Sports x Fashion: Who’s Really Winning?
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 8 October 2025
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
From team-branded fashion shows to tunnel-walk capsules and luxury watch deals, sport and fashion are converging at speed. The NFL has rolled smaller licensing tie-ups into marquee partnerships, while the WNBA is emerging as a fertile ground for inventive brand-player collaborations. But alongside the growth is bloat: logo-slap collections, clearance-rack remnants and fuzzy KPIs.
Senior correspondent Sheena Butler-Young and executive editor Brian Baskin are joined by BoF sports correspondent Mike Sykes to map the deals that resonate and the ones that miss — and how success of these partnerships are being measured beyond the momentary halo.
Key Insights:
- The WNBA is a collaboration engine because players are the drivers, not passengers. “I think the WNBA right now is a breeding ground for some of these deals in part because the players are eager to find these other opportunities to spread their portfolio,” Sykes says. That unlocks new formats: partnerships “not just between teams and brands or the league and brands, but players themselves and the brands [that] manifest in really cool and unique ways.”
- Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) has supercharged women’s sports, and fashion is part of the bargaining. Sheena points out the 2021 shift when “college athletes could not monetise their name, image, or likeness” and then stars like “Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark were becoming brands in their own right.” That changes how teams and leagues engage players: “fashion deals can be a bargaining chip on both sides of that equation.”
- As sports and fashion collaborations become more ubiquitous, authentic propositions are needed to cut through the noise. As Butler-Young puts it, the best examples “take the collections seriously. They treat it like a real fashion product. ‘Anything will do’ – people see through that.” Sykes agrees: “To work with players, you have to work with teams that really want to do things the right way.” It has to make sense for the consumer, and when it doesn’t, the audience calls it out. “The Chelsea and OVO collection was kind of a logo-slap. Even the fans were like, ‘This isn’t it.’”
- For some brands and athletes involved in these collaborations, partnerships are judged on reach and relevance rather than immediate revenue as the key marker of success. Sykes points to the NFL x Veronica Beard blazers: “There’s still some of that product left and it’s 75 to 80 per cent discounted … you have to look at that as a failure.” Yet the league “takes a holistic view,” he says: even if one capsule doesn’t sell through, lessons on “what you produce, how much, where you produce it, who your core audiences are” feed the next partnership.
Additional Resources:
- Sports and Fashion Are Tighter Than Ever. But Who’s Really Winning?
- Has Fashion’s Convergence With Sports Gone Too Far?
- How WNBA Players Are Using Merch to Underscore Their Value
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion where each week we delve |
| 0:11.9 | into our most popular B.OF professional stories with the correspondence who created them. |
| 0:17.1 | I'm senior correspondent, Sheena Butler Young. |
| 0:19.6 | And I'm executive editor, Brian Baskin. |
| 0:22.4 | From a Violet Hugh WNBA runway in San Francisco to NFL tie-ups with Abercrombie and Fitch and a whole bunch of other brands, sports and fashion are colliding like never before. |
| 0:34.1 | Sponsorship's spend is soaring with PWC predicting companies will spend $160 billion working with athletes, leagues, and players by 2030. |
| 0:45.3 | But clearance racks are also filling up with collaborations that didn't quite hit the mark. |
| 0:51.1 | Today on the debrief, Mike Sykes, our sports correspondent and author of The Kicks |
| 0:55.4 | You Wear newsletter, joins us to discuss what sports and fashion partnerships are actually working, |
| 1:01.0 | which aren't, and why. Mike, welcome to the debrief. Thanks so much for having me. Glad you're here. |
| 1:06.6 | Now, this episode actually came out of a story that you and Sheena worked on together about how there are just so darn many of these sports and fashion collaborations right now. |
| 1:18.5 | What was the tipping point that made you to realize we need to do a story about what the heck is going on here? |
| 1:25.2 | Well, I think for me, and I don't know where the tipping point was for you, Sheena, |
| 1:29.6 | but I think when I pulled up to the Hellman's fashion house and saw NFL fashion editor, |
| 1:38.5 | Kyle Smith with promoting, I should say, a collection of Hellman's clothes. I mean, it was, don't get me wrong, |
| 1:47.3 | like it's not like it was bad. It was actually pretty good, but just the fact that Helmand's |
| 1:53.0 | mayonnaise is now a fashion house, I guess. Like, that's kind of, that's a lot. That's a lot. |
| 1:59.8 | Yeah, I didn't quite make my way to the condiments section of the fashion aisle. |
| 2:03.7 | But for me, it was, I wrote a story a few months ago about the WNBA team, the New York Liberty and their like bevy of fashion collaborations and projects. |
| 2:13.8 | And within that week, I think I got pitched like a dozen other like sports teams or projects at the |
| 2:20.8 | intersection of sports and fashion. And I started to think, or Mike and I together started to think about |
| 2:25.5 | this is all great. Maybe some of it's exciting. Some of it's not so exciting. But like, who's really |
... |
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