Kevin Durant and the University of Texas launched a multi-year NIL program Thursday that channels Nike sponsorship dollars directly to Longhorn basketball players, with total commitment estimated above $10 million. The structure—athlete funds school roster via corporate partner—marks one of the first deals where an NBA star uses his own endorsement apparatus to subsidize college athletes at his alma mater.
Durant, who spent one season at Texas in 2006-07 before the NBA's one-and-done rule pushed him to the draft, negotiated the arrangement with Nike and university leadership over six months. The program covers the full 13-scholarship men's roster and the 15-scholarship women's roster, with payments tiered by playing time and academic standing. Nike supplies apparel, content production, and marketing rights; Durant supplies brand credibility and some incremental cash from his Nike deal. Texas supplies roster access and institutional cover. The first checks clear before the 2025-26 season.
The mechanics matter. Traditional collectives—booster-funded LLCs that pay players for autograph sessions and social posts—operate at arm's length from schools to preserve NCAA amateurism fiction. Durant's structure collapses that distance. He signs the master agreement with Texas Athletics; Nike signs with him. The university handles distribution, compliance review, and public messaging. It's sponsorship dressed as philanthropy dressed as NIL, and it works because Durant has $300 million in career Nike money and no reason to pretend otherwise.
The blueprint interests two groups. First, NBA and NFL stars who played before NIL and want to fund current rosters without forming a 501(c)(3) or hiring a collective operator. Michigan has six alumni in that category; Duke has nine; Kentucky has twelve. Second, brands that want deeper college access but face Title IX exposure if they pay schools directly. Nike already sponsors Texas football, basketball, and Olympic sports under a 10-year, $250 million gear deal signed in 2020; this arrangement layers athlete marketing onto existing infrastructure without triggering equal-treatment lawsuits from non-revenue sports. The women's basketball team gets the same per-player NIL as the men under the Durant program, which insulates Texas from gender-equity complaints.
Rival programs have noticed. A Big Ten athletic director texted a colleague Thursday afternoon asking for the Texas contract template. Two agents with NBA clients who played at major programs called Nike's athlete partnerships team before close of business. One Power Five compliance officer told a reporter the structure "makes our collective look like a lemonade stand," then asked not to be named because his school is pursuing a similar deal.
The timing aligns with recruiting. Texas basketball coach Rodney Terry has four unsigned 2025 recruits still taking visits; the Durant announcement gives him a $10 million talking point in living rooms. It also creates pressure on peer schools. If Texas can offer $50,000+ per year in NIL to rotation players, other programs need equivalent ammunition or clearer paths to the NBA. The Longhorns went 21-13 last season and missed the NCAA tournament; Durant's money buys talent, not nostalgia.
Nike's angle is access and content. The company has 78 active NBA endorsers but limited pathways to college athletes under current rules. This structure gives Nike early relationships with future draft picks while Texas handles compliance risk. Durant appears in marketing, wears Texas gear at public events, and films content with players. The brand gets distribution across Texas's social channels—1.2 million Instagram followers, 580,000 on TikTok—without directly employing college athletes.
Watch for contract details when Texas files its next financial disclosure in December. The university has not confirmed whether the $10 million figure is annual or spread across multiple years, whether payments are salary or licensing fees, or how much comes from Durant's personal funds versus Nike reallocation. Also watch Oklahoma and Texas A&M, both of which have wealthier boosters and more desperate football programs. If the structure works for basketball, someone applies it to quarterbacks.
Three other schools have reached out to Durant's Thirty Five Ventures about replicating the model at their institutions, according to someone with knowledge of the conversations. The person declined to name the schools but said one is in the SEC and two are on the West Coast.