Kevin Durant, the Phoenix Suns forward and Texas alumnus, announced a Nike-sponsored NIL program for University of Texas basketball players. The partnership routes endorsement money directly to current Longhorn athletes through a structure Durant's Boardroom venture helped design. No total fund size was disclosed. Nike supplies apparel, event access, and brand integration; Durant supplies credibility and a phone tree that reaches NBA front offices.
The program targets men's and women's basketball rosters, with individual athletes receiving tiered stipends based on media obligations and content creation. Texas joins a short list of schools—Oregon, USC, Duke—where a single apparel sponsor underwrites an NIL fund tied to one alumnus. The model solves two problems: athletes get predictable income without chasing local car dealerships, and the apparel company locks in brand loyalty before draft night. Durant played one season at Texas in 2006-07, won national player of the year, then left for Seattle. He has kept a home in Austin, attended football games, and quietly funded basketball facility upgrades since 2019. The NIL program formalizes what was already happening through backchannels.
The timing is deliberate. Texas men's basketball, under coach Rodney Terry, is No. 14 in the AP poll and SEC-bound next season. The women's team, led by Rori Harmon, is ranked No. 8 and drew 12,200 fans to Moody Center last Saturday. Both programs are recruiting against schools—Kansas, Arkansas, Tennessee—where NIL collectives now routinely offer $500,000 packages to freshmen. Texas needed a visible, repeatable answer. Durant's name does that. The Nike partnership does the rest, turning one-off booster checks into a branded system that scales. Rival SEC programs are already asking their own NBA alumni for similar arrangements. The structure is portable. Other schools will copy it within six months, swapping Durant for whichever first-round pick still answers the AD's texts. Expect versions at Kentucky (Wall or Booker), at UNC (Jordan-backed, though he has resisted NIL direct funding), at Michigan State (Draymond Green has floated the idea publicly since 2023). The pressure is not just competitive; it is operational. Athletic departments cannot legally pay athletes directly for endorsements, but they can facilitate alumni-driven programs that behave like salary supplements. Nike gets content, athletes get cash, the school gets recruiting ammunition, and Durant gets his legacy tied to something other than free agency decisions.
The first cohort of athletes will be announced before the SEC tournament in March. Texas is also negotiating a secondary NIL deal with a regional bank for football, separate from Durant's structure. Nike's contract with Texas runs through 2031, worth roughly $250 million in cash and product. The basketball NIL program sits inside that broader deal but operates as a distinct line item, which keeps it visible when recruits tour campus. Durant appeared in a Texas jersey at the announcement event, stood next to athletic director Chris Del Conte, and did not take questions.
Watch for other Nike-sponsored schools—Florida, Alabama, LSU—to announce similar alumni-backed NIL funds before the spring signing period. Also watch whether Durant attends Texas basketball games more frequently; his courtside presence is now part of the recruiting pitch. Nike will release a co-branded Texas basketball capsule collection in late summer, with proceeds flowing back into the NIL fund. The structure assumes Durant remains involved for at least three recruiting cycles, which means through the 2026-27 season. If he retires before that, the fund continues under Nike's existing Texas contract, but the name recognition dilutes.
Durant has not recruited for Texas in any formal sense, but his phone still rings when five-star guards need advice. Now those calls include a funding mechanism that did not exist two years ago.