The Oregon Ducks have spent years building one of the most recognizable looks in college football, but the NIL era is forcing programs to think a little differently about what can live on a uniform.
That’s why the idea of a brand patch on an Oregon jersey no longer feels completely far-fetched, even if it still clashes with the Ducks’ fashion-forward, futuristic identity. Around the sport, schools are already moving in that direction.
Wisconsin recently announced a partnership with Culver’s that stretches across football, men’s basketball and hockey, with the brand showing up on courts, ice and fields as well. The valuation hasn’t been disclosed, but the scope of the deal shows how deeply brands are investing in college athletics.
Wisconsin deputy athletic director Mitchell Pinta put it this way: “Yes, the revenue piece is important. It was equally important to find the right partner who shared the same values with us and a partner that could help create incremental NIL opportunities for our student-athletes, a partner who could help engage the community and a partner who could help elevate the fan experience," said Wisconsin deputy athletic director Mitchell Pinta to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
For Oregon, any potential patch partner would need to fit the program in more ways than one. A long history with the athletic department matters.
So does trust. And if a brand is going to go all-in on the Ducks, it probably can’t be one that would take a hit by wearing that kind of commitment, especially in a case like Nike, since other teams wear Nike gear too.
That leaves a short list of names that actually make sense with the Oregon brand: local ties, shared values, and relationships that already exist.
Papé Machinery is one of them. The Oregon-based company has been a long-time donor to the university and its athletic programs, and it already worked with Oregon women’s basketball in 2023 through Division Street. Its yellow-and-black logo also fits neatly with the Ducks’ current color schemes.
Flight Club is another possibility. The shoe-consignment brand was part of Oregon Football’s recent trip to Tokyo, Japan for the “Tokyo Oregon Football Showcase presented by Flight Club.”
Beats By Dre has also been around the program in a meaningful way. The company sponsored both starting quarterback Dante Moore and Cleveland Browns quarterback Dillon Gabriel during his time at Oregon, and Ducks stars Sabrina Ionescu and Hroniss Grasu gave 100 pairs of custom Oregon headphones to Oregon hoops athletes before the start of the 2025-2026 season.
Then there’s Umpqua Dairy, which is more of a fun fit but still has real Oregon roots. The Roseburg-based company makes the ice cream “Duck Tracks,” which has been sold inside Autzen Stadium for more than a decade. That kind of local connection gives the idea some real weight.
Oregon also already showed in 2025 that its uniforms can handle extra branding without losing their identity. In the September game against Oregon State, the Ducks wore custom patches on their “Shoe Duck” uniform, a nod to Nike co-founder Phil Knight and track coach Bill Bowerman.
One patch featured Knight and Bowerman’s famous handshake that launched Blue Ribbon Sports, which later became Nike. Another showed a meeting of Mt.
Hood and Mt. Fuji, tying Nike to Oregon and Japan on each shoulder.
Later that October, the Ducks rolled out the “Grateful Duck” uniforms honoring The Grateful Dead. That set included a special “Steal Your Face” logo with a Duck skull and green and yellow coloring on both shoulders.
Those uniforms didn’t just push design in a bold direction. They also made the case that a brand patch could fit on an Oregon uniform if the program ever chooses to go that route.
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