The NFL confirmed Tuesday it hired Kyle Smith, 32, as its first dedicated fashion editor, ending a four-year freelance arrangement and signaling the league now treats pregame tunnel coverage as infrastructure, not content. Smith's salary was not disclosed. The position reports to the league's media properties division, not merchandising, a structural choice that matters when Nike's $1.1 billion annual apparel deal renews in 2028.
Smith spent three seasons covering tunnel arrivals on contract, writing lookbooks and tracking designer collaborations for NFL.com and social channels. The work generated 47 million Instagram impressions in the 2025 season, according to league estimates, roughly 12% of total NFL digital video consumption. Engagement skewed younger—62% of tunnel video viewers were under 35, a cohort the league struggles to convert into Sunday ticket buyers. The freelance model worked until it didn't. Smith was fielding offers from sneaker brands and a major streaming platform. The NFL made him full-time in January.
The move acknowledges what merchandising executives have known for eighteen months: pregame fits drive apparel sales more efficiently than highlight reels. When Cincinnati wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase wore a custom Amiri jacket to a December playoff game, the brand's website traffic spiked 340% within six hours, per SimilarWeb data. Chase does not have an Amiri endorsement. He paid retail. That's the signal. Players are spending five figures per season on tunnel outfits without sponsor obligations, treating the walk as owned media. Brands noticed. So did the league office, which now employs someone whose job is to catalog, contextualize, and monetize that behavior before it happens off-platform.
Smith's hire arrives as the NFL renegotiates its relationship with sideline credentialing. The league issues 312 media credentials per game on average, but only 19 are dedicated to fashion or lifestyle coverage, a ratio some team presidents now consider misallocated. Tunnel moments generate more sponsor value per minute of broadcast time than fourth-quarter drives, according to a 2025 Wasserman study that circulated quietly among team marketing chiefs last spring. The report quantified what executives already felt: fashion content has a longer commercial half-life than game footage. A Sunday tunnel fit gets reposted, TikTok-ed, and memed through Thursday. A touchdown gets clipped, maybe shared, and dies by Tuesday. Smith's position is the league betting it can control and extend that cycle.
Watch Nike's behavior over the next eighteen months. The company's current deal gives it first right of refusal on player appearance partnerships, but that language predates the tunnel economy and doesn't cover talent wearing competitors in non-game settings. Smith's editorial calendar will now dictate what gets elevated, which indirectly steers which brands get visibility. If Nike feels locked out, expect renegotiation language around "official pregame apparel" to surface before the 2028 renewal window formally opens. Also watch whether other leagues follow. The NBA already has GQ-style tunnel photographers; it does not have a dedicated staffer. The NFL moved first.
Smith starts full-time in June, three weeks before training camps open and five weeks before the league announces its streaming partnership for tunnel-exclusive content, a deal Bloomberg reported is in late-stage talks with a platform that rhymes with Max. The timing is not accidental.
The takeaway
NFL formalizes tunnel fashion coverage to capture **$180M** annual player wardrobe spend and retain content control before streaming platforms build competing pipelines.
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