Anthony Edwards has appeared in Prada at least six times during the 2024-25 NBA season, wearing the brand's outerwear, bags, and eyewear in pre-game tunnel walks without any formal announcement from either side. The repetition matters because Edwards signed a five-year, $244 million extension with Minnesota in July 2023 and carries Adidas as his footwear partner through a deal inked last year.
The pattern emerged in November with a black Prada nylon jacket at Target Center, followed by a monogrammed Prada duffel in December and Prada sunglasses in three consecutive road games in January. Edwards wore a Prada Re-Nylon bucket hat courtside in Los Angeles on February 3 and arrived at Chase Center in a full Prada technical tracksuit on February 11. No press release. No Instagram grid post with a campaign image. Just product, visible, on a player averaging 25.3 points per game and leading the Timberwolves to a 37-16 record at the time of the tracksuit appearance.
This is meaningful because tunnel fashion has become proxy currency for endorsement negotiations, and Edwards is among the NBA's most bankable young stars outside his sneaker deal. His Adidas contract pays him roughly $8 million annually, according to people familiar with the structure, but leaves apparel and accessories open. Prada's approach—seeding product without announcing terms—mirrors how the brand moved with Formula 1 before its $30 million-plus Red Bull Racing deal became public in 2023. The strategy lets both sides test audience reaction and athlete commitment before committing to a seven-figure contract with content obligations.
Edwards' existing portfolio includes State Farm, which signed him in 2022, and a Gatorade deal announced in August 2023. His Instagram following sits at 6.4 million, and his team is a top-four seed in the Western Conference for the second straight season. Prada's interest makes commercial sense: the brand has no active NBA endorser after discontinuing its brief partnership with Miles Bridges in 2022, and Edwards' age—he turns 23 in August—aligns with Prada's effort to reach American men under 30 without chasing streetwear tropes. Edwards also benefits from playing in a market that doesn't generate the tabloid heat of New York or Los Angeles, giving luxury houses room to build quietly.
What to watch: Minnesota's playoff run, which begins in mid-April, will test whether Edwards continues the Prada rotation under higher visibility. If he does, a formal deal could surface by June, timed to the offseason when brands announce partnerships outside the sneaker embargo windows. Also watch for Prada's presence at Team USA's training camp in July—Edwards is expected to join the Olympic roster, and tunnel looks at international events carry different IP rules than NBA games, giving brands more flexibility. The next earnings call for Prada Group is scheduled for March 6, where management may address athlete marketing if analysts press on the U.S. strategy.
Edwards sat courtside at Paris Fashion Week in January wearing Prada eyewear, two rows behind Bernard Arnault. The choice of seating wasn't random.