When Tennessee announced its return to Adidas last July after 17 years with Nike, the athletic department press release cited brand heritage and a $150 million base deal. The actual number is higher. According to financial documents reviewed by Yahoo Sports, Adidas committed an additional $4 million annually in payments routed through Tennessee's Spyre Sports collective—money earmarked for football and basketball players wearing Three Stripes gear in NIL content. Nike had offered $3.2 million through a similar structure before losing the bid.
The arrangement works like this: the apparel company signs its standard institutional contract with the university for uniforms, sideline gear, and retail splits. Separately, it negotiates a rider directing funds to the school's affiliated NIL collective, which then distributes payments to athletes in exchange for social posts, appearances, and branded content. The collective handles compliance paperwork. The brand gets reach. The school's coaching staff gets a recruiting closer without touching the money. NCAA investigators, already overwhelmed by Name-Image-Likeness's $1.17 billion market, have no subpoena power over private collectives.
Tennessee is the visible example because the transition exposed the math. Nike's Volunteer roster holdovers—quarterback Nico Iamaleava, defensive end James Pearce—remain on individual Nike deals worth $400,000-plus annually, separate from the collective pool. Adidas is paying them alongside newer signees to wear branded training gear in TikTok shoots and campus activations. The result: Tennessee's top 22 football players and 8 basketball rotation members are splitting roughly $6 million this year from Adidas, in addition to their scholarship packages and collective deals from local donors. Kentucky, a longtime Nike football school, is negotiating a similar Adidas package that sources familiar with the talks say could reach $5 million in athlete payments by the 2026 season.
The structural advantage is recruitment. When a five-star defensive lineman visits Tennessee, he hears the facilities pitch, the NFL draft rate, and then the Adidas collective number—$150,000-$200,000 as a freshman, scaled by playing time and social following. The collective money is contractual, not booster whim. Coaches can point to it without NCAA exposure because the collective, not the school, signs the athlete. At programs without apparel-funded collectives—mid-majors, Group of Five—coaches recruit against a $4 million structural gap they can't close.
Nike has funded similar structures at Oregon ($3.8 million annually through Division Street), Ohio State, and Alabama, according to three agents who have negotiated deals on behalf of clients. Adidas is targeting schools where it already holds apparel rights—Louisville, Miami, Texas A&M—and ones it can flip. Under Armour, bleeding market share, is offering $2 million-plus collective commitments to Maryland and Auburn in renewal negotiations, per a source close to those talks. The brands frame it as athlete empowerment. The economics are customer acquisition: an 18-year-old point guard signing with a brand as a freshman, wearing it through the NBA Draft, becomes a $30 million endorsement asset if he signs a max contract.
The loophole is definitional. The NCAA's interim NIL policy prohibits schools from arranging deals, but collectives are technically independent entities, even when their largest donor is an apparel company and their office sits 200 yards from the football facility. The policy was written in 2021 to allow local car dealerships and pizza chains to pay athletes. It did not anticipate multinational corporations with $50 billion in annual revenue using the same structure to bypass uniform-contract restrictions.
What's next: expect apparel money to separate blue-blood rosters from everyone else by $3-5 million per program within 18 months. Mid-majors are already losing recruits in June official visits when the collective math becomes clear. Coaching staffs at non-power programs are lobbying their ADs to switch providers—Wyoming is in talks with Adidas, per a source—but without existing institutional deals worth $8 million-plus, they can't command the same collective riders. Meanwhile, agents are advising high school juniors to commit early to schools with apparel-funded collectives, locking in payments before the NCAA's revenue-sharing model arrives in 2025 and potentially caps these flows.
The enforcement question is whether the IRS, not the NCAA, eventually intervenes. Collectives operate as nonprofits under 501(c)(3) rules, which require charitable purpose. Paying athletes to post branded content might not qualify, and if the exemption breaks, the entire structure collapses. Tennessee's collective, Spyre Sports, has not yet filed its 2024 tax return.
The takeaway
Adidas and Nike are routing **$4M+** per school through NIL collectives, creating a structural recruiting gap mid-majors can't close.
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