For a decade Stephen Curry was the face of Under Armour, the American sportswear giant that built a global reputation on his shooting grace. Now Curry has walked away. He signed a lifetime deal with Li-Ning, the Chinese company whose rise has been meteoric. The move sends a tremor through the UK market. British brands JD Sports, Sports Direct and even heritage names like Umbro are watching closely. The sponsorship landscape is shifting east, and with it flows the money that props up sport in local communities.
Li-Ning will pay Curry a reported $300 million over 20 years. The exact terms are confidential but industry insiders say it includes a signature shoe line and equity stake. Yao Ming backed it. Li-Ning now pulls in revenues of £15 billion. By comparison JD Sports made £10 billion last year. The gap is closing.
What does this mean for working families in Manchester or Glasgow? Sportswear jobs in warehouses in Bury and distribution centres in Dundee depend on brands staying competitive. Under Armour employs 1,200 people in the UK. If it loses its flagship star revenues dip, expansion slows, jobs hang in the balance. Sports Direct buys excess stock to fill its shelves cheaply. Fewer big deals means less surplus. Smaller suppliers feel the pinch first.
Steph Curry is not just a player. He is the embodiment of a brand that grew by aligning with blue collar grit. Under Armour’s slogan “I will” echoed in school halls and grassroots clubs. Li-Ning appeals to a different patriotism. Government investment in domestic brands is huge. Chinese consumers now buy local first. That shifts global supply chains. UK retailers that signed exclusive deals with Under Armour may find the partnership less valuable without Curry.
Unions represent thousands in the sportswear supply chain. The GMB and Unite are already watching the numbers. If Li-Ning takes a slice of the UK market from Nike and Adidas, then kit prices could fall. But the risk is that cheap Chinese manufacturing undercuts British wages. Factories in Dongguan pay £4 an hour. The UK national living wage is £11.44. The gap is not purely economic. It is a race to the bottom if we are not careful.
Curry’s defection also signals a generational shift. Young players in the Premier League increasingly endorse brands like Anta and Peak. UK retailers must adapt or lose control of the story. Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley built a fortune on buying distressed stock. He may need to start looking east for bargains. But the real story is about who controls the culture. Will British kids still want Curry’s old Under Armour shoes or will Li-Ning become the new cool? That question keeps chief executives awake.
For now, the pound holds steady. Shares in Under Armour fell 2% on the news. But the long term danger is real. If elite athletes abandon Western brands the whole pyramid topples. Grassroots sponsorship dries up. Local clubs lose kit deals. The ripple effect hits school sports. The government’s sport strategy, which relies on private investment, looks vulnerable. Unions are beginning to talk about a national sportswear strategy to protect jobs. It sounds ambitious but so did a Chinese brand beating Under Armour at its own game.
This is not just a celebrity endorsement falling through. It is a verdict on globalisation. UK brands that once bet on American stars now have to win back shoppers on price and ethics. Li-Ning produces shoes with a smaller carbon footprint than Nike. That matters to the green generation. Meanwhile Under Armour has been dogged by accusations of poor factory conditions. Curry may have chosen a cleaner conscience. Or simply a bigger cheque.
Either way, the shop floor feels it first. Workers in Stoke who stitch kit for JD Sports are wondering if their next pay packet will hold. A new player is in town. And it doesn’t play by the old rules.








