The news that NBA superstar Stephen Curry has severed ties with Under Armour to sign with a Chinese sportswear manufacturer is not merely a commercial transaction. It is a strategic pivot that signals a broader shift in the global soft power landscape. For the British sportswear industry, this is a threat vector that must be assessed with the same rigour as a hostile state actor’s cyber intrusion.
Curry, a figure of immense cultural influence, has effectively become a vector for Chinese commercial penetration into Western markets. The deal, reportedly worth billions, is a logistics and branding coup for Beijing’s ‘Made in China 2025’ industrial strategy. The British industry, already grappling with supply chain vulnerabilities and intellectual property theft, now faces a direct challenge to its market share and values.
This is not just about sneakers; it is about the weaponisation of celebrity endorsements as part of a broader influence operation. The West’s failure to secure its commercial icons represents an intelligence failure of the first order.








