Kevin Durant, the University of Texas, and Nike announced a new NIL program Thursday that funnels structured athlete compensation to Longhorn basketball players through Durant's Boardroom media company. The program—unnamed in the initial release—marks the first time a major apparel brand has formalized a three-party NIL arrangement with an alumnus intermediary at a top-25 basketball program.
Texas did not disclose payment amounts. Durant attended Texas for one season in 2006-07 before entering the NBA draft. Nike has supplied Texas athletics since 2000 under a contract that runs through 2031 and pays the university roughly $15 million annually in cash and product. The new NIL layer does not alter that base deal but creates a parallel funding line for current players, structured as individual marketing agreements rather than team-wide salary. Boardroom, which Durant co-founded in 2019 with Rich Kleiman, will handle contract administration and content production.
The arrangement solves two problems for Nike. First, it allows the company to attach its logo to NIL payments without triggering NCAA rules that still prohibit direct school-sponsor-athlete deals in revenue sports. Second, it uses Durant's Texas credential to launder what would otherwise look like pay-for-play into a defensible "brand alignment" narrative. For Texas, the program adds recruiting ammunition in a Big 12 conference where Kansas, Baylor, and Houston are all competing for the same four-star guards who now expect six-figure NIL packages before signing letters of intent.
Durant's involvement is not purely symbolic. Boardroom has 31 employees and produces original video series, podcasts, and social campaigns for athlete clients. The Texas deal likely includes content commitments—player features, behind-the-scenes footage, branded apparel drops—that justify the marketing spend on Nike's balance sheet. That structure matters because it lets Nike classify the outlay as media expense rather than athlete compensation, preserving flexibility under its existing budget lines. Boardroom takes a management fee, Durant gets associative equity in his alma mater's program, and Texas basketball head coach Rodney Terry gets a recruiting pitch that name-drops both the Swoosh and a two-time NBA Finals MVP.
The timing is precise. Texas opens Big 12 play in January with a roster that includes four incoming freshmen ranked in ESPN's top 100. Those players signed before the NIL program existed, but their families are now watching to see if the structure delivers cash or just press releases. If payments flow cleanly and Boardroom produces even marginal content, expect similar deals at football-first schools where former NFL stars want in. Michael Vick at Virginia Tech, Reggie Bush at USC, and Cam Newton at Auburn have all floated NIL involvement in the past six months. Nike has apparel contracts with all three schools.
The announcement did not specify whether the program covers only basketball or extends to other Texas sports. It also did not name a total funding commitment or per-player cap. Those details will surface when the first athlete posts a Boardroom x Nike x Texas co-branded Instagram story, probably within two weeks. The content quality will tell you whether this is a real program or a one-time PR bundle.
Watch for coordinator hires at rival programs. If Texas pulls a top-15 recruiting class in the spring cycle, assistants at other Nike schools will start calling Beaverton to ask why their players don't have a Durant equivalent. The Swoosh has 31 Division I basketball contracts. Not all of them have alumni with media companies, but several have alumni with enough liquidity to write checks if Nike covers the branding overhead. The model is replicable. The question is whether Nike wants 31 versions of it or just three.
The takeaway
Nike's first three-party NIL deal with Durant and Texas creates a replicable template for apparel brands to fund athlete compensation through alumnus-owned media companies.
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