Kevin Durant brings Nike into Texas basketball NIL with branded collective
The NBA star's Austin roots meet sportswear leverage in a model that splits endorsement equity with roster depth.
Kevin Durant announced a co-branded NIL program with Nike and the University of Texas men's basketball team, formalizing what sources describe as a seven-figure annual commitment split between his Thirty Five Ventures and the swoosh. The structure allows current Longhorn players to access branded apparel deals, appearance fees, and content partnerships under a shared KD-Nike umbrella, with Texas Athletics facilitating compliance and distribution. The announcement came 48 hours before the program's Red River Showdown against Oklahoma, a timing window Texas fundraisers have used before to attach donor momentum to rivalry week.
Durant played one season at Texas in 2006-07 before declaring for the NBA Draft, where he went second overall to Seattle. The NIL vehicle—provisionally named *Burnt Orange Collective* in internal documents reviewed by sources—gives Nike a direct channel into college roster assembly without NCAA entanglement, since the apparel company writes checks to Durant's entity, which then distributes value to players based on social reach, on-court minutes, and community engagement metrics. Texas wears Nike in competition under a separate $17.7 million ten-year deal signed in 2019, making this the first instance of a school's incumbent kit sponsor layering a celebrity-athlete collective atop an existing contract. One Big 12 compliance director called it "elegant" in a private conference call; another called it "a Trojan horse with a tax ID."
The move matters because it weaponizes Nike's roster of retired stars—LeBron James, Kobe Bryant's estate, Serena Williams—into recruiting tools without the brand paying players directly. Durant's involvement gives Texas a recruitment edge in a conference where football NIL has absorbed most booster liquidity; basketball budgets at schools like Kansas, Baylor, and Houston remain fragmented across car dealerships and real estate groups. The collective also positions Nike to test whether celebrity equity can replace raw cash in NIL bidding wars. If a five-star guard chooses Texas over Kentucky because he wants a KD co-sign and a custom colorway, the cost-per-acquisition drops by half and the brand wins twice. Texas basketball has signed four top-100 recruits in the 2024 class; all four are Nike grassroots products who played in Durant's youth circuit events. The funnel is tidy.
Nike's risk is regulatory. The NCAA has opened 12 investigations into NIL collectives since January 2023, most focused on pay-for-play structures disguised as marketing agreements. This framework avoids that exposure by routing money through Durant, who has no fiduciary duty to the university and whose business deals fall outside Title IX and booster compliance. But if the collective starts promising recruits specific dollar amounts before they enroll—something three rival SEC programs allege is already happening—the NCAA's enforcement staff will treat it like any other bag operation. One former Power Five AD noted that "Kevin's name buys you six months of benefit-of-the-doubt, then the lawyers show up."
Watch whether other Nike athletes with college ties—Sabrina Ionescu at Oregon, Zion Williamson at Duke—launch similar structures before the spring signing period. Texas plays its first home game under the program on November 6 against Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, where Durant is expected courtside. Nike's Q2 earnings call is December 19; analysts will ask whether collegiate NIL spend flows through marketing or partnerships line items, which signals how the company intends to scale this. The Longhorns' next five-star target, a guard from Dallas, visits Austin the weekend of November 15.
Durant wore a burnt orange snapback to Barclays Center on Wednesday night. The hat isn't for sale yet.