal — "but in a week?" he added, stressing the week and what that pace used to look like with endorsements factored in.
He called it "a vulnerable moment where I was honest." And he still believes it. "I still believe in that where it's like, yo, I cannot provide like I once did."
Newton then shared a quote that's stuck with him for years: "I've heard this quote and it always resonated with me — I would rather live the rest of my life comfortably like a prince, rather than to splurge like a king."
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Real Estate, Not Regret
Newton pushed back hard against the assumption that financial trouble follows every former athlete. Most of his money, he said, went into appreciating assets. "Every single property, every single business that I own, I own the land," he said, referring to his real estate portfolio and businesses like his cigar lounge and restaurants.
He added that poor tax planning — not flashy purchases — is what really breaks athletes. "You don't go broke just because you have these splurging yachts and houses," he said. "You go broke because you don't understand taxes."
And despite the headlines? "I'd be a fool to be broke right now," he said.
Critics Talk. Cam Builds.
He's well aware of the online noise — the comments about his family size, his money, his lifestyle. But Newton didn't back down. "That's the investment," he said of his eight children. "My broke and your broke just two different brokes."
He said all of his kids are in private school. He lives with intention, drives a 2018 pickup truck, and spends deliberately. "I never spent more than I was making," he said.
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Now, he's focused on building a second career: content, partnerships, and ownership. "I'm trying to put myself in position to make $20,000 a week in content… $100,000 a week. That's a good week. But it still ain't a million."
That gap, he said, wasn't about being broke — it was about scale. The NFL paid big, fast, and briefly. Life after it doesn't.
Why the Rest of Us Might Actually Need a Plan
When athletes retire, the money stops all at once. For most people, it just slows down — and that's exactly why financial planning matters.
No one's handing you $20 million over 17 weeks. And that's the advantage. You know what's coming. You can plan around it.
Whether you're navigating tuition, caregiving, or the slow fade into retirement, a financial adviser isn't about chasing wealth — it's about stability. Because when the income eventually dips, the last thing you want is to be surprised by it. Cam Newton made $1 million a week. Most of us won't. But we still have to figure out how to make it last.
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This article Cam Newton, 36, Says He Was Making $1M A Week In The NFL But Now It Hurts He Can't Provide For His 8 Kids Like He Did, 'I'm Just A Man' originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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Category: General Sports