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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type |
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Nike Inc | NYSE:NKE | NYSE | Common Stock |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
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2.11 | 2.34% | 92.45 | 92.45 | 90.91 | 91.16 | 7,338,566 | 01:00:00 |
By Sara Germano
Adidas AG is facing its second Big Ten loss of the year.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison has agreed to terms of a proposed 10-year contract between the school and Under Armour Inc. in which the sportswear maker would provide about $2.5 million annually in shoes and apparel to the school's 23 athletic teams, according to documents posted online by the university's Board of Regents.
The board is expected to vote on the matter on Friday. If passed, the Badgers would join the University of Michigan's Wolverines in dropping Adidas AG this year. Over the summer, the University of Michigan signed a new outfitting deal with Nike Inc. instead of renewing its contract with Adidas, which has partnered with the Wolverines since 2008. The Nike contract will take effect next year.
An Adidas spokeswoman said the company declined to renew its current deal with the Badgers.
"We evaluate our partnerships and investments to ensure they provide a high value to our brand," Adidas spokeswoman Maria Culp said in an email. "We will continue to build partnerships with universities that inspire young athletes by reflecting creativity, innovation and a high performance culture."
The University of Wisconsin-Madison would also become the third Big Ten school to sign with Under Armour, after Northwestern University and the University of Maryland, the alma mater of the company's founder and chief executive, Kevin Plank. The terms of the proposed agreement would take effect in July 2016, after the current contract with Adidas expires.
The university's Board of Regents declined to comment. Under Armour didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
Adidas has been mounting a significant marketing campaign in recent months to sign endorsements and outfitting deals with prominent U.S. sports assets, as a means to recapture declining sales in the world's biggest sportswear market.
While Adidas is a German brand, two of its most prominent executives have Wisconsin ties. The company's North American division president, Mark King, is a Green Bay, Wis, native and an alumnus of the University of Wisconsin's Green Bay campus. Eric Liedtke, Adidas's global brands president and a candidate to succeed the current chief executive, graduated from the university's Madison campus.
According to the board's agenda, the University of Wisconsin's athletics, legal affairs, and trademark licensing departments met with "several shoe and apparel companies" over the past few months before reaching an agreement with Under Armour.
The Badgers have more than two dozen NCAA titles across several Division-I sports, according to the athletic department website. Most recently, the Wisconsin basketball team upset an undefeated University of Kentucky in this spring's Final Four college basketball tournament to advance to the NCAA Finals, where the Badgers lost to Duke University.
Write to Sara Germano at sara.germano@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 08, 2015 16:58 ET (20:58 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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