Nike is reducing the number of individual equipment endorsement deals with athletes across professional and college football, a pullback visible in NFL locker rooms and NCAA sidelines as competitors layer institutional sponsorships with NIL collective funding. Tennessee announced a ten-year, $250 million switch to Adidas this week—the largest apparel deal in college sports history—structured to include direct payments to athletes through the school's NIL collective, a format Nike has not matched at scale.
The company is signing fewer boot deals with marquee players in both leagues, according to agents and equipment managers interviewed by *The Athletic*. Where Nike once maintained rosters of 40-50 endorsed skill-position players per draft class, that number has contracted by roughly a third over two cycles. The shift is not budget-driven in absolute terms—Nike's total sports marketing spend held flat at $3.8 billion in fiscal 2024—but reflects reallocation toward basketball, global football, and women's sports categories where the company sees better return on incremental dollars. An NFL equipment manager at an NFC contender noted that rookie wide receivers who would have received four-figure boot deals in 2022 are now arriving in camp wearing retail cleats purchased through the league's team store allowance.
The Tennessee deal exposes the structural challenge. Adidas is writing checks that clear two ledgers: the athletic department receives $175 million over ten years for uniforms, coaching apparel, and facilities branding, while the school's Spyre Sports NIL collective distributes the remaining $75 million directly to scholarship athletes as monthly stipends tied to social media posts and community appearances. Nike has institutional contracts with 38 Power Four schools but has not structured a deal to include explicit NIL funding, leaving competitors room to bundle what used to be separate transactions. Alabama, Georgia, and Ohio State—three of Nike's highest-profile college partnerships—now face renewal windows in 2026 and 2027 with NIL collectives seeking eight-figure annual contributions that the athletic departments themselves cannot provide under NCAA rules.
The pullback matters for three constituencies. NFL teams relying on Nike-endorsed players to drive locker room adoption are seeing more fragmented boot walls, which complicates uniform aesthetics in an era when league sponsors pay for cohesive brand presentation. Agents who once counted on $15,000-$40,000 annual boot deals as bridge income for Day 2 and Day 3 draft picks are advising clients to prioritize NIL collective access during recruiting visits, a shift that consolidates leverage at the school level. And family offices evaluating sportswear equities now face a market where Adidas and Under Armour can outbid Nike for institutional relationships by moving spend from athlete endorsements—a line item Nike dominates—to collective partnerships where they have structural flexibility.
The immediate follow-on is Alabama's contract renewal. The Crimson Tide's Nike deal expires June 2026 and is currently valued at $12 million annually, well below Tennessee's new number. Adidas has already scheduled meetings with Alabama's athletic director and Yea Alabama NIL Fund leadership for April, according to two people familiar with the discussions. If Alabama flips, Nike will lose four of the last six national champions as institutional partners. The company's Q3 earnings call in March will likely address whether it plans to compete in the NIL-bundled format or continue separating institutional and athlete spend.
Nike's global football boot pipeline remains dominant, with 68% of Premier League starters wearing Swoosh cleats as of December. The question is whether that lead holds when the next generation of American football talent signs their first professional contract having spent four college years in a rival brand, paid monthly by a rival-funded collective.