Kevin Durant and the University of Texas announced a Nike-backed NIL program for Longhorn basketball players, marking the program's first aggregated roster deal since joining the SEC. The structure pools compensation across the roster rather than isolating marquee transfers, a tactic Austin boosters believe closes the gap with Kentucky and Alabama collectives that have operated at scale since 2022.
The program launches immediately, covers men's and women's rosters, and ties compensation to team participation and social obligations rather than performance bonuses. Nike's involvement suggests apparel integration—players wear Swoosh gear in sponsored content, Durant's Boardroom media arm distributes clips, Texas Athletics controls messaging. The dollar figure was not disclosed, but three collectives operating in college basketball currently pay $750,000 to $1.5 million annually for similar aggregated structures, per public filings reviewed by agents at Excel and CAA.
Texas finished 26-9 last season but lost its second-leading scorer to the transfer portal in April. The new fund aims to retain current talent and signal to high school recruits that Austin can match SEC spending without relying on a single booster writing checks. Durant played one season at Texas in 2006-07 before entering the NBA draft. His involvement here is part marketing theater, part alumni capital—his name carries weight with 17-year-olds who never saw him in burnt orange, and Nike views him as a bridge between professional and collegiate product lines.
The timing matters. Texas begins SEC play in January 2025, and the conference's basketball recruiting apparatus has outspent Big 12 programs by an estimated 30 percent since NIL legalization, according to data compiled by Opendorse. The Longhorns' collective, Texas One Fund, has operated since 2022 but focused on football. This Durant arrangement is its first structured play in basketball, a sport where roster turnover and portal churn make year-to-year funding unreliable. Aggregated deals smooth that volatility.
Nike's calculus is straightforward. The brand pays Durant roughly $10 million annually under his lifetime contract and wants visibility on college rosters ahead of March. Texas plays 18 nationally televised games this season, including matchups against Tennessee and Auburn. Players in Nike gear, promoted by Durant's media channels, reach recruiting demographics without the compliance risk of direct athlete endorsements. The structure also pilots a model Nike may replicate at Oregon, North Carolina, and other flagship programs where booster collectives remain fragmented.
What to watch: Texas opens conference play on January 4 against Texas A&M. Portal activity will accelerate in late March, and the fund's retention rate becomes measurable then. Nike's Q2 earnings call in December may reference collegiate partnerships as a growth vertical. Durant's Boardroom is expected to release a short documentary on the program before the SEC tournament in March.
The real test arrives when a five-star guard from Atlanta weighs offers. Kentucky's collective can point to $2 million paid to Oscar Tshiebwe. Texas now counters with Durant's phone number and a Nike logo.
The takeaway
Texas deploys Durant and Nike to fund basketball rosters at SEC scale, betting brand access competes with raw cash.
niltexaskevin durantnikesec basketballcollectives
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