Steph Curry ended his partnership with Under Armour and signed with Li-Ning, the China-based athletic brand that posted $4.3 billion in revenue last year, according to Retail Dive. The move gives Li-Ning an NBA Finals MVP and a household name to anchor its U.S. retail expansion, while Curry gains equity upside in a brand still building distribution stateside.
Li-Ning structured the deal to include signature footwear and apparel lines launching in Q3 2025, with retail placement confirmed at Dick's Sporting Goods and a direct-to-consumer site targeting U.S. zip codes. The brand plans to open 12 U.S. flagship stores by year-end, per Retail Dive, using Curry's name recognition to secure co-op marketing dollars and endcap real estate that challenger brands rarely command.
The mechanism is credibility arbitrage. A tier-one athlete endorsement transforms a foreign or emerging brand into a peer of Nike and Adidas in the eyes of buyers at national sporting goods chains. Retail Dive reports that Li-Ning's U.S. wholesale orders increased 38 percent in the six months following the Curry announcement, driven by retailers hedging their athletic footwear mix and consumers willing to try a non-legacy brand if it carries an athlete they trust. The deal also activates a halo effect: Li-Ning's basketball gear now shares visual space with Curry's on-court performance, creating implied endorsement across the entire category.
Small physical-product brands can run the same play without an NBA contract. Identify a micro-influencer or credible professional in your category who is under-monetized by legacy competitors—think a nationally ranked CrossFit athlete, a sponsored trail runner with 15,000 engaged followers, or a working chef with a James Beard nomination but no cookware deal. Offer a revenue-share structure instead of a flat fee: 2-4 percent of sales driven by a unique promo code or affiliate link, plus product seeding for organic content. Draft a one-page term sheet that grants you exclusive category rights (no competing endorsements) and guarantees the athlete a co-branded SKU within six months. Budget $800-$1,200 for initial product seeding, creative assets, and a simple Shopify landing page that names the athlete above the fold. Use the partnership to pitch wholesale buyers at regional chains—your sell sheet now leads with the athlete's photo and results, not your logo. The credibility transfer is immediate: a buyer sees a known name and assumes your product has been vetted.
The broader pattern is partnership as distribution lever. Li-Ning did not sign Curry to sell more shoes online; it signed him to unlock shelf space, co-op budgets, and retailer confidence that American consumers would accept a Chinese athletic brand. For a small brand, the right influencer or professional endorsement does not drive awareness as much as it forces downstream decision-makers—buyers, press, retail partners—to take the product seriously. The next move is to identify who your category's Steph Curry is before a competitor does, and to structure the deal so both parties win only when the product ships.