University of Utah athletic director Mark Harlan held substantive conversations with Nike before inking an eight-year, $90 million apparel contract with Adidas in November, according to strategic partnership documents filed with the university's executive committee. The process began in April 2024 when Under Armour notified Utah it would not renew their $6.3 million annual deal set to expire June 2025.
Harlan's department built a three-tier evaluation framework: brand equity in western markets, cash-versus-product mix, and willingness to accelerate payments ahead of the Big 12 transition. Nike entered formal discussions in June. Adidas closed in September. The final Adidas structure delivers $11.25 million annually—78% higher than the expiring Under Armour rate—with $32 million front-loaded into the first three years. Nike's last written proposal, submitted in late August, structured payments more evenly across the term and included performance escalators tied to CFP appearances. Utah chose guaranteed money.
The timing matters for two constituencies. First, Big 12 sponsors watching whether Utah can command power-conference rates without the PAC-12 media halo. The Adidas number lands $2.8 million above Kansas and $1.1 million below TCU, both comp programs in the new league. Second, Nike's campus development team, which now holds nine of fourteen Big 12 schools but lost the one program that could have justified a premium for Swoosh density in the Mountain time zone. Utah's Olympic sports alumni network—seventeen medalists since 2008—wanted Nike. Harlan wanted the check.
Adidas gains a marquee campus in a recruit-rich corridor and a football program that signed four ESPN 300 prospects in February. The German brand also locks Utah's volleyball and gymnastics programs, both top-ten nationally, into Adidas Performance apparel ahead of a 2026 NCAA tournament hosting cycle that puts 12,000 seats in the Huntsman Center on broadcasts. Under Armour, meanwhile, exits its last PAC-12 legacy account and now sponsors zero power-conference programs west of Lubbock.
Watch for Utah's first Adidas uniform reveal during spring football in April, when the program typically unveils alternate kits to juice season-ticket deposits. Adidas is expected to retain Harlan's preferred red-white-black palette but will introduce a new typeface and possibly a throwback helmet honoring the 1994 team. Nike's loss also opens a question in Eugene, where Oregon's $13.6 million annual deal comes up for renewal in 2027 and where Phil Knight's checkbook no longer guarantees automatic extensions. The Ducks' compliance office has already received inquiries from two other apparel brands about future timing.
Harlan closed the Adidas deal three weeks before Utah played its final game as a PAC-12 member. The wire transfer for year one cleared on November 18. He spent Thanksgiving in Herzogenaurach.