
TLDR
- Galaxy Digital has signed a 15-year deal to rename Texas Tech’s football stadium Galaxy Stadium
- The deal makes Galaxy the official digital assets and data center partner of Texas Tech Athletics
- Galaxy operates the nearby Helios data center campus in Dickens County with 1.6 gigawatts of approved capacity
- The renamed stadium hosts its first game on September 5, 2026 against Abilene Christian
- Texas has become a growing hub for crypto investment, mining operations, and pro-crypto legislation
Galaxy Digital has agreed to a 15-year naming rights deal with Texas Tech University, renaming its football venue Galaxy Stadium starting with the 2026 season.
We’re excited to share Galaxy is now the official data center and digital assets partner of @TechAthletics under a 15-year agreement, renaming the home of Red Raider Football as Galaxy Stadium.
Texas Tech is central to our community footprint in West Texas. The university has… pic.twitter.com/UvL84ey8mo
— Galaxy (@galaxyhq) July 17, 2026
The announcement was made on Friday, July 17. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The first game under the new name takes place on September 5, when Texas Tech opens its season against Abilene Christian.
What the Deal Covers
Beyond the naming rights, Galaxy becomes the official data center and digital assets partner of Texas Tech Athletics.
The two parties plan to work together on artificial intelligence projects, workforce training, and student-athlete name, image, and likeness opportunities.
No specific financial details or timelines for those programs were released in the announcement.

Galaxy’s Texas Footprint
Galaxy already has a base in the region. Its Helios data center campus sits in Dickens County, roughly 60 miles east of Lubbock.
The site holds 1.6 gigawatts of approved capacity for AI and high-performance computing workloads.
The Texas Tech deal connects Galaxy’s infrastructure business with one of West Texas’s most visible college sports programs.
Texas has attracted a wide range of crypto and digital infrastructure companies. Riot Platforms, Cipher Mining, Core Scientific, CleanSpark, IREN, and Hut 8 all operate in the state.
In February, mining hardware maker Canaan bought a 49% stake in three Texas mining sites from Cipher Mining for nearly $40 million.
Earlier this month, MARA Holdings announced plans to acquire a two-gigawatt powered site in Texas to develop a campus supporting Bitcoin mining and high-performance computing.
Texas Crypto Policy and Political Spending
Texas has also become active on the policy side. Governor Greg Abbott signed legislation last year creating the Texas Strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
In May, state officials began moving the reserve away from a spot Bitcoin ETF toward directly held Bitcoin.
Crypto-linked political groups have spent heavily in Texas elections. In May, industry-affiliated PACs spent more than $10 million backing candidates in congressional primary runoffs. All six supported candidates won.
The Galaxy stadium deal adds a major college sports partnership to Texas’s growing role in the crypto industry.
The 15-year term gives Galaxy a long-term presence at Texas Tech, though the full value of the contract has not been made public.
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