NIL
3 Arts Acquires A&A Management Group, Expanding Footprint In Sports
Leading management and production company 3 Arts Entertainment has acquired A&A Management Group, expanding in sports and naming A&A founders Aaron and André Eanes partners. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. A&A, which focuses on professional athlete representation and brand-building, will join 3 Arts’ deep bench in talent management and production spanning actors, writers, […]


Leading management and production company 3 Arts Entertainment has acquired A&A Management Group, expanding in sports and naming A&A founders Aaron and André Eanes partners.
Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.
A&A, which focuses on professional athlete representation and brand-building, will join 3 Arts’ deep bench in talent management and production spanning actors, writers, directors, comedians and creators as well as athletes.
Founded in Cleveland, Ohio, in 2011, A&A curates individualized strategies with clients including three-time Super Bowl Champion Travis Kelce, NBA stars Jonathan Kuminga and Nah’Shon “Bones” Hyland, and NFL players Denzel Ward, Joe Haden, and Sports Illustrated model Camille Kostek. Its work extends across media, fashion, business, and philanthropy, securing partnerships with global brands like Amazon, Experian, Louis Vuitton and State Farm.
“Athletes are no longer defined solely by their performance, they are shaping culture, launching businesses, and building brands that resonate far beyond the world of sports,” said 3 Arts Entertainment co-CEOs, Brian Weinstein and Michael Rotenberg. “Aaron and André possess a unique understanding of the evolution of the entertainment industry, converging sports, culture, and entrepreneurship. Their experience shaping careers offers invaluable perspective as we develop new relationships.”
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“Athletes and talent today are more than just one thing—they’re entrepreneurs, brands, and leaders,” said Aaron Eanes. “3 Arts’ expertise in talent management and production, combined with our expertise in brand building and sports, gives our clients the resources and guidance they need to thrive in today’s changing marketplace. Together, our shared vision is to empower talent to maximize their impact, wherever their ambitions take them.”
“3 Arts is the right partner for us because they share our commitment to nurturing talent and unleashing creativity,” said André Eanes. “The firm’s track record in representing top-tier artists and storytellers and their global resources and reputation gives our team the ideal platform to innovate and develop new opportunities for our clients.”
3 Arts, which is majority owned by Lionsgate Studios, manages a high-profile client roster and has backed shows from Hacks to The Office, Parks & Recreation, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, and Oscar-winning film American Fiction.
Sports is as hot as its ever been in a shifting media landscape with new streaming partners pushing up the cost of broadcast rights, and strong ratings a boon for advertising. In other recent news, Patrick Whitesell launched WIN Sports Group, a football representation firm built for athletes, coaches and leaders in the field. And WME will spin out WME Basketball into a new company owned by Ari Emanuel, Mark Shapiro and Bill Duffy.
NIL
Tennessee agrees to apparel deal with adidas, set to leave Nike
As its agreement with Nike gets ready to expire, Tennessee is going back to its former apparel partner. The school agreed to a new deal with adidas, On3’s Brett McMurphy has confirmed, as first reported by ESPN’s Chris Low. Tennessee left adidas in 2014 to sign with Nike, and the amended deal runs through 2026. […]

As its agreement with Nike gets ready to expire, Tennessee is going back to its former apparel partner. The school agreed to a new deal with adidas, On3’s Brett McMurphy has confirmed, as first reported by ESPN’s Chris Low.
Tennessee left adidas in 2014 to sign with Nike, and the amended deal runs through 2026. Through the partnership, the university is set to receive $1.2 million in base compensation in 2025-26 and $4.5 million in annual product allotment.
UT initially signed its deal with Nike in 2014, and the original contract paid the school $7.6 million through 2022-23. However, the amendment increased that figure to 11.6 million over 11 years and increased the scheduled payment to $1.2 million for the final three years of the agreement, starting in 2023-24.
Tennessee is the latest high-profile addition to adidas’ school partners. The company signed an agreement with Texas A&M in 2022 worth more than $47 million over five years, according to Sports Business Journal, and $3 million per year in base compensation.
Texas Tech also secured a 10-year partnership with adidas in 2024 that includes $50 million in total product allotment. Additionally, former Red Raiders star Patrick Mahomes – who has an endorsement deal with adidas – partnered with the school on an NIL initiative. Six athletes signed with “Team Mahomes” as part of NIL deals.
The inaugural list of “Team Mahomes” athletes included five-star receiver Micah Hudson, USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year NiJaree Canady and women’s basketball leading scorer Jasmine Shavers. Men’s golfer Matthew Comegys, women’s soccer star Sam Courtwright and Freshman All-American baseball player TJ Pompey rounded out the group.
Full terms of the endorsement contracts were not made available; however, the six athletes participated in brand marketing campaigns. That included marketing Mahomes’ signature shoe and apparel line with adidas.
NIL
Inside Adidas plans for Tennessee athletics in blockbuster 10
AI-assisted summary Tennessee will switch from Nike to Adidas for its athletic apparel in 2026, marking a significant shift in college sports branding. The 10-year deal aims to position UT as Adidas’ flagship program, similar to Oregon’s relationship with Nike, and includes a groundbreaking NIL program. Adidas plans to leverage UT athletes in national marketing […]

- Tennessee will switch from Nike to Adidas for its athletic apparel in 2026, marking a significant shift in college sports branding.
- The 10-year deal aims to position UT as Adidas’ flagship program, similar to Oregon’s relationship with Nike, and includes a groundbreaking NIL program.
- Adidas plans to leverage UT athletes in national marketing campaigns and offer NIL opportunities across all sports, including a signature shoe line.
University of Tennessee athletics will switch from Nike to Adidas in 2026 as its official apparel supplier in a blockbuster 10-year deal that plans to make the Vols the brand’s flagship college program while paying its athletes for their name, image and likeness.
In short, Tennessee will be to Adidas what Oregon is to Nike and Notre Dame is to Under Armour.
And Adidas has big plans beyond that. They include a broader collection of fan gear, stocking stores year-round with new team apparel, marketing campaigns featuring UT athletes and a line of Vols signature shoes.
“We’ve been trying to do this for the past decade, so it’s exciting that we’re finally here,” Chris McGuire, Adidas Vice President of Sports Marketing, told Knox News.
Adidas apparently made an offer too good for UT to refuse, and Nike didn’t counter.
“My best guess would be that Adidas’ offer was so strong that (Nike) chose not to (make a counter offer),” UT athletics director Danny White told Knox News on Aug. 13, the day the deal was announced.
Neither Adidas nor UT disclosed financial terms of the deal because its unique structure would provide a competitive advantage if revealed, a UT spokesperson said.
“It’s important for our fans to know that it’s not just about the money. It’s about partnering with the right brand,” White said. “But it’s one of the biggest deals in the history of college sports. We will be the flagship to Adidas.”
Adidas will become UT’s official footwear, uniform, apparel and sideline partner, beginning July 1, 2026. It had previously served as the Vols’ apparel provider from 1995 to 2015.
Now Adidas is back with its groundbreaking NIL program, which signs high school and college players for major marketing campaigns. The brand wants to feature UT nationwide and offer NIL opportunities for athletes in all 20 sports for the Vols.
“Tennessee has always been a priority for us,” McGuire said. “Knowing there was an opportunity to start conversations with them, we jumped on that immediately.”
Who will design Tennessee’s Adidas uniforms?
Nike will remain the Vols’ apparel and uniform supplier for the 2025-26 academic year while UT prepares for the switch to Adidas.
UT designs its own uniforms in house and collaborates with the brand to bring them to the field, the court and official team stores.
That doesn’t guarantee that fans will like every uniform design. But it does ensure that UT won’t be caught off guard by a color scheme or design that it did not intend. That independence was a precondition for any UT apparel provider.
“From day one of these conversations, Adidas has assured us that the existing design ethos of Tennessee athletics is critically important to their ambitions for our brand,” said Alicia Longworth, UT deputy AD/chief marketing officer.
How Adidas could pay Tennessee athletes for NIL
The change from Nike to Adidas could be a divisive decision among UT fans.
During the previous partnership, there were highs like the Vols wearing Adidas football jerseys during the 1998 national title season. And there were lows like the awkward uniform designs during sub-par football seasons late in the Adidas era.
But the lucrative Adidas contract will help fund UT’s revenue sharing pool to pay athletes.
Plus, Adidas prioritizes college sports, so it could open doors to national branding campaigns for elite UT athletes with signature NIL deals. At Nike, most of those opportunities were reserved for NFL and NBA players.
That’s a new concept in the NIL era, where schools can facilitate corporate contracts for their athletes. National campaigns then feature those college athletes in ways they couldn’t do in the previous era.
“Obviously, we’ll always have the big school relationship. But it’s great to use different marketing campaigns in and around campus (featuring UT athletes)” said McGuire, an Adidas executive for the past 26 years.
“Some will go national, depending on who they are. Some will be regional campaigns. And if it’s a new football jersey or basketball jersey that needs to be sold, we’ll use athletes there on campus, and they’ll be compensated.”
Vols signature shoes and other NIL opportunities
Adidas is a leader in NIL because it dove headfirst into the industry once it was adopted by the NCAA in 2021. And the company has remained aggressive in the NIL space.
Adidas is already working to land NIL deals with current UT athletes.
Once the partnership begins in July 2026, every UT athlete will be eligible to participate in Adidas’ NIL Ambassador Network, which touts more than 12,000 college athletes who earn a percentage of the sales they drive for key products and campaigns.
The NIL Ambassador Network is only available to athletes at Adidas-partnered Division I schools.
Adidas’ NIL approach is different for each school it partners with, and that’ll be the case for UT.
At Texas Tech, Adidas created “Team Mahomes,” an NIL squad featuring NFL MVP quarterback Patrick Mahomes of the Kansas City Chiefs alongside six high-profile athletes from different sports at his alma mater. That could provide a blueprint for Adidas’ NIL plan at UT.
Texas A&M, Miami, Nebraska, Mississippi State, Kansas, Washington, Indiana and Arizona State are among other Adidas schools. They were featured with school-specific signature shoes in Adidas’ College Collection, which will include Tennessee in a future design.
“Tennessee will be in that mix (in a signature shoe collection) in the future,” McGuire, the Adidas VP, said. “We do different renditions of footwear throughout the course of the year – some more lifestyle, some more performance driven.
“So believe me, Tennessee will have their fair share of everything we have to offer.”
How Lady Vols legend Candace Parker impacts Adidas deal
UT already has a signature former athlete at Adidas in Lady Vols legend Candace Parker, the president of its women’s basketball division. Before Parker earned two WNBA MVP awards and two Olympic gold medals, she led the Lady Vols to NCAA titles in 2007 and 2008.
Parker helped facilitate the Adidas deal with UT, and she will have a voice in the brand’s marketing strategy with her alma mater.
“Candace has been a great partner of ours, obviously, from her days at Tennessee. I hear from Candace a lot on the importance of the Volunteer nation and how it would be great if we were back to being partners,” McGuire said.
“We use Candace quite a bit in the background to help facilitate some different ideas that we can bring to the university. (She) was able to share some great insights for us across all (Tennessee) sports.”
How dropping Nike could impact Vols recruiting
Traditionally, athletes have considered the apparel brand when choosing a school. In fact, a decade ago, it was common for a recruit to have that as a top priority, and Nike was a popular choice.
That’s undoubtedly still true for some athletes, but those instances are dwindling.
In the NIL era, the school’s apparel brand has slid down the priority list in recent years. Instead, the highest priority is now player pay, and by a wide margin. Athletes want to know how much money they can earn in NIL and direct school-to-player pay.
In theory, UT should fund a more talented roster with increased revenue from Adidas or, at least, leverage the partnership to land touted prospects.
Adidas has been aggressive in signing some of the nation’s top high school athletes in hopes of continuing that relationship in college and the pros. UT recruits many of those same players.
How Tennessee let Nike go after 12 years
UT’s contract with Nike runs through June 30, 2026, according to the amendment provided by the university to Knox News.
The deal was initially set to run through 2023, but former AD Dave Hart signed an extension through the 2025-26 academic year.
Nike is scheduled to pay Tennessee $1.2 million in base compensation in 2025-26, with an annual product allotment of $4.5 million. UT gets an annual Nike ELITE credit of $100,000 for the athletics department and an additional $100,000 for football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and administration.
Per the contract, UT and Nike began negotiations for extending the deal in late 2024. But that exclusive negotiating window ended March 30.
That’s when Adidas and other brands came into the picture. Nike could’ve matched the highest bid, but it balked on that opportunity.
The Vols are a popular brand in college sports. They have an enormous fan base and enjoy the widespread exposure of the SEC. That made UT a coveted client, and Adidas submitted a bid that wouldn’t be beaten.
Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Emailadam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.
Get the latest news and insight on SEC football by subscribing to the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.
NIL
Soccer Hosting Holy Cross (Ind.) Thursday Afternoon for Exhibition
The Ball State soccer team plays in its second and final exhibition of the 2025 season when it hosts Holy Cross (Ind.) at 4 p.m. on Thursday at the Briner Sports Complex. The Cardinals played Wright State on Sunday and will open up the regular season at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 17 against Purdue […]

The Cardinals played Wright State on Sunday and will open up the regular season at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 17 against Purdue in Muncie.
Thursday’s promotion is Faculty Appreciation Day, where nominated professors will be recognized at halftime.
Head coach Andy Stoots enters his first season leading the program after recent stints at Missouri and Louisville.
NIL
Adidas deal could land 5-star recruit Tristen Keys
While University of Tennessee was mulling a lucrative offer from Adidas this spring, Tristen Keys, the No. 1 wide receiver recruit in the nation, was doing the same. There’s a chance they could join forces under the Adidas umbrella now that both UT and the blue-chip prospect have signed with the apparel brand. On Aug. […]

While University of Tennessee was mulling a lucrative offer from Adidas this spring, Tristen Keys, the No. 1 wide receiver recruit in the nation, was doing the same.
There’s a chance they could join forces under the Adidas umbrella now that both UT and the blue-chip prospect have signed with the apparel brand.
On Aug. 13, UT announced a 10-year deal with Adidas, beginning in 2026, to become the Vols’ official apparel partner.
On June 8, Adidas announced it had signed Keys to a name, image and likeness contract, continuing its strategy to aggressively land elite high school recruits before they choose a college.
“When we think about our core consumer, they know about that kid, that top high school athlete, more than ever,” Chris McGuire, Adidas Vice President of Sports Marketing, told Knox News when referring to the company’s approach to NIL for high school athletes.
“Social (media) has led all these individual athletes to have their own platform to talk to larger fan bases. They are becoming individuals that kids look up to in their sport.”
How 5-star QB Faizon Brandon can land Tristen Keys
In March, Keys committed to LSU, a Nike school. But it’s been widely reported that he is considering flipping his commitment to Tennessee, Miami or Texas A&M. All three will be Adidas schools when UT joins the fold in July 2026.
Keys is a 6-foot-3, 180-pounder from Hattiesburg, Mississippi. The five-star recruit is ranked the No. 1 wide receiver and No. 6 prospect overall in the 2026 class, according to 247Sports Composite.
Tennessee commitment Faizon Brandon, a five-star quarterback, has been trying to convince Keys to flip to the Vols. Notably, Brandon wore bright orange Adidas cleats during a recent high school practice.
It hinted that Brandon and Keys could be fellow Adidas ambassadors as well as future teammates.
That would be a dream pairing for the Vols. It’s only a fantasy unless Keys commits to UT, and there’s no timetable for that potential announcement.
But UT’s deal with Adidas is an encouraging sign for the Vols landing Keys, a centerpiece of the shoe brand’s collection of high school athletes.
What Adidas says about impact on recruiting via NIL
Whether UT can flip Keys won’t define Adidas’ impact on Vols recruiting. But it’s a timely peek into the triangulation that goes into landing premier prospects in the NIL era.
The university matters. The brand and its NIL package matters. And the recruit considers both.
Typically, players wear the shoe brand under contract to their school. In the NIL era, that might change as athletes sign with brands not partnered with their school.
But it’s much easier, and perhaps more financially beneficial to the athlete, if the athlete and school are contracted to the same brand.
Adidas is a leader in NIL because it dove headfirst into the industry once it was adopted by the NCAA in 2021. The company has remained aggressive in the NIL space, and but there’s plenty of competition by other apparel brands like Nike and Under Armour.
Adidas knows its impact on recruiting through NIL is a selling point to potential
“What we want to do is make sure we have a strong base of NIL athletes under contract, and then our college coaches know that they are comfortable talking to them,” McGuire said. “At the end of the day, it’s up to that kid to make that choice of what school they want to attend.”
Adidas is already trying to sign current UT athletes to NIL deals.
Once the partnership begins in July 2026, every UT athlete will be eligible to participate in Adidas’ NIL Ambassador Network, which touts more than 12,000 college athletes who earn a percentage of the sales they drive for key products and campaigns.
The NIL Ambassador Network is only available to athletes at Adidas-partnered Division I schools. It’s part of Adidas’ attempt to lock up athletes from high school to college and possibly professional ranks.
Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Email adam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.
Get the latest news and insight on SEC football by subscribing to the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.
NIL
PROP approves double first base rule in Division I softball
Story Links The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Wednesday approved requiring a double first base to be implemented in softball for the 2025-26 academic year for Division I. Implementation in Divisions II and III will be delayed until 2026-27. After a thorough discussion in June, the NCAA Softball Rules Committee made […]

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Wednesday approved requiring a double first base to be implemented in softball for the 2025-26 academic year for Division I. Implementation in Divisions II and III will be delayed until 2026-27.
After a thorough discussion in June, the NCAA Softball Rules Committee made the recommendation in an effort to better define a running lane between home plate and first base. This can help umpires make calls when deciding whether the offensive player interfered with a defensive player’s ability to catch a throw.
Video review
The panel approved a measure that allows a team to retain a video review challenge if the call on the field is overturned.
If a game goes into extra innings, all remaining challenges will carry over.
Other tweaks to the video review system include:
- A video challenge will be allowed if interference (including collisions) is not called on the field and the ball remains live.
- Interference called on the field will not be reviewable, and all base runners will remain at the bases they were occupying. The exceptions to nonreviewable interference calls will be spectator and batter interference.
- A “no catch” call within the infield will be reviewable only if it results in the third out with runners on base or any time with the batter/runner only. However, a catch call within the infield area is not reviewable at any time.
- If video review is conducted on-site by the crew chief, the monitors should not be within any team area. At least one umpire should remain on the field during a video review.
- During a video review, the defensive team will remain on the field and can huddle or warm up. Offensive players can leave the batter’s box, the bases and the on-deck circle. However, once the umpire returns with the decision on the video review, both teams must be ready to play. If there is a defensive delay, a ball will be added to the count. If there is an offensive delay, a strike will be added to the count.
Other rules changes:
- One-way electronic communication devices may be used by offensive players. Communication can originate from the dugouts or coaches boxes.
- All protests will be resolved during the game. Games will no longer be played “under protest,” awaiting postgame decisions by the NCAA secretary-rules editor for softball.
- Once a play is under video review, replays of the play can be shown at any speed on the in-game video board.
Rescinded proposal
After reviewing comments from the membership, the NCAA Softball Rules Committee rescinded a proposal that if a hitter has one foot completely out of the batter’s box or stepping on the plate while contacting a pitch, an immediate dead ball would be called.
The rule remains that if any part of a batter’s body is touching home plate or on the ground outside the lines of the batter’s box at the moment of bat-and-ball contact, a delayed dead ball is signaled. The coach of the defensive team can choose either the result of the play or the standard effect for illegal contact, which is a strike on the batter and all base runners having to return to the base legally occupied at the time of the pitch. If the standard effect for illegal contact is chosen and it is the third strike, the batter is declared out.
Obstruction rule
During its meeting in June, the NCAA Softball Rules Committee clarified the obstruction rule.
Obstruction occurs when a defensive player, neither in possession of the ball nor in the act of fielding a batted ball, impedes a batter’s attempt to make contact with a pitch or impedes the progress of any runner who is legally running bases on a live ball. It can be intentional or unintentional.
It is obstruction when a defensive player, while not in possession of the ball, does one of the following:
- Blocks any part of the leading edge of first, second or third base or home plate (as defined).
- Otherwise blocks the runner from advancing or returning to a base.
The defensive player is not considered obstructing if the player is in possession of the ball or if the movement or position of the defensive player did not impede or alter the runner’s path to a base or home plate.
Notes:
- Once in possession of the ball, the defensive player can be positioned between the runner and the base/plate.
- Obstruction may be ruled even though there is no physical contact.
- Obstruction can occur on a force or tag play.
- Blocking the leading edge of the base constitutes obstruction unless the runner’s ability to reach the base is not hindered.
- If the base runner would have been out, regardless of the defensive player’s movement or positioning, the runner would remain out, and the obstruction would be ignored.
NIL
Tennessee football
AI-assisted summary Top-ranked 2026 wide receiver recruit Tristen Keys, already signed with Adidas, is considering flipping his commitment from LSU to Tennessee, an Adidas school starting in 2026. Tennessee’s 10-year apparel deal with Adidas may influence Keys’ decision, as it aligns with his existing NIL contract. Five-star quarterback and Tennessee commit Faizon Brandon is actively […]

- Top-ranked 2026 wide receiver recruit Tristen Keys, already signed with Adidas, is considering flipping his commitment from LSU to Tennessee, an Adidas school starting in 2026.
- Tennessee’s 10-year apparel deal with Adidas may influence Keys’ decision, as it aligns with his existing NIL contract.
- Five-star quarterback and Tennessee commit Faizon Brandon is actively recruiting Keys, adding another layer to the Vols’ pursuit.
While University of Tennessee was mulling a lucrative offer from Adidas this spring, Tristen Keys, the No. 1 wide receiver recruit in the nation, was doing the same.
There’s a chance they could join forces under the Adidas umbrella now that both UT and the blue-chip prospect have signed with the apparel brand.
On Aug. 13, UT announced a 10-year deal with Adidas, beginning in 2026, to become the Vols’ official apparel partner.
On June 8, Adidas announced it had signed Keys to a name, image and likeness contract, continuing its strategy to aggressively land elite high school recruits before they choose a college.
“When we think about our core consumer, they know about that kid, that top high school athlete, more than ever,” Chris McGuire, Adidas Vice President of Sports Marketing, told Knox News when referring to the company’s approach to NIL for high school athletes.
“Social (media) has led all these individual athletes to have their own platform to talk to larger fan bases. They are becoming individuals that kids look up to in their sport.”
How 5-star QB Faizon Brandon can land Tristen Keys
In March, Keys committed to LSU, a Nike school. But it’s been widely reported that he is considering flipping his commitment to Tennessee, Miami or Texas A&M. All three will be Adidas schools when UT joins the fold in July 2026.
Keys is a 6-foot-3, 180-pounder from Hattiesburg, Mississippi. The five-star recruit is ranked the No. 1 wide receiver and No. 6 prospect overall in the 2026 class, according to 247Sports Composite.
Tennessee commitment Faizon Brandon, a five-star quarterback, has been trying to convince Keys to flip to the Vols. Notably, Brandon wore bright orange Adidas cleats during a recent high school practice.
It hinted that Brandon and Keys could be fellow Adidas ambassadors as well as future teammates.
That would be a dream pairing for the Vols. It’s only a fantasy unless Keys commits to UT, and there’s no timetable for that potential announcement.
But UT’s deal with Adidas is an encouraging sign for the Vols landing Keys, a centerpiece of the shoe brand’s collection of high school athletes.
What Adidas says about impact on recruiting via NIL
Whether UT can flip Keys won’t define Adidas’ impact on Vols recruiting. But it’s a timely peek into the triangulation that goes into landing premier prospects in the NIL era.
The university matters. The brand and its NIL package matters. And the recruit considers both.
Typically, players wear the shoe brand under contract to their school. In the NIL era, that might change as athletes sign with brands not partnered with their school.
But it’s much easier, and perhaps more financially beneficial to the athlete, if the athlete and school are contracted to the same brand.
Adidas is a leader in NIL because it dove headfirst into the industry once it was adopted by the NCAA in 2021. The company has remained aggressive in the NIL space, and but there’s plenty of competition by other apparel brands like Nike and Under Armour.
Adidas knows its impact on recruiting through NIL is a selling point to potential
“What we want to do is make sure we have a strong base of NIL athletes under contract, and then our college coaches know that they are comfortable talking to them,” McGuire said. “At the end of the day, it’s up to that kid to make that choice of what school they want to attend.”
Adidas is already trying to sign current UT athletes to NIL deals.
Once the partnership begins in July 2026, every UT athlete will be eligible to participate in Adidas’ NIL Ambassador Network, which touts more than 12,000 college athletes who earn a percentage of the sales they drive for key products and campaigns.
The NIL Ambassador Network is only available to athletes at Adidas-partnered Division I schools. It’s part of Adidas’ attempt to lock up athletes from high school to college and possibly professional ranks.
Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Emailadam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.
Get the latest news and insight on SEC football by subscribing to the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.
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