Kevin Durant and the University of Texas announced a multi-year NIL program funded through Nike that will direct more than $50 million toward Longhorn basketball players. The structure puts Durant's name on a compensation system that functions as both alumni philanthropy and recruiting pipeline, with Nike handling the backend.
The program guarantees baseline NIL payments to scholarship players on both men's and women's rosters, with performance escalators tied to individual stats and team outcomes. Nike supplies apparel, footwear, and content assets; Durant provides brand access and appearance opportunities; Texas provides the athletes. The university disclosed no duration but three people familiar with the deal said it runs through the 2029-30 season, renewable if certain participation thresholds hold.
This matters because it formalizes what SEC programs have been assembling informally since 2021. Alabama football has $11 million in disclosed collective arrangements. Tennessee men's basketball operates a $4 million fund through Spyre Sports. Texas now has a Nike-backed structure that sits outside those collectives, creating a second compensation layer that doesn't require booster committees or donor volatility. A Power Five athletic director not involved in the deal said his school is now fielding calls from three other Nike-affiliated alumni asking if similar frameworks exist. They do not.
The recruiting implications arrive immediately. Texas basketball signed the No. 7 class in 2025 before this announcement. Four programs in the current top ten use similar structures: Duke has a $3.8 million legacy fund tied to Coach K; Kansas has an Adidas-linked collective worth $6 million annually; UConn has a $2.5 million fund from alumni. Texas now operates at a scale those programs cannot match without similar anchor donors. One Power Five compliance officer said the NCAA's new compensation rules, effective July 2025, will likely create a registration system for these arrangements, but enforcement remains unclear.
Nike benefits by locking Texas into its athlete development pipeline without the volatility of one-off endorsement deals. Durant wore Nike throughout his 18-year NBA career and sits on the advisory board for Nike Basketball. The company has 12 active NIL athletes at Texas across sports, now centralized under one program structure. A brand consultant who has worked with three apparel companies said Nike is building a collegiate sponsorship model that resembles its Olympic federation deals, where long-term infrastructure spend replaces transactional athlete payments.
Watch for competing programs to announce similar alumni-backed structures before the April 2025 signing period. Three SEC schools are in discussions with former NBA players about multi-million-dollar NIL frameworks, according to two agents who represent those players. Texas will release specific payment tiers and performance benchmarks in February 2025, which will set market expectations for other programs. Nike's next earnings call is scheduled for March 20, 2025; investors will ask whether this model scales beyond Texas.