Nike HQ hosts high school football, flag teams at HQ for kickoff event with NFL

Two boys football and two girls flag football teams played at Nike HQ and provided product insight as the brand looks to expand efforts.

Since the launch of the Air Jordan brand, Nike has made the “individual star” cool. From branding to youth camps, the sports designer and manufacturer has become a giant based on its attraction of the brightest and the best. Recently, though, the company has emphasized promoting the team over the player through initiatives such as 11-on and now the Nike Kickoff Classic in partnership with the NFL. Twenty NFL teams participated in this event by participating in national high school games, while Nike hosted four teams at its Oregon headquarters.

Nike league athletes and grassroots brand manager Matt James said the company wanted to create a more team-focused identity and philosophy.

“Football is truly the last true team game out there where Friday nights matter, your community, your teams, your coaches,” he said. “We wanted to get back to team and not only be about the five-star player but also be about the last person at the end of the bench.”

This three-day event at the headquarters wasn’t so much about NFL-level training but instead team bonding and exposure to the world of football outside the gridiron.

Former NFL player Bobby Taylor, who is the co-chair of the NFL Legends Youth Advisory Committee, spoke to the boys football players from DeSoto High School (Texas) and St. Augustine High School (New Orleans, La.) at a breakfast. And Katie Sowers, one of the first women to coach at the NFL level, did the same with the girls flag football teams, Alonso and Robinson high schools (Tampa, Fla.). Bo Jackson also made an appearance to speak to the players.

“I stressed to them how special this opportunity was,” Taylor said. “This is the first time it’s ever happened, and I think they all soaked it in.”

In the first high school games at the Nike facility, Robinson took down Alonso 12-6 on Friday afternoon before DeSoto beat St. Augustine 35-10.

(Photo: Nike)

The game was perhaps the justification for the trip, but the value came from other activities. On Thursday, athletes gathered with members of the Nike product insight team in the hotel. Who better to hear opinions from, after all, than the target audience themselves?

When DeSoto five-star receiver Johntay Cook II suggested dunk cleats, he saw a woman smile. Not long after, the group revealed a pair matching his recommendation.

“I was giving great ideas, I’m not gonna lie,” Cook said.

Nike league athletes and grassroots brand manager Matt James said the girls’ input on the product insights and social and digital sides were vital as the company and league try to further efforts to spread the sport.

It made the girls feel welcome, said Robinson head coach Jeff Saunders. It also provided more potential avenues for future involvement in the game beyond playing or coaching.

“The most important part of it was that their voices were heard. Their opinions mattered,” Saunders said. “… A lot of times, especially with girls flag football until this moment, they maybe haven’t.”

(Photo: Nike)

Broadening the exposure to this branch of the sport was a primary motivation for the event. Flag football and women’s involvement are both growing; six states, including Florida, now sanction flag football as a high school sport. In addition, several NAIA schools offer scholarships. Last August, the NFL and USA Football hosted a tournament, and in February 2021, Nike and the NFL donated $5 million in products and equipment to girls flag football teams around the U.S.

While boys athletes have NFL legends to look up to, there are fewer female role models in the world of football. The flag football teams stayed in Oregon to help coach youth girls flag teams on Saturday, James said. It’s not yet a major market, but it certainly is progressing.

“I think the challenge is there just hadn’t been enough support,” Taylor said. “But when you have entities like the NFL, Nike, supporting all of the efforts … the states that bring on girls flag as a sanctioned high school sport, and you also have the opportunity for girls to get scholarships … When you have this type of energy, it’s kind of hard for you to fail.”

NFL, Nike collaborate to kick off high school football season

Nike and the NFL are hosting a high school football kickoff with games at Nike HQ and 23 NFL teams collaborating with local schools.

The crash of the helmets. The smells of cheap hot dogs. The blaring of the official’s whistle. And now, for the first time, the sights of decor and inflatable tunnels from the collaboration between NFL and Nike draped across stadiums throughout the country.

High school football is back, and the NFL and Nike have partnered to put together a kickoff event that will have 20 teams play host to schools, and two games take place at the Ronaldo Field at Nike World Headquarters in Oregon.

On Friday night, the boys football game between DeSoto High School (Texas) and St. Augustine High School (New Orleans, La.) and the girls flag football game between Tampa, Fla. schools Alonso High and Robinson High at Nike HQ will headline the event and be broadcast on NFL Network.

“It’s a good outreach opportunity to reach teens and communities,” said Roman Oben, NFL vice president of football development and former offensive tackle in the league.

“In the seven-plus years that I’ve been in this, I haven’t seen a greater time where the NFL teams have worked together and worked at being thematically and directionally aligned. The work that we’ve done with Nike has improved,” he said. “When you listen to people and figure out what they really need, it’s not a logo slap … It’s something that everyone’s engaged in; it gets everyone involved.”

While the games will not take place at NFL stadiums, teams are getting involved in other ways.

Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

Several high-level executives and players of the Washington Commanders will attend the local Friday game, including co-owner and co-CEO Tanya Snyder, president Jason Wright, head coach Ron Rivera, plus Carson Wentz and Terry McLaurin.

And the New York Giants hosted a pair of youth teams—Manville Jr. Mustangs (N.J.) and Mt. Vernon Razorbacks United (N.Y.)— during a preseason game last Sunday. Beyond the on-field experience, each team had also received $10,000 in disaster grants over the past few months from the Giants and the NFL Foundation, a helping hand to assist in overcoming hurricane disaster and unfortunate vandalism.

The NFL and Nike are also emphasizing their outreach to girls flag football players with this event.

“Girls want to play,” Oben said. “It’s a movement that’s already happening. We have to just continue to be smart and diligent enough to continue to create these opportunities. These girls not only become fans and players of the game, but they become moms who let their kids play, they become coaches, and you’re seeing women officials and you’re seeing women in the sports business.”

In general, high school football continues to grow and improve as a sport. Advancements in technology, training and football education led to a sport for Oben’s sons, who are now in college, that was an evolved version of what he played in during high school.

“The high school game, college and pro game is starting to become more aligned in terms of what players are being required to do,” he said. “You watch a football game from 20 years ago, and you watch one now … a high school game right looks like you’re watching a Div. II college football game.”

Nike and the NFL hope their efforts can help the sport continue to grow and encourage players to continue playing toward the next levels of the game.

Kickoff for the event is Friday night.

The NFL teams participating are:

  • Arizona Cardinals
  • Chicago Bears
  • Cleveland Browns
  • Dallas Cowboys
  • Denver Broncos
  • Green Bay Packers
  • Houston Texans
  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Los Angeles Chargers
  • Los Angeles Rams
  • Miami Dolphins
  • Minnesota Vikings
  • New Orleans Saints
  • New York Giants
  • Oakland Raiders
  • Pittsburgh Steelers
  • San Francisco 49ers
  • Seattle Seahawks
  • Tennessee Titans
  • Washington Commanders
Graphic: Courtesy of NFL

Desoto jumps to No. 1 in Super 25 Girls Basketball Rankings

There’s a new No. 1 team in the Super 25 High School Girls Basketball Rankings this week. See that and more in the latest rankings.

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The start of a season can bring big changes in the Super 25 Rankings: teams can move up multiple spots with wins or drop out entirely with losses.

In Week 1 of the Super 25 Girls Basketball Rankings, one of those changes came at No. 1.

Desoto (Texas), which ranked No. 11 in the Preseason list, has started the year 6-0 and is now atop the Super 25 Girls Basketball Rankings. The team showed out at the Thanksgiving Hoopfest, taking down then-No. 6 Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, California).

FULL RANKINGS: Super 25 Girls Basketball Rankings, Week 1

The Preseason No. 1, New Hope Academy (Landover Hills, Maryland), was there for a reason. The team went on a dominant run in the GEICO Nationals last season that culminated in a national championship victory. The team has strong returners such as Jada Walker and Delicia Pinnick, and also added Delaware-committed Tara Cousins and Flera Vinerte, who committed to San Diego State. However, the Tigers have gotten off to a rocky start, losing two of their first four games.

SUPER 25 BOYS BASKETBALL: TOP 25 | REGIONAL

New Hope Academy’s first loss of the season came to Mount Notre Dame (Cincinnati), 61-59, in overtime. Mount Notre Dame moved up from 18 to No. 9 this week after a 4-0 start. The Tigers’ second loss came to Riverdale Baptist (Upper Marlboro, Maryland), another undefeated team in the top 10 of the Super 25 this week. Riverdale Baptist has started 3-0. Both of New Hope Academy’s losses were good enough so that it was able to stay in the rankings this week at No. 15.

There were four new teams to enter the rankings. South Grand Prairie (Grand Prairie, Texas),  Duncanville (Texas), Maine West (Des Plaines, Illinois) and Lake Highland Prep (Orlando, Florida) were all new to the rankings.