NIL
Kansas State turning heads with $2.5M NIL power play
When a 6-foot-5 Serbian guard lands $2.5 million to play college ball, it’s not just a signing—it’s a statement. Kansas State basketball has turned heads once again with its aggressive NIL strategy, securing international standout Andrej Kostic with a reported deal worth $2.5 million. The move not only eclipses the Wildcats’ previous record set by […]

When a 6-foot-5 Serbian guard lands $2.5 million to play college ball, it’s not just a signing—it’s a statement.
Kansas State basketball has turned heads once again with its aggressive NIL strategy, securing international standout Andrej Kostic with a reported deal worth $2.5 million. The move not only eclipses the Wildcats’ previous record set by Coleman Hawkins last season, but also cements K-State as a serious player in the escalating arms race of college basketball recruiting.
Advertisement
A New NIL Era at Kansas State
Kostic, who averaged 15.7 points and 5.7 rebounds in Serbia’s U18 league for Dynamic Balkan Bet, enters the Big 12 spotlight under an even brighter microscope than Hawkins did. Hawkins’ $2 million NIL deal in 2024 drew national attention—and criticism—especially when K-State’s performance didn’t meet inflated expectations. “If I could go back, man, I’d definitely do some things differently,” Hawkins admitted in March. The pressure, both internal and external, weighed heavily on him.
Kansas State Wildcats’ guard Brendan Hausen (11) and forward Coleman Hawkins (33) celebrates after winning 61-80 over Iowa State in the Big-12 men’s basketball showdown at Hilton Coliseum on Feb 1, 2025 in Ames, Iowa.© Nirmalendu Majumdar/Ames Tribune / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
But the narrative may shift with Kostic. As the NCAA prepares for a potential revenue-sharing model capped at $20.5 million per school, $2.5 million no longer feels like an outlier. Players like Texas Tech’s JT Toppin are reportedly landing NIL deals upwards of $4 million. In this new financial landscape, Kostic’s price tag reflects not extravagance, but market value.
Advertisement
Jerome Tang’s High-Stakes Blueprint
Head coach Jerome Tang isn’t just building a team—he’s investing in a future. Kostic joins a high-upside recruiting class that includes Akron’s Nate Johnson and Monmouth’s Abdi Bashir. The message is clear: Kansas State is willing to pay for potential. And with the Big 12 growing more competitive, paying to win is becoming a necessity, not a luxury.
Still, the challenge remains—can Kostic perform under the weight of a multi-million dollar spotlight?
As NIL reshapes college sports, K-State fans should ask not if the deal was too much—but whether the program has finally embraced the cost of contention.
Related: South Carolina QB turns heads with latest NIL deal
Related: Proposed bill could force huge pay cuts for most FBS football coaches