Kyrie Irving’s multi-million dollar sponsorship deal with Nike is finished, the sportswear company said Monday, after the basketball megastar became embroiled in an anti-Semitism row.
The tie-up, reportedly worth around $11 million to the athlete, was one of the largest in the sporting world, and its dissolution comes as companies increasingly face pressure over the views of their star signings.
“Kyrie Irving is no longer a Nike athlete,” a spokesman for the company told AFP in a one-line email.
The sponsorship deal was thrown into doubt in October after the Brooklyn Nets’ point guard posted a link to the film “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake up Black America” — a 2018 film widely condemned for containing a range of anti-Semitic tropes.
Despite pressure applied on him publicly by the NBA outfit, Irving refused to apologize, and was suspended for eight games, forfeiting millions of dollars in salary.
In early November, Nike said it was suspending its relationship with Irving, and was pulling the “Kyrie 8” shoe that had been due for release last month.
Anyone who has even spent their hard earned money on anything I have ever released, I consider you FAMILY and we are forever connected.
it’s time to show how powerful we are as a community.🤞🏾♾
— Chief Hélà 🤞🏾 (@KyrieIrving) December 5, 2022
Irving took to Twitter on Monday, replying to a journalist who wrote about the Nike rupture with a GIF of the words “Let the party begin”.
Hours later, he also posted: “Anyone who has even spent their hard earned money on anything I have ever released, I consider you FAMILY and we are forever connected. It’s time to show how powerful we are as a community.”
In the wake of his initial post, Irving was pulled from the Nets roster, with the team citing his “failure to disavow anti-Semitism” either on social media or in meetings with reporters.
In an interview several weeks later, he insisted he was not anti-Semitic.
“I just really want to focus on the hurt that I caused or the impact that I made within the Jewish community, putting some type of threat, or assumed threat, on the Jewish community,” Irving told SportsNet New York.
“I just want to apologize deeply for all my actions for the time that it has been since the post was first put up.”
Irving, whose deal with the Nets is worth $37 million a year, did not play home games with the team for the first few months of 2022 because he is not vaccinated against COVID-19.
New York City workplace rules at the time mandated vaccines for employees.
The Nets initially said he would not be allowed back into the squad until he could play full time, but later relented and he was selected for road games.
News of Irving’s split with Nike comes days after Kanye West doubled down on his fierce anti-Semitism, using a three-hour appearance on the InfoWars stream to proclaim his “love” of Nazis and his admiration for Adolf Hitler.
West has seen several multi-million dollar sponsorship deals — including one with Adidas — evaporate as his comments on Jewish people have become ever-more outlandish.
West was accompanied on the show by Nick Fuentes, the white nationalist with whom he was hosted for dinner at Mar-A-Lago by former president Donald Trump a week earlier.
Trump’s tenure in the White House was marked by an increase in reports of racist attacks, and the open display of symbols of racial hatred, including amongst his own supporters.