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Nike and Adidas Route NIL Cash Through Loophole Deals to Blue-Chip Athletes

USA Today investigation maps apparel payments bypassing compliance tracking at Duke, Kansas, Miami.

Published May 7, 2026 Source USA Today From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
NCAA / Adidas / Nike
PAPER · May 7, 2026
WELL POUR · May 7, 2026

Nike and Adidas Route NIL Cash Through Loophole Deals to Blue-Chip Athletes

USA Today investigation maps apparel payments bypassing compliance tracking at Duke, Kansas, Miami.

Source USA Today ↗

Nike and Adidas are funneling name-image-likeness payments to athletes at marquee programs through structured arrangements that sit outside standard NCAA compliance monitoring, according to a USA Today investigation published Thursday. The deals route payments through third-party collectives and marketing agencies rather than direct athlete endorsements, creating a disclosure gap that neither schools nor the NCAA systematically track.

The reporting identifies specific flows at Duke, Kansas, and Miami—three schools with $200 million-plus apparel contracts. Athletes at these programs receive NIL compensation tied to brand activations arranged by external agencies that also hold separate service agreements with Nike and Adidas. The structure lets apparel companies influence athlete compensation without triggering the reporting requirements that govern traditional endorsement deals. Schools told USA Today they monitor athlete NIL activity but acknowledged they lack visibility into payments structured as third-party marketing services rather than direct brand deals.

This matters because it extends the apparel leverage model down to the athlete level in ways that NCAA enforcement can't easily track. Apparel contracts have long governed which logo appears on a program's uniform and sideline gear; these arrangements now let Nike and Adidas effectively subsidize the cost of keeping elite talent at partner schools without appearing on compliance spreadsheets. For athletic directors, that means apparel money is doing double duty—covering team operating costs and reinforcing recruiting pipelines—while staying off the books that NCAA staff review during compliance audits. For rival schools with smaller apparel deals, it's another structural disadvantage that doesn't show up in reported NIL totals.

The disclosure gap also complicates sponsor strategy. Brands negotiating NIL deals with athletes now compete with apparel money that flows through channels they can't see in public filings or school reports. A regional auto dealer offering $15,000 to a point guard doesn't know whether Nike-linked payments through a collective already locked in that athlete at a higher number. That information asymmetry makes pricing harder and increases the risk that sponsors overpay for access that apparel money already secured. It also means that the reported NIL figures schools publish—often used in media coverage and recruiting pitches—undercount the actual compensation athletes receive, particularly at programs with $10 million-plus annual apparel contracts.

For apparel companies, the model extends brand influence without the compliance costs of direct athlete deals. Nike and Adidas can preserve relationships with schools while shaping athlete rosters through third-party payments, keeping their names out of NCAA enforcement discussions. The setup also insulates them from athlete controversies; if an athlete's conduct becomes a reputational problem, the payment structure provides distance that direct endorsement contracts don't. That's valuable in a landscape where NCAA athletes increasingly behave like professionals but still operate under amateur eligibility rules that apparel companies don't want to be seen violating.

The NCAA told USA Today it's reviewing the arrangements but provided no timeline for new guidance. That means the current structure likely persists through the next contracting cycle. Apparel deals at major programs renew on three-to-five-year timelines, with Duke's Nike contract extending through 2027 and Kansas's Adidas deal running through 2031. Those agreements set the baseline for how much money flows into the ecosystem; the NIL arrangements documented in the investigation determine where it lands. Schools at smaller conferences without equivalent apparel leverage now face a recruiting gap that compounds existing revenue differences from media rights and ticket sales.

Watch for two follow-on moves. First, whether Nike and Adidas adjust their third-party arrangements ahead of any NCAA guidance, which would signal they expect enforcement risk. Second, whether smaller apparel brands—Under Armour, New Balance, Puma—adopt similar structures to compete for programs looking to replace aging contracts. Under Armour's UCLA deal expires in 2026; how that renewal negotiation treats NIL infrastructure will indicate whether the loophole becomes standard or gets closed before it spreads.

The investigation arrived the same week a federal court ruled on House v. NCAA, allowing schools to directly pay athletes. That makes the apparel money less critical to athlete compensation but more valuable for off-books recruiting leverage. Schools will pay athletes openly, but apparel deals can still add undisclosed margin that tilts close recruiting battles. The loophole just became more valuable because it's one of the few compensation channels that won't appear in mandated school disclosures when direct payments begin.

The takeaway
Apparel companies route NIL cash through third parties to avoid compliance tracking, creating a **$200 million** recruiting advantage at blue bloods that rivals can't see.
nilncaanikeadidascomplianceapparel
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