By Louise Radnofsky
Superstar gymnast Simone Biles is leaving Nike Inc., departing
the sneaker juggernaut's roster for a new apparel partnership with
Athleta that she says more closely reflects her values.
The relationship, which will be announced Friday, is a major
coup for the smaller, women's activewear brand, which was founded
in 1998 and is owned by Gap Inc. It comes after Athleta signed a
partnership in 2019 with sprinting champion Allyson Felix, a former
Nike athlete who had criticized the company for failing to support
pregnant athletes. It also comes days after Nike's partnership
expired with the estate of basketball player Kobe Bryant.
Biles did not directly criticize Nike in an interview, but
emphasized what had attracted her to Athleta.
"I felt like it wasn't just about my achievements, it's what I
stood for and how they were going to help me use my voice and also
be a voice for females and kids," she said. "I feel like they also
support me, not just as an athlete, but just as an individual
outside of the gym and the change that I want to create, which is
so refreshing."
A Nike spokeswoman said that "Simone Biles is an incredible
athlete and we wish her the very best," and that "we will continue
to champion, celebrate and evolve to support our female
athletes."
With Athleta, Biles will have her own performance wear line,
including products for wearing to and from the gym.
She said the company has also pledged to support the
post-Olympics gymnastics tour that she is planning to mount
herself, rather than the usual tour backed by USA Gymnastics, the
sport's national governing body. The tour could help reshape
professional opportunities for elite gymnasts for years to
come.
Athleta and Biles said that the company would give her a
platform to be an activist participating in "honest conversations"
with women and girls, and that she felt that with a predominantly
female design team, she was joining a company that was "truly for
women by women."
Asked if she felt that she couldn't have had her own line at
Nike, Biles said: "Not necessarily, but I also feel like Athleta is
committed to diversity and inclusion, of all women, backgrounds,
ages, sizes, abilities and races."
Over the years, a number of athletes have left the packed
endorsement roster of Nike to be the face of another brand.
Biles is considered to be a "Greatest of All Time"-conversation
athlete, dominating her sport for an extraordinary eight-year run
with new skills that are unprecedented in difficulty. She has done
many of her increasingly audacious feats at a time when she is also
speaking out as a self-identified victim of abuse in gymnastics,
remaining a recognizable figure in between Olympic Games
cycles.
Within Nike, however, she has not been a major face in recent
years. In an ad aired during the NCAA basketball tournament
celebrating Black female athleticism, she did not recognizably
appear at all, even as the ad included close ups of tennis players
Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams, runner Caster Semenya and fencer
Ibtihaj Muhammad. Biles has had only fleeting moments in other
recent ads.
Nike has also been dealing with reports about its workplace
culture for several years. In early 2018, a group of women
circulated a survey to protest inappropriate behavior by men at the
company as well as pay disparity and gender imbalance in the top
ranks.
Later that year, Nike replaced several senior executives, and
then-chief executive Mark Parker apologized at an all-hands
meeting, pledging to improve the workplace culture.
Nike said that it continues to support women and girls through
investments in coaching and scientific research, as well as a think
tank to help Nike understand the experience of female athletes.
It said that it has the largest roster of female athletes, and
that its policies for pregnant female athletes have evolved and
were expanded in 2019 to guarantee pay and bonuses for 18 months
around pregnancy.
Biles said that when she was younger, she "totally" believed
that Nike was a good place to be a female athlete.
"But now that I'm older and kind of in the world a little bit
more, I see and I know and I learn and I grow from things, so to
partner with Athleta, I think they stand for everything that I
stand for...I just thought it was time for a change."
Athleta chief product officer Jana Henning said the partnership,
like Felix's, could offer a new model for athlete sponsorships.
"When Allyson joined our team, we recognized right away how
powerful this was for the brand, but we also recognized how deep
that relationship went...And so as we were thinking about, 'Who do
we want to partner with, who is out there in the world?' Simone was
an obvious choice just from the beginning."
Biles and Felix are likely to be two of the most prominent
athletes at the Olympic Games in Tokyo this summer.
Athleta said the discussions with Biles prior to the
announcement had all been carried out by Zoom and telephone
discussions, and had included Athleta discussing its company
culture. It says its workforce is female-led and 97% female
overall.
Neither Athleta nor Biles commented on the value of the new
Athleta contract.
Biles' Nike partnership began in 2015, just as she opted to
forgo a college scholarship and turn professional.
"It was obviously super neat at that age to sign with such a big
brand," said Biles, who was 18 at the time and is now 24. "But now
I feel like it's so much different because I was the one that got
to sit down and speak with the team and decide, yes, this is who I
want to go forward with, this is the team I want to work with."
Write to Louise Radnofsky at louise.radnofsky@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 23, 2021 06:14 ET (10:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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