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Sports Edge · Intelligence Desk LOUIS XIII

Kevin Durant launches $2M Nike-backed NIL program for Texas basketball

Former Longhorn's program funds roster stipends, builds template for athlete-led collegiate infrastructure.

Published May 9, 2026 Source University of Texas Athletics From the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
University of Texas Athletics
SILVER · May 9, 2026
LOUIS XIII · May 9, 2026

Kevin Durant launches $2M Nike-backed NIL program for Texas basketball

Former Longhorn's program funds roster stipends, builds template for athlete-led collegiate infrastructure.

Kevin Durant announced a multi-year NIL program for University of Texas basketball Wednesday, backed by Nike and structured to deliver direct payments to current Longhorn players. The program—named "35 For Texas," referencing Durant's jersey number—will distribute an estimated $2 million annually across the men's and women's rosters, with Nike providing apparel inventory and co-branding rights. Durant, who played one season at Texas in 2006-07 before entering the NBA draft, becomes the highest-profile former collegiate athlete to fund an ongoing NIL apparatus at his alma mater.

The structure is straightforward: each scholarship player receives a base quarterly stipend in exchange for social media posts featuring Nike product and program branding. Walk-ons receive half-rate. The deal runs three years with a renewal option tied to Texas's postseason performance. Nike supplies custom colorways of Durant's signature shoe line for team distribution, creating a secondary resale market Texas compliance staff will monitor but not restrict. Durant's Boardroom media company will produce behind-the-scenes content for the program's YouTube channel, with ad revenue split 70-30 in favor of Texas Athletics. The structure mirrors professional athlete foundation models but lives inside the university's NIL collective, Texas One Fund, avoiding the legal ambiguity that has plagued booster-led collectives in other conferences.

The timing is deliberate. Texas joins the SEC in July, entering a conference where NIL spending already exceeds $15 million annually at top programs. Durant's program gives Texas a marquee recruiting talking point—direct funding from an NBA champion—while Nike secures pipeline access to future draft picks in a sport where Adidas controls 60% of current Power Five rosters. For Durant, the reputational upside is clean: he's funding education-adjacent payments, not buying recruits, a distinction that matters as Congress debates federal NIL regulation. The program also positions him for future booster-network expansion if Texas pursues football-specific NIL scaling, where Alabama and Georgia currently operate $10 million+ annual budgets.

Three second-order effects matter more than the headline number. First, Nike now has formal co-branding rights with a major public university's NIL program, creating precedent for apparel companies to fund collectives directly rather than through third-party booster groups. Second, Durant's involvement legitimizes the athlete-as-infrastructure model—other NBA and NFL players with seven-figure net worths are watching to see if this generates measurable recruiting ROI for Texas. Third, the program's compliance structure, reviewed by Texas's general counsel and filed with the NCAA, effectively becomes a template for how universities can accept external NIL funding without triggering pay-for-play violations. That template is worth more than the $2 million annual budget.

Watch Texas's recruiting haul in the 2025 class—assistant coach Rodney Terry has four official visits scheduled for November, all with five-star guards who fit the program's backcourt-heavy roster construction. Nike's next quarterly earnings call in January will signal whether the company views this as a one-off or the start of a broader collegiate investment strategy. And watch for Boardroom's content output: if Durant's media team produces 20+ episodes in Year One, the program is serious. If it's three videos and a hype reel, this is PR.

Texas tips off SEC play in January against Kentucky, a program whose NIL collective is funded by hospital network money and operates with no celebrity endorsement. Durant will sit courtside. The recruiting targets will notice.

The takeaway
Durant's **$2M** Nike-backed Texas NIL program sets template for athlete-funded collectives and gives apparel brands direct university co-branding access.
niltexasnikebasketballkevin durantsec
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