Five-star linebacker Honor Fa'alave-Johnson, committed to USC's class of 2027, signed an NIL deal with Adidas before enrolling at a school whose football program has worn Nike since 2002. The deal, announced this week, marks him as the first Trojan recruit in recent memory to arrive with apparel allegiance already spoken for.
Fa'alave-Johnson is the nation's No. 1 inside linebacker in the 2027 class and No. 12 overall prospect according to 247Sports. He committed to USC in December 2024, sixteen months before his expected enrollment. The Adidas contract covers personal endorsement, social content, and appearances. Neither the player nor the brand disclosed deal terms, but five-star high school juniors with national profiles typically command low six figures annually in the current market.
The tension is structural. USC's football team wears Nike under a deal that runs through 2027 and pays the athletic department roughly $6 million annually in cash and product. Fa'alave-Johnson will dress in Nike on Saturdays and promote Adidas the rest of the week. That split used to be unthinkable; NCAA rules before 2021 would have forced him to choose. Now it is merely awkward, and the awkwardness carries information. Apparel brands are learning they no longer need to wait for the school partnership to reach the athlete. The athlete, meanwhile, learns early that his personal endorsement value may exceed the institutional relationship, a lesson that travels with him when he considers the transfer portal or an agent two years from now.
Adidas has been more aggressive than Nike in signing individual college athletes since NIL opened. The brand holds deals with Kansas basketball guard AJ Storr and Michigan tight end Colston Loveland, both at schools with Nike contracts. Nike has moved more cautiously, focusing on marquee names like Arch Manning and Shedeur Sanders, players whose school affiliations align with existing Nike partnerships. Adidas is playing a different game: build a roster of recognizable college names regardless of campus apparel, then convert a fraction of them into professional endorsers when they turn pro. Fa'alave-Johnson is 16 years old. If he signs with Adidas again after declaring for the NFL draft in 2030, the brand will have owned the relationship for four years before his first professional contract.
USC's NIL collective, Legacy NIL, was not involved in the Adidas deal. Collectives typically handle pay-for-play arrangements and school-adjacent endorsements. Fa'alave-Johnson's deal was brokered by Klutch Sports, the agency that represents LeBron James and recently expanded into college representation. Klutch signed Fa'alave-Johnson in January 2025, making him one of the youngest athletes on the agency's roster. The move suggests the agency sees enough professional upside to justify years of relationship development before he is draft-eligible.
The immediate risk for USC is optical, not operational. Fa'alave-Johnson will not refuse to wear team-issued Nike cleats. The risk is that other five-star recruits notice the precedent and start negotiating their own apparel deals before signing letters of intent, fragmenting the visual coherence that sponsors pay schools to deliver. Nike's deal with USC does not prohibit individual players from holding outside endorsements, a standard clause since NIL became legal. But contracts written in 2019 did not anticipate a world where 30% of a recruiting class might arrive with conflicting shoe deals already signed.
Watch for Nike's response in its next round of school contract renewals, which for USC come up in 2027. The brand will either tighten exclusivity clauses to prohibit athlete-level endorsements with competitors, or accept fragmentation and adjust pricing accordingly. Also watch whether Adidas attempts to sign more USC commits before enrollment, testing how far the school will let brand split go before it threatens institutional sponsorship dollars. Fa'alave-Johnson enrolls in January 2027, sixteen months to see if his teammates follow the same playbook.
Klutch Sports now represents 12 high school football players who have not yet graduated, according to agency filings. That number was zero eighteen months ago.
The takeaway
Adidas signed USC's top 2027 recruit before he enrolls at a Nike school, previewing how apparel brands now bypass team contracts to own athletes early.
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