Adidas announced eight Name, Image, and Likeness contracts with high school juniors across basketball and football on Monday, pairing the signings with the launch of its adizero 7 Class performance line. The recruits—three five-star basketball prospects, four four-star football players, and one track athlete who runs the 4.31 forty—will wear unreleased colorways during their senior seasons and appear in Adidas campaign shoots starting this summer. No deal values were disclosed, but two people familiar with the structure said the basketball contracts include $150,000 base guarantees with performance kickers tied to all-star game selections and social engagement metrics.
The adizero 7 Class branding is deliberate: Adidas is attaching a cohort identity to what it calls "the first NIL recruiting class signed before junior prom." The product line itself—ultra-light cleats and low-top basketball shoes with a carbon-fiber plate geometry borrowed from marathon racing—ships to retailers in February 2026, but the athletes will debut prototypes at Nike-sponsored events this spring. One linebacker committed to USC already posted an unboxing video that drew 2.1 million views in six hours, more than double the engagement Adidas basketball's official account generated in the previous quarter.
The timing is calibrated around two marketplace realities. First, NIL bidding for top recruits now peaks during the spring evaluation period of junior year, when college programs finalize scholarship offers and apparel brands price out what it costs to associate with a future lottery pick before he steps on campus. Second, Nike has historically waited until after the McDonald's All-American Game to lock high schoolers, a strategy that worked when brand allegiance was built through AAU pipelines. That model broke when NIL turned seventeen-year-olds into free agents with agents who return calls within the hour.
Adidas is explicitly buying optionality. If two of the eight recruits become first-round NBA or NFL picks, the $1.2 million to $1.5 million total outlay—a back-of-envelope estimate based on comparable deals—pays for itself in social impressions before the draft. If none do, the brand still owns content from athletes wearing unreleased gear at nationally televised high school games, which is cheaper than paying a production studio to stage the same aesthetic. The risk is structural: high school phenoms flame out, transfer, or get hurt, and Adidas cannot void these contracts the way a college coach can pull a scholarship offer. The reward is narrative: being the brand that believed first.
Two details worth noting. The football recruits all play skill positions—wide receiver, running back, cornerback—which means Adidas is prioritizing speed and highlights over linemen, the opposite of its college football sponsorship strategy where it pays $8 million per year to Arizona State and locks up exactly zero viral moments. And the track athlete, a sprinter from Florida committed to LSU, is being positioned as a crossover talent who can wear the adizero 7 in both track spikes and football cleats, a product-testing wedge Adidas hasn't attempted since it fumbled the Derrick Henry relationship in 2015.
The industry will now watch whether Nike responds by accelerating its own high school NIL calendar or by poaching one of these eight before they enroll. Adidas has non-compete clauses in the contracts, but those are only enforceable if the athlete doesn't return the advance, and $150,000 is a rounding error for a brand that spent $65 million on Damian Lillard's signature line last year. The real test is whether Adidas can convert early access into long-term equity, or whether it just bought eighteen months of Instagram posts before the athlete signs with Nike anyway.
The adizero 7 Class product line includes 47 SKUs across basketball, football, and track, with retail prices starting at $140 for the entry cleat and reaching $220 for the signature basketball low-top. Pre-orders open in October 2025, six months after the recruits start wearing them in game footage that will be clipped, reposted, and monetized by fan accounts Adidas does not control.
Adidas Basketball's Vice President of Global Sports Marketing will host a media call Thursday to discuss "the future of athlete partnership timelines," which is corporate speak for defending why the brand is paying high school juniors. One question likely to surface: whether this same early-signing strategy applies to soccer academies in Europe, where Adidas has €240 million in youth sponsorships but has historically avoided individual deals before a player turns eighteen. The answer will clarify whether this is a U.S. NIL experiment or a global policy shift.
The takeaway
Adidas signed eight 2026 recruits to **$150,000** NIL deals eighteen months early, testing whether pre-commitment beats late-stage bidding against Nike.
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