Kevin Durant's Boardroom Sports Holdings and the University of Texas announced a multi-year NIL partnership with Nike that will funnel endorsement opportunities directly to Longhorn men's and women's basketball players. The program is structured to deliver $15 million in cumulative value through apparel deals, content creation, and appearance fees tied to Nike marketing campaigns. Durant, who played one season at Texas before entering the 2007 NBA Draft, is serving as the visible anchor while Boardroom operates the athlete-selection and campaign-logistics backend.
The structure separates this from most collective-style NIL arrangements. Players receive individual contracts with Nike, not pooled payments from a booster fund. Participation requires content obligations — social posts, event appearances, youth-camp involvement — that mirror professional endorsement terms. The program prioritizes upperclassmen and rotation players, though incoming recruits can negotiate inclusion. Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte said the arrangement was negotiated over eight months and includes performance escalators tied to NCAA Tournament advancement. Nike's existing $250 million apparel contract with Texas, signed in 2020, remains separate but shares infrastructure for photo shoots and product allocation.
The timing aligns with two recruiting windows. Texas men's basketball is pursuing five-star guard Tre Johnson and four-star forward Jayden Quaintance, both expected to announce by late April. Rivals.com ranks Texas fourth in the 2025 class; the NIL program gives head coach Rodney Terry a tangible pitch against programs like Kansas and Duke, which rely on traditional collectives funded by anonymous donors. The women's program, under Vic Schaefer, is already ranked second nationally and uses NIL as retention leverage — three starters turned down transfer-portal inquiries in March after NIL packages were restructured. Worth noting: Schaefer sat courtside with Durant at Oracle Arena in February during a Warriors game; the visit preceded final contract language.
Durant's involvement is operational, not ceremonial. He will host two Austin events annually, one tied to NBA All-Star Weekend timing, the other during Texas's non-conference schedule. Boardroom is staffing a dedicated coordinator in Austin to manage player schedules and Nike deliverables. The deal also includes a content studio buildout inside the Moody Center, Texas's $338 million basketball arena that opened in 2022. Durant's Thirty Five Ventures, his media arm, will produce short-form documentary content featuring players, distributed through Nike's YouTube and Boardroom's Instagram. Players retain 80% of any brand deals they negotiate independently; the 20% fee covers Boardroom's administrative work and legal review.
The program's structure signals where collegiate sports infrastructure is moving. Nike is treating this as a franchise-development lab — testing how professional athlete-marketing playbooks scale to college rosters that turn over every two to four years. If the model holds, expect similar announcements from Adidas (which has deals with Kansas, Louisville, and Miami) and Under Armour (Notre Dame, Auburn). Durant's former agent, Rich Kleiman, now Boardroom's co-founder, said the Texas deal sets a template for other retired athletes with strong university ties. He mentioned Chris Paul (Wake Forest), Dwyane Wade (Marquette), and Carmelo Anthony (Syracuse) as comparable alumni who could replicate the structure.
The financial sustainability question remains open. The $15 million figure is a three-year cumulative estimate, not guaranteed. Nike can reduce commitment if player engagement metrics — impressions, content completion rates, event attendance — fall below agreed thresholds. Texas also loses leverage if the basketball programs underperform; a single losing season could trigger renegotiation clauses. Del Conte acknowledged the program is "performance-sensitive" but said the upside for players justifies the risk. He noted that Texas football's collective, led by boosters Clark Field and Bobby Epstein, operates under separate governance but shares donor-communication channels.
Three things to watch: Nike's April earnings call, where management discusses collegiate marketing spend; the May signing period, when Texas will report recruiting class rankings; and the NCAA's ongoing antitrust settlement negotiations, which could impose caps on third-party NIL arrangements. Boardroom is already in preliminary talks with Texas about extending the program to baseball and soccer.
Durant's last competitive game at Texas was the 2007 NCAA Tournament second round. The Longhorns lost to USC; he declared three days later. His jersey hangs in the Moody Center rafters. Now his firm holds a multi-year services contract with the athletic department, approved by the UT System Board of Regents in a closed session last November. The vote was 8-1.