KEY POINTS
  • This case with Nike and celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti mimics a recent scandal involving Nike rival Adidas, in which three men were convicted of so-called pay-for-play schemes.
  • Nike has so far only said it "will not respond" to Avenatti's allegations and that it's continuing to cooperate with the government's investigation into "grassroots basketball."
  • Legal analysts say Nike has little to worry about here, given what we know.
Michael Avenatti arrives at the Ronald Reagan Federal Building & U.S. Courthouse in Santa Ana for a 2 p.m. hearing on criminal charges of bank and wire fraud on April 1, 2019 in Santa Ana, California.

Nike might not have that much to worry about as celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti hurls accusations its way.

The athletic apparel retailer has been thrust into the spotlight, for better or for worse, after it called on the Federal Bureau of Investigation to arrest Avenatti for extortion, ahead of him taking accusations about Nike public. He claimed at the time his accusations could damage the company and wipe $10 billion off its nearly $133 billion in market cap.