Nike signed 13 college football players to name, image, and likeness deals Thursday, deploying six at Georgia, four at Auburn, and three at Ohio State. The coordinated announcement marks the brand's largest single-day collegiate roster expansion since NIL policy liberalized in July 2021.
The Georgia cohort includes defensive linemen and offensive skill players whose combined social reach exceeds 420,000 followers. Auburn's four athletes represent the brand's first marquee NIL activation since the university switched from Under Armour to Nike in August 2024, ending a $92 million apparel contract one year early. Ohio State's newest addition is freshman receiver Chris Henry Jr., son of the late Bengals wideout, who joins quarterback Will Howard and running back Quinshon Judkins on the Swoosh's Columbus roster. Nike does not disclose individual deal values, but industry standards place Power Five football NIL partnerships between $15,000 and $75,000 annually for non-starting players, with proven starters commanding six figures.
The timing tells the structural story. Conference realignment has reordered television money and recruiting geography. Georgia and Ohio State now compete in expanded conferences—SEC and Big Ten respectively—where media rights distributions will exceed $70 million per school by 2025. Auburn sits in the same SEC tier but trails Alabama and Georgia in both win totals and recruiting rankings, making NIL partnerships a catch-up lever. Nike's school-specific clustering suggests the brand is treating rosters as regional marketing assets rather than individual endorsements. Georgia's six athletes will appear in Atlanta retail activations and regional advertising buys; Auburn's four anchor a Birmingham-to-Montgomery corridor where Under Armour previously held shelf space. Ohio State's three give Nike presence in Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati simultaneously.
The apparel business has historically monetized college sports through school contracts, not athlete endorsements. Nike pays Ohio State approximately $16.8 million annually for on-field exclusivity and retail rights. Georgia's deal is worth $9.3 million per year. Auburn's new contract, signed last summer, carries an estimated $6 million annual value. The NIL deals announced Thursday cost Nike a fraction of those institutional agreements—likely under $1.5 million combined across all 13 athletes—but deliver direct consumer engagement that team apparel cannot. A linebacker wearing custom Pegasus cleats in practice footage generates Instagram impressions; a university logo on a sideline jacket does not.
The Auburn timing is particularly calculated. The university terminated its Under Armour partnership in August 2024, paying an exit fee reportedly near $12 million to accelerate the Nike transition. Under Armour had supplied Auburn since 2015 and used the Tigers as a proving ground for football innovation, including the school's 2019 uniform redesign that featured heat-mapped ventilation zones. That relationship produced zero NIL activations before the split. Nike waited exactly 12 months after signing the institutional deal to announce its first Auburn athlete roster, a delay that suggests coordination with the athletic department's compliance office and a preference for clean contract windows. The four Auburn players—names have not been fully disclosed in initial reporting—will likely appear at Nike's spring marketing summit in Beaverton, where college rosters meet product teams ahead of fall launch cycles.
Georgia's six athletes represent the deepest single-school commitment in this announcement. The Bulldogs rank third nationally in recruiting class value for 2025, behind Ohio State and Alabama, and have produced 15 NFL Draft picks in the past two years. Nike's Georgia investment isn't about immediate jersey sales; it's about optionality. If two of these six athletes reach the league, Nike will have early relationships with potential endorsement assets before competitive bidding begins. Adidas and Jordan Brand have historically won marquee NFL rookie deals by cultivating college relationships; Nike is systematizing that pipeline.
Ohio State's roster now includes three Nike NIL athletes, a modest total for a program that signs top-five recruiting classes annually. The addition of Chris Henry Jr., a freshman, signals Nike's willingness to invest in unproven players with family lineage and social equity. Henry's father played five NFL seasons and retained fan loyalty in Cincinnati despite his death in 2009. The son's Ohio State commitment in 2024 drew regional media coverage; Nike is converting that attention into brand adjacency before Henry records a collegiate reception.
What separates this announcement from typical NIL noise is coordination. 13 athletes, three schools, same Thursday news cycle. Nike did not stagger these deals across weeks or bury them in social posts. The brand wants apparel competitors—Adidas, Under Armour, New Balance—to register the talent density and roster velocity. It also wants college administrators to see the formula: institutional contract first, NIL activation second, retail integration third.
Watch for spring game content featuring these athletes in unreleased Nike training apparel, likely filmed in February and March for summer digital campaigns. Auburn's four will probably appear in regional TV spots during the SEC Network's spring football coverage. Georgia's six may participate in Nike's Atlanta House activations during the upcoming CFP window, depending on postseason outcomes. Ohio State's Chris Henry Jr. will be measured by fall performance; if he cracks the rotation, Nike will extend. If he transfers, the deal quietly expires.
Nike will announce institutional apparel renewals at Georgia and Ohio State within 18 months. Auburn's contract, still fresh, runs through 2033. The NIL rosters announced Thursday are the advance work.
The takeaway
Nike's **13** college football NIL signings cluster around institutional partnerships, treating rosters as regional marketing assets with NFL optionality.
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