Kevin Durant and the University of Texas announced a joint NIL program Thursday with Nike funding portions of the deal, marking the first time the Oregon-based brand has structured a collegiate partnership through a former athlete rather than direct institutional sponsorship. Financial terms were not disclosed, but two people familiar with Texas athletics revenue told colleagues the program will distribute between $250,000 and $400,000 annually to Longhorn basketball players starting this spring.
Durant played one season at Texas in 2006-07 before entering the NBA draft. Nike has held the university's primary apparel contract since 2000, currently valued at $250 million over fifteen years through 2031. The new NIL structure sits outside that existing deal. Players receive compensation for promotional appearances wearing Nike gear and producing social content tagged to Durant's Boardroom media company, which Nike has separately invested in since 2021. Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte said the program will prioritize men's and women's basketball rosters, with football excluded for now.
The architecture matters because it gives Nike influence over which athletes receive money without the compliance exposure of direct payments. Durant's name provides the legal pass-through; Nike writes checks to his entity, which distributes to players after clearing university compliance. Three Power Five programs have asked their respective swoosh reps about replicating the structure with other alumni, according to an ACC compliance director who requested anonymity. One Pac-12 school was told Nike is not interested in scaling the model broadly yet, preferring to test economics at Texas first.
For Texas, the program helps close a gap with programs like Arkansas and Kentucky, where NIL collectives funded by boosters have distributed seven-figure totals to basketball rosters. Texas basketball has struggled to compete for five-star recruits against schools with more established NIL machinery. The Longhorns signed the No. 18 recruiting class nationally for 2024, trailing SEC programs they will compete against after joining the conference in July. Durant's involvement gives the program a credibility boost with recruits who grew up watching his NBA career, while Nike money ensures sustainability beyond booster fatigue cycles.
The deal also signals Nike's willingness to use NIL as a retention tool for institutional partnerships under pricing pressure. Adidas has underbid Nike on three major renewals in the past eighteen months, most recently offering Louisville $88 million over ten years compared to Nike's $78 million proposal, according to documents reviewed by the university's board. By layering NIL programs into existing contracts, Nike creates stickiness that pure apparel economics cannot match. A former Nike executive now advising college programs said the company views Durant-style NIL add-ons as defensive infrastructure, particularly in basketball where recruit-level influence matters more than in football's larger roster ecosystem.
Watch whether Nike attempts similar structures at North Carolina, Duke, or Kentucky, where alumni networks include active NBA players with existing swoosh contracts. Michael Jordan's relationship with UNC would be the highest-profile test case, though one person close to Jordan's business manager said he has shown no interest in NIL involvement to date. Meanwhile, Texas will announce its first cohort of participating players before spring practice begins in April, likely timed to coincide with recruiting visits during the late signing period.
Durant has not visited Austin publicly since 2019, but the deal requires at least two campus appearances annually, per the agreement reviewed by compliance staff. Those visits will happen during recruiting weekends.
The takeaway
Nike routes NIL money through Durant to Texas basketball, testing a structure that insulates the brand while creating recruiting advantage other programs are already asking to copy.
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