LeBron James, Cristiano Ronaldo, and Serena Williams were set to headline what could have been the biggest sports marketing campaign in years. Nike confirmed on Instagram this week that “The GOATs’ Goodbye” is heading back to the drawing board.
The post was short. Nike tagged all three athletes – @kingjames, @cristiano, and @serenawilliams – each with a block symbol next to the handle. The brand wrote: “Looks like The GOATs’ Goodbye is going back to the drawing board…” No reason given, no new timeline.
Consider who’s actually in this campaign. These three athletes didn’t just dominate their sports. They redefined them. LeBron has four NBA championships and is still playing at 41, widely regarded as the greatest basketball player of his generation. Cristiano Ronaldo holds the all-time international goals record in soccer. His career has lasted so long that entire generations of fans grew up watching him. Serena Williams walked away from professional tennis in 2022 with 23 Grand Slam singles titles. Her legacy stretches well beyond the sport itself.
Getting all three into one campaign is the sports marketing version of an Avengers-level assembly. Three icons from three completely different sports, all under the Nike roof at once. That’s the kind of crossover that makes you stop scrolling.
The campaign title tells you a lot about the angle. All three athletes are at or past the farewell stage of their careers. LeBron is still active but broadly seen as being in his final stretch. Ronaldo, also 41, continues playing professionally in Saudi Arabia. Serena stepped away in 2022. A Nike send-off project celebrating their combined legacy made a ton of commercial sense.
Nike has built its brand around iconic athlete campaigns for decades. The Jordan era set a template for what athlete-brand storytelling can look like. A three-GOAT project would have been something different – the whole era closing out at once, not just one athlete’s story.
So what went wrong? Nike hasn’t said. The block symbols next to each athlete’s handle hint that the lineup or concept may have shifted. That’s reading into a very minimal post, though. The revision could be creative, contractual, or something else entirely.
Worth noting: “going back to the drawing board” isn’t the same as cancelled. The project is being reworked, not buried. Something about the original direction didn’t clear the bar, and now someone has to figure out what comes next.
For anyone who follows these three careers, the wait is real. That spans fans across three different sports and about a dozen countries. LeBron, Ronaldo, and Serena together in one Nike campaign, with a full narrative built around their legacies. The potential is obvious. Getting it made is the hard part, apparently.
Nike will announce a new direction at some point. For now, the campaign sits somewhere between confirmed and on hold. No timeline, no public explanation.
