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When we hear the name of an apparel, we always associate it with a player. For example, when Nike comes up, people think of Kobe Bryant or Michael Jordan. And for New Balance, we think of Shohei Ohtani. In the same way, when it came to Bryce Harper or Stephen Curry, we used to think of a $2.5 billion giant. But now, we might have to change that.

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After Stephen Curry cut ties with Under Armour, Bryce Harper might also be following Curry’s footsteps.

“Bryce Harper says he doesn’t currently have a deal with an apparel company,” reported Talkin’ Baseball.

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Steph Curry partnered with Under Armour in 2013, building a signature line spanning 12 shoes. Curry Brand launched in 2020, but sales growth lagged expectations, creating tension over long-term investment. Sources cited underinvestment, stalled basketball division revenue, and failed Caitlin Clark recruitment, trailing Nike’s offer.

By 2024, leadership changes failed to ease concerns, and both sides agreed to end the partnership formally.

That split echoes for fans watching Bryce Harper’s long association with Under Armour now unravel. In 2016, Harper signed a 10-year extension, surpassing Alex Rodriguez’s $1 million annual endorsement deal. The contract included stock, signature Harper One cleats, and ran through the 2026 season.

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Harper recently confirmed a lack of an apparel deal, signaling the extension’s conclusion, approaching market free agency.

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Fans notice parallels as Under Armour faced questions about investing enough behind Curry and Harper, both. Curry’s frustration centered on resources and vision, while Harper’s silence follows a deal expiring now. Under Armour still plans to release Curry’s final shoe in February, marking a symbolic closing chapter.

Together, these timelines show elite endorsements ending quietly, leaving brand futures uncertain but measurable ahead.

Bryce Harper and Stephen Curry show that even superstar talent can outgrow the brands that once defined them. Under Armour’s empire of MVPs now faces a future where contracts might not guarantee loyalty. Fans watch closely, realizing apparel deals are less about players and more about strategic chess moves.

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Has Bryce Harper already shown us who his next apparel deal is going to be with?

Everybody’s pretending this is still a mystery, which is the funniest part. The clues aren’t subtle; they’re practically doing batting practice in plain sight. Bryce Harper didn’t drift away from Under Armour quietly. He left fingerprints on the exit door. And if you’ve been paying attention since the last chapter ended, the next one is already being staged.

Bryce Harper’s split from Under Armour ends a partnership started in 2011 and extended in 2016. During that run, his signature cleats became staples, including Harper 3, Harper 6, and Harper 9. Limited releases like Phanatic editions and city themes documented his long-term branding focus in Philadelphia.

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The shift became visible when Harper appeared in Travis Scott’s Nike cleats within a hitting video. That appearance matters because players under active footwear contracts typically avoid competing brand usage publicly. Harper has not announced terms, but the footwear choice aligns with his confirmed Under Armour separation.

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If finalized, a Nike agreement would follow MLB trends favoring global brands with athlete-driven signature lines. Nike already supports multiple MLB stars, and Travis Scott collaborations have documented commercial reach globally. For fans, the change marks closure backed by contracts, sightings, and timelines rather than speculation.

Bryce Harper rarely signals anything, and his post-Under Armour footwear choices clearly carried intention. When elite athletes test public waters, apparel companies usually receive the message immediately today. If this is subtlety, Bryce Harper has already told Nike everything it needs publicly.

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