Kevin Durant's Boardroom and Nike launched a multi-year NIL program Thursday that delivers signature KD merchandise, training access, and endorsement infrastructure to every scholarship player on the University of Texas men's and women's basketball rosters. The program starts immediately and runs through at least the 2026-27 season. Financial specifics were not disclosed, but comparable Nike roster-wide NIL deals at SEC peers have carried annual budgets north of $1 million when you factor in product, cash stipends, and media production.
Texas players now receive custom colorways of Durant's signature shoe line, quarterly cash payments tied to social media performance, and access to Nike's athlete development curriculum that includes financial literacy modules and post-eligibility career planning. The program also funds a content studio inside the Moody Center where players can produce sponsor-friendly video for their personal channels. Durant himself will host an annual on-campus session, typically scheduled during the offseason to avoid NCAA calendar conflicts. Women's roster inclusion matters here—Nike's existing WNBA relationships give Texas women a cleaner path to post-college endorsement deals, and the program quietly positions UT as the destination for guards who want early brand exposure.
This is Durant's first structured college NIL play since the Supreme Court cleared the way in 2021, and it's timed to Texas's 2024 move into the SEC. The conference shift brings $70 million annual media payouts per school starting next season, and Nike is treating Texas basketball as a southern foothold to rival its Jordan Brand presence at North Carolina. The Longhorns went 21-13 last season under Rodney Terry, who was promoted after Chris Beard's dismissal. Terry's retention hinged partly on whether Texas could match SEC-level NIL funding—this Nike deal closes that gap without requiring local booster coordination. Texas's existing NIL collective, Horns with Heart, will continue handling football, but basketball now runs through a national brand with direct athlete relationships.
Watch for Texas to use this program as a recruiting closer during the spring signing period. Head coach Vic Schaefer on the women's side already has four top-50 commits for 2025, and the Nike pipeline gives him a tangible answer when parents ask about post-eligibility earning potential. On the men's side, Terry is chasing transfers from high-major programs where NIL funding remains chaotic. The program's structure—predictable payments, clear deliverables, Nike's legal team handling compliance—appeals to agents steering clients away from collective-funded deals that can evaporate mid-season. Nike will also track which players generate the most engagement and funnel them into broader brand campaigns, effectively auditioning Texas athletes for post-college endorsement contracts.
Durant wore burnt orange Nikes courtside at a December game against Tennessee, which now reads as advance work for this announcement. His Boardroom entity has been building a college sports vertical since 2022, and this Texas deal provides the template for similar programs at other schools where Nike wants to entrench before Adidas or Under Armour can move. The next comparable deal to watch is likely at USC or UCLA, where Nike's Pac-12 legacy relationships need refreshing ahead of those schools' Big Ten debuts.