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IRVIN IAN RITCHIE KHOZA<br />

Behind On the far-reaching<br />

the scenes at<br />

Wimbledon, impact World tennis’ Cup 2010 most<br />

prestigious will have on tournament South Africa<br />

JIM RICHARD BROWN PHILLIPS<br />

Targeting On delivering £100m <strong>FIFA</strong>’s in turnover big<br />

event for Silverstone, and the colour host of and<br />

passion the British unique Grand to Prix Africa<br />

DANNY EELCO VAN JORDAAN DER NOLL<br />

How On World AB InBev’s Cup ticket sponsorship sales<br />

strategies and the excitement paid dividends around<br />

the at the US 2010 travelling World contingent Cup<br />

ISSUE No. 157 160 • 06.10 09.10<br />

ANYONE FOR TENNIS?<br />

INTRODUCING THE NEXT GENERATION<br />

OF WOMEN’S STARS<br />

INFORMATION, INSIGHT AND ANALYSIS FOR THE GLOBAL SPORTS SECTOR


09.10 CONTENTS<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10<br />

REGULARS<br />

08 Agenda<br />

Looking ahead, comment<br />

and analysis<br />

14 Brands and Marketing<br />

P&G’s Olympic agreement<br />

and the best performing<br />

licensing brands in Europe<br />

20 Media<br />

Industry expertise from sister<br />

publication TV Sports Markets<br />

VOICES<br />

PAGE 30<br />

“There is a significant risk of major<br />

properties pricing themselves out of<br />

the market. Current price levels for<br />

major events are just astronomical<br />

and very difficult to justify.”<br />

Eelco van der Noll,<br />

Global Director, Sports &<br />

Entertainment, AB InBev<br />

30<br />

27<br />

26 Events<br />

Horse play in Kentucky, the<br />

ATP World Tour Finals and<br />

pressure on Brazil 2014<br />

30 Headliner<br />

Eelco van der Noll<br />

Global Director, Sports &<br />

Entertainment, AB InBev<br />

80 Big Debate<br />

How will HD and 3D TV and<br />

other technologies impact<br />

the live events sector?<br />

82 Most Influential...<br />

Promoters<br />

90 People<br />

Richard Lewis<br />

Chairman, Sport England<br />

34<br />

FEATURES<br />

34 Let Battle Commence<br />

Preview of next month’s Ryder Cup and the bids for 2018<br />

41 On Track for Success<br />

How women’s tennis is progressing on all fronts<br />

57 Ultimate Sports Apps 2010<br />

The inaugural recognition of best mobile sports apps<br />

64 The Home of Tennis<br />

Anatomy of an Event: Wimbledon<br />

69 Racing Revolution<br />

Anatomy of an Event: British Grand Prix<br />

74 Europe’s Northern Stars<br />

<strong>International</strong> focus: The Nordics<br />

PAGE 64<br />

“We look more at quality and values than<br />

cost - we won’t go for the cheapest option.<br />

The contractor must understand what we<br />

want them to do. Failure to deliver is not<br />

accepted. They see us as a trophy contract<br />

and this means they give us special<br />

attention. They are under no illusions.”<br />

Ian Ritchie,<br />

CEO, All England Tennis Club<br />

PAGE 69<br />

“Silverstone is equally as good, or better<br />

than most of the European circuits.<br />

The issues Silverstone has faced in the<br />

past were down to the fact Formula<br />

One contracts have only been for five<br />

years, and this wasn’t sufficient to<br />

assure us it was worth investing in<br />

better facilities...We’ve now moved on<br />

lightyears from that.”<br />

Richard Phillips,<br />

Managing Director, Silverstone<br />

69


UPDATA 09.10<br />

www.sportbusiness.com<br />

deal of the month<br />

The American multinational<br />

giant became a top-tier Olympic<br />

sponsor in a ten-year deal<br />

through to the 2020 Games.<br />

About the deal<br />

Dow Chemical became the<br />

official “chemistry company” for<br />

the Olympic movement - signing<br />

as the IOC’s tenth global sponsor<br />

one week before Procter &<br />

Gamble was announced as the<br />

eleventh (see p. 14).<br />

The Dow deal covers the 2012<br />

London Olympics, the 2014 Sochi<br />

Winter Games, the 2016 Summer<br />

Games in Rio de Janeiro, as<br />

well as the 2018 Winter and<br />

2020 Summer Olympics. In 2011<br />

Dow’s sponsorship campaign<br />

will cover the values of the<br />

‘<strong>International</strong> Year of Chemistry’,<br />

highlighting the role chemistry<br />

must play to help meet human<br />

challenges of the future.<br />

What drove the deal?<br />

“As a global leader in the chemical<br />

industry and an innovator in<br />

sustainability, Dow will not only<br />

provide critical financial support<br />

to the Olympic Movement, but<br />

also bring industry-leading<br />

expertise and innovation to the<br />

Games themselves,” said IOC<br />

president Jacques Rogge.<br />

What’s it worth?<br />

$250 million.<br />

Top 30 Sponsorship Deals: JULY 2010<br />

Sponsor value Duration Deal<br />

No Sponsor Industry event or Activity type ($m) (years) type<br />

1 Dow Chemical Chemicals IOC 2010-2020 Event 250 10 N<br />

2 Procter & Gamble Household Products IOC 2010-2014 Event 100 4 N<br />

3 Aviva Financial Services - Insurance Premiership Rugby Event 30 4 N<br />

4 Autonomy Information Technology Tottenham Hotspur Team 30 2 N<br />

5 Everbank Financial Services - Banking Jacksonville Stadium Team 25 5 N<br />

6 Gazprom Energy/Power/Gas/Electricity Red Star Belgrade Team 19 5 N<br />

7 Zon Telecommunications Liga Zon Sagres Event 17.4 4 N<br />

8 CBS Outdoor Media/Press/TV London Olympics Tier Three Event 15 2 N<br />

9 Technogym Sports Equipment London Olympics Tier Three Event 15 2 N<br />

10 Turkish Airlines Airlines Euroleague Basketball Event 13 5 N<br />

11 Red Bull Drinks - Energy Central Stadium in Leipzig Team 10+ N<br />

12 MasterCard Financial Services - Credit Cards Saudi Premier League Event 10+ 5 N<br />

13 Henkel Household Products Arizona Diamondbacks Team 10+ 3 N<br />

14 Orangina Drinks - Soft Drinks Liga Orangina Event 10+ N<br />

15 Rogers Communications Telecommunications Vancouver Canucks stadium Team 10+ 10 N<br />

16 Mahindra Satyam Information Technology <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup Event 10+ 4 N<br />

17 Bwin Gambling/Lottery Serie B Event 10+ 2 N<br />

18 Insurance Office of America Financial Services - Insurance Orlando Magic Team 10+ N<br />

19 HP Information Technology San Francisco 49ers Team 10+ N<br />

20 Bridgestone Cars/Automotive Super Bowl Half Time show Event 10+ 5 R<br />

21 Toshiba Information Technology Rugby World Cup 2011 Event 10+ 2 N<br />

22 Continental Cars/Automotive Bayern Munich Team 10+ 5 N<br />

23 Thomas Cook Travel Manchester United Team 8 4 N<br />

24 Alands Penningautomatforening Gambling/Lottery Athletico de Madrid Team 7.5 1 R<br />

25 Singha Beer Drinks - Beer Manchester United Team 6 3 N<br />

26 City of Edmonton Government Authority Edmonton IndyCar race Event 5.5 3 N<br />

27 BMO Financial Services - Banking Toronto FC Team 4 6 N<br />

28 Blue Cross Financial Services - Insurance Jaguars practice field Team 4 1 N<br />

29 Marriott Hotels USA Swimming Team 3.75 3 N<br />

30 Rolex Watches/Timing Sydney-to-Hobart Yacht Race Event 3.75 5 R<br />

Notes: Fees are reported/estimated. (N) - New deal; (R) - Renewal<br />

Source: The World Sponsorship Monitor produced by Sports Marketing Surveys. Contact: nigelg@sportsmarketingsurveys.com<br />

snapshoT<br />

Level of interest in Golf in USA and 5 European key Markets<br />

“Despite all the commotion<br />

surrounding Tiger Woods, the<br />

interest in golf is still quite<br />

high in the relevant markets of<br />

USA and Europe,” says Marcel<br />

Cordes, Executive Director<br />

SPORT+MARKT. “However for<br />

the first time in recent years, the<br />

popularity of golf in the UK is<br />

higher than in the USA.<br />

“Very interested“ and “interested”<br />

20%<br />

27%<br />

“Compared to last year, the<br />

popularity of golf in the UK has<br />

gained 5 percentage points, while<br />

in the US the level of interest has<br />

been steady in the last couple<br />

of years. The level of interest<br />

has also increased a lot in other<br />

European countries such as<br />

France and Italy. This shows<br />

clearly that golf is reaching out<br />

to fans in new markets where<br />

traditionally the sport had low<br />

penetration levels in the past.”<br />

11%<br />

10%<br />

6% 6%<br />

USA UK France Italy Germany Spain<br />

43.1m 11.4m 3.6m 4.2m 3.5m 2.6m<br />

Source: SPORT+MARKT Sponsoring 21+ 2010<br />

4 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


UpdAtA 09.10<br />

toUr GetS AUdIenCe BooSt In tIMe for eBU neGotIAtIonS<br />

GerMAn And SpAnISh television<br />

audiences for the Tour de France<br />

surged this year, but dropped in<br />

some other top European cycling<br />

markets, according to an audience<br />

survey by TV Sports Markets and<br />

Eurodata TV Worldwide.<br />

Audiences on German publicservice<br />

broadcasters ARD and ZDF<br />

were up 25 per cent, vindicating<br />

their decision to almost double<br />

their hours of live coverage. ARD<br />

and ZDF had slashed coverage last<br />

year to 20 hours, from 60 in 2008,<br />

in protest at the doping scandals<br />

that dogged the race.<br />

In Spain, audiences for state<br />

broadcaster TVE rose 23 per cent,<br />

spurred by Spanish rider Alberto<br />

Contador’s second Tour win in a<br />

row. The jump was impressive<br />

given the reduced amount of<br />

coverage on its main free-to-air<br />

channels, TVE1 and La2, from<br />

almost 47 hours in 2009 to less<br />

than 14 this year. Coverage on<br />

free satellite and digital terrestrial<br />

sports channel Teledeporte rose to<br />

almost 72 hours, pulling an average<br />

tour de france live television audiences<br />

Market<br />

audience of 578,000 viewers and<br />

a 5.3-per-cent share, up from 60<br />

hours last year (307,000 viewers<br />

and a 2.9-per-cent share).<br />

The audience lifts are good<br />

news for Tour organiser Amaury<br />

Sport Organisation, which will<br />

start negotiating a new pan-<br />

European deal with the European<br />

Broadcasting Union before the next<br />

Tour. In the absence of France and<br />

the UK, which have separate deals,<br />

Germany and Spain form a key part<br />

of the EBU contract.<br />

2010 2009<br />

Channel 000s Channel 000s<br />

2010 v<br />

2009 (%)<br />

France France 2/France 3 3,286 France 2 3,763 -12.7<br />

Germany<br />

ARD/ZDF 1,257 ARD/ZDF 1,009 +24.6<br />

Eurosport 396 Eurosport 675 -41.3<br />

Italy RAI 2/RAI 3 1,090 RAI 2 1,161 -6.1<br />

Spain<br />

TVE1/La2/<br />

Teledeporte<br />

769<br />

TVE1/La2/<br />

Teledeporte<br />

625 +23.1<br />

UK ITV4 227 ITV4 228 -0.4<br />

Sources: Kantar Media (Spain), AGF-Gfk Fernsehforschung (Germany), Barb, Attentional<br />

(UK), AUDITEL - Nielsen Audience Measurement (Italy), MEDIAMETRIE (France)<br />

Audiences fell 13 per cent in<br />

the Tour’s home market. Publicservice<br />

broadcaster France<br />

Télévisions showed some live<br />

coverage on secondary channel<br />

France 3 this year, having shown<br />

coverage only on main channel<br />

France 2 last year. The top French<br />

rider finished in 19th place.<br />

Italian state broadcaster Rai’s<br />

average audience fell 6.1 per cent<br />

to 1.1 million after a 27-per-cent<br />

cut in the number of hours of<br />

coverage.<br />

Eurodata TV Worldwide is the leading<br />

provider of sports television audiences,<br />

with access to ratings and programming<br />

details for 2,000 channels over five<br />

continents. Eurodata TV Worldwide<br />

offers a range of services to help clients<br />

successfully market TV programmes<br />

and monitor their broadcasts.<br />

Florent Simon<br />

Eurodata TV Worldwide Sport Manager<br />

Email: fsimon@eurodatatv.com<br />

Tel: +33 171 099 307<br />

TVSPORTS M A R K E T S<br />

TV Sports Markets is No.1 for the<br />

business of TV sports. With its unrivalled<br />

knowledge of TV rights deals and<br />

markets around the world, it provides<br />

market-leading analysis of the sector<br />

in a range of publications and bespoke<br />

research products.<br />

Paul Santos<br />

TV Sports Markets Business Development<br />

Email: paul.santos@tvsportsmarkets.com<br />

Tel: +44 207 954 3483<br />

A new book by TSE Consulting<br />

1 November 2010<br />

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SPORTS<br />

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Developing a winning<br />

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A four-step approach for successful bidding and hosting<br />

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Order Now !<br />

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“India should become a natural host for<br />

prestigious events. But that can’t happen<br />

until international companies can<br />

operate there confident that a deal is a<br />

deal and a contract will be honoured.”<br />

KEVIN ROBERTS ON THE DIFFICULTIES INTERNATIONAL AGEN<strong>CIES</strong> ARE<br />

EXPERIENCING IN DELHI AND NEW OPPORTUNITIES IN SPONSORSHIP.<br />

IT’S NOW LESS than a month before the Commonwealth<br />

Games are due to get under way in Delhi.<br />

It should be a time of celebration for sport in India and<br />

the country’s National Olympic Committee says it intends<br />

to make a bid to stage the Olympic Games, with Delhi<br />

2010 portrayed as a stepping stone towards The Big One.<br />

But with Olympic bid campaigns costing anything<br />

upwards of $100 million, they might consider better ways<br />

of spending their cash. Because, as things stand, you<br />

would have to be very brave to predict Delhi landing any<br />

major sports event in the foreseeable future.<br />

It’s not simply that construction of facilities and<br />

infrastructure for the Delhi Commonwealth Games has<br />

gone right down to the wire - we’ve seen that before,<br />

notably with Athens in 2004.<br />

More significantly it is about the atmosphere of<br />

exasperation, fear and distrust which has developed<br />

around the experience of the major international sports<br />

sector consultancies working on the Commonwealth<br />

Games and other projects in India.<br />

IMG, World Sports Group (WSG), Sports Marketing<br />

and Management (SMAM) and Great Big Events are<br />

among the companies which have encountered problems.<br />

IMG, which had done so much to establish and operate<br />

the Indian Premier League, had its contract arbitrarily<br />

cancelled by the Board of Control for Cricket in India<br />

in what appeared to be an internal power-struggle while<br />

WSG had its IPL rights sales contract axed.<br />

SMAM could take a massive bath over its involvement<br />

in the Commonwealth Games after being axed from its<br />

sponsorship sales role despite bringing in $85 million,<br />

while Great Big Events - an acknowledged leader in sports<br />

event presentation and ceremonies - was reported to be<br />

off the project as SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> went to press.<br />

Even Fast Track, which is selling the Games’ TV rights, has<br />

had its name dragged through the press after allegations -<br />

vehemently denied - it had been handed the contract without<br />

going through a rigorous selection process (see pp. 12-13).<br />

With its massive population, booming economy and<br />

democratic tradition, India should be set on becoming<br />

a major power in sport and a natural host for many<br />

prestigious major events. But it is difficult to see how that<br />

can happen until international companies can operate there<br />

without feeling like they are battling through a quagmire<br />

of bureaucracy and hostility, and with the confidence that a<br />

deal really is a deal and that a contract will be honoured.<br />

There are, of course, massive differences in business<br />

culture between nations and it would be naïve to assume<br />

international best practice is universally followed. But in<br />

sport, as in other sectors, those who work internationally<br />

are able to adjust to local conditions and expectations.<br />

This doesn’t seem to have been the case in Delhi, where<br />

international businesses have been left not simply frustrated<br />

but surprised and shaken at what they have encountered.<br />

Delhi 2010 really was an opportunity for India to<br />

demonstrate its ability to deliver major international sports<br />

events but in reality they have blown it. As ever, the public<br />

will lose sight of these issues once the competition starts<br />

and we can only join the organisers in hoping for some great<br />

performances and a true celebration of the best in sport.<br />

But once the lights go out after the closing ceremony, it<br />

will take some time for the commercial sports world to get<br />

the bitter taste out of its mouth and that could well affect<br />

the world’s appetite for taking events to India.<br />

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *<br />

Congratulations to Deepdale Solutions, providers of<br />

‘creative solutions in aluminium and glass’ and the first of<br />

a new generation of shirt sponsors of big (ish) spending<br />

English Championship football club Middlesbrough.<br />

Boro’s commercial department looked for a creative<br />

solution when Garmin satellite navigation decided not to<br />

renew its shirt deal. They came up with the idea of selling<br />

the space in 10 monthly blocks for rest of the season.<br />

We don’t know whether the cumulative sponsorship take<br />

will be greater than expectations from a single deal, but it<br />

does represent a willingness to think beyond the established<br />

orthodoxy of one sponsor, one shirt, one season.<br />

Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur has also<br />

expanded its sponsorship inventory by selling shirt space for<br />

league matches to one brand, and cup games for another.<br />

The trend raises a number of issues. How will parents<br />

of Boro fans respond to the pester power of their offspring<br />

when they demand their tenth replica shirt of the year? And<br />

what sort of financial structure did Spurs put in place for its<br />

cup shirt deal which could deliver as few as four matches?<br />

Should this trend continue, there may be some value<br />

in considering pooling the shirt sponsorship rights for<br />

lower league teams playing away from home. This would<br />

provide an opportunity for a national or international<br />

brand to reinforce its presence in football without seriously<br />

detracting from the visibility of the home shirt sponsors,<br />

which are generally local businesses anxious for visibility<br />

within a relatively small and well-defined area.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 7


AGENDA<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

Gambia: The country’s leading<br />

Olympic official, Langtombong Tamba,<br />

was sentenced to death for treason,<br />

conspiracy to murder and participating<br />

in an act to overthrow the government.<br />

According to insidethegames.biz,<br />

Tamba, the president of the Gambia<br />

National Olympic Committee, was given<br />

the penalty after being found guilty of<br />

trying to stage a coup in 2006 while<br />

head of the Armed Forces.<br />

MotoGP: Valentino Rossi announced he<br />

would switch to Ducati from Yamaha<br />

next season.<br />

Blackburn Rovers: The English Premier<br />

League club confirmed it was in serious<br />

talks with a financial services company<br />

which wants to take over the club. If<br />

successful, Western Gulf Advisory<br />

(a Swiss-Bahraini enterprise which<br />

manages investments on behalf of an<br />

Indian entrepreneur called Ahsan Ali<br />

Syed) says it will release £80m to £100m<br />

in funds for the purchase of players over<br />

the next five years.<br />

China: Deputy sports minister Cui<br />

Dalin, the man behind the country’s<br />

medal table-topping triumph at the<br />

2008 Beijing Olympics, retired.<br />

ICC: Following last month’s monsoon<br />

floods, the <strong>International</strong> Cricket Council<br />

announced a World XI team would visit<br />

Pakistan as a gesture of support for<br />

the country - which is unable to stage<br />

international cricket at home because<br />

of security threats.<br />

Arsenal: The English Premier League<br />

club launched a new shares-buying<br />

initiative for supporters. Supporters will<br />

be invited to pay a minimum of £100 to<br />

buy one fanshare – one hundredth of<br />

an actual share. In return, the member<br />

will secure full shareholder’s rights,<br />

including the chance to attend the<br />

annual general meeting.<br />

IndyCar: Drivers will compete in two<br />

races in one day for the first time in 30<br />

years from next season. The ‘Two-Step’<br />

at the Texas Motor Speedway will feature<br />

two races of 275km, replacing the<br />

550km event previously staged there.<br />

RFU: The English Rugby Football Union<br />

told clubs they will face tougher financial<br />

sanctions next season after complaints<br />

last season that three clubs went into<br />

administration or liquidation only to<br />

re-emerge as phoenix companies.<br />

AND HERE’S THE NEWS<br />

A new editorial offering is being<br />

launched for sports broadcasters.<br />

DIGITAL SPORTS SPECIALIST PERFORM is<br />

launching sports news service, OMNISPORT,<br />

offering multi-platform broadcasters over<br />

15,000 news stories a year with fully integrated<br />

video, editorial, imagery and data, SportBusiness<br />

<strong>International</strong> can exclusively reveal.<br />

PERFORM, which says the first-of-its-kind<br />

operation is “the most comprehensive rights<br />

and territory-cleared multi-format sports news<br />

service available on the market”, has spotted<br />

a commercial opportunity to cater for today’s<br />

multi-platform sports broadcast requirements.<br />

OMNISPORT stories will link video, editorial,<br />

data and images and will be available in a range<br />

of flexible delivery options to enable broadcasters<br />

to publish sports news content across their TV,<br />

online and mobile services. Ninety per cent of<br />

video stories will be cleared for all platforms.<br />

To test the market for the service, PERFORM<br />

launched a beta version for the 2010 <strong>FIFA</strong> World<br />

Cup, which was taken by over fifty broadcasters,<br />

internet service providers, mobile operators and<br />

publishers including BBC, CBS Sports, Univision,<br />

Sky New Zealand, Vodafone and Orange.<br />

“Sports fans are consuming sport wherever<br />

and whenever they can across any device and we<br />

understand that sports news broadcasters need a<br />

THE HEAD OF A leading sponsorship<br />

consultancy which could take a multimillion<br />

dollar hit after being fired from the<br />

Commonwealth Games has been left frustrated,<br />

upset and dreading the prospect of lengthy legal<br />

proceedings to recover the money.<br />

Mike Bushell, CEO of Sports Marketing<br />

and Management (SMAM), says there were no<br />

grounds for dropping his company after it had<br />

raised some $85 million in sponsorship.<br />

It is the latest in a string of incidents which<br />

have seen international sports sector companies<br />

run into stormy waters while working in India.<br />

SMAM, which has worked on every<br />

Commonwealth Games since 1982, had been<br />

working on the Delhi 2010 project for three<br />

years with 10 to 12 staff involved at any time.<br />

The company developed a sponsorship sales and<br />

servicing strategy and had already generated more<br />

revenue than either the 2006 or 2002 Games.<br />

But, says Bushell: “We were summarily<br />

dismissed without being paid a single Rupee. We<br />

were told we were being fired on performance<br />

grounds but that was just made up. There were<br />

no criteria for dropping us.”<br />

flexible sports news solution that can be tailored<br />

to their service,” said Oliver Slipper, joint-CEO of<br />

PERFORM. “We have spoken to multi-platform<br />

broadcasters who at present are using providers<br />

that deliver only editorial or video formats and<br />

often only clear rights for one platform.”<br />

OMNISPORT will be broken down into four<br />

content packages: UK Football (including news<br />

from the Premier League, Cup competitions,<br />

England internationals and English teams in<br />

UEFA competitions), Global Football (which<br />

combines the UK Football package with in depth<br />

news, previews and round-ups from the rest of<br />

the world’s leading football competitions), Sport<br />

(combining all the content from the Football<br />

package with breaking news from all the top<br />

global sports) and Special Events (major events).<br />

SHAM FACES DELHI DEFECIT<br />

Agency dropped from selling Delhi<br />

sponsorship reacts to its difficulties.<br />

Football-focused operation - Getty Images Sport<br />

Opening of Melbourne 2006 - Getty Images Sport<br />

The issue came to a head after Indian<br />

Railways, one of a number of public companies<br />

to sponsor the Games, said it would pull out if<br />

SMAM received any commission on the deal.<br />

SMAM’s initial proposal was based on around<br />

half of sponsors coming from the public utility<br />

sector. That level of public sector involvement has<br />

become the norm and other events, including<br />

Sochi 2014, have exceeded that level.<br />

When it became an issue SMAM agreed to<br />

lower its commission on deals as a gesture of<br />

goodwill but was shown the exit. The company<br />

is now waiting for a date for mediation to reach<br />

an agreement. If that’s unsuccessful a potentially<br />

lengthy arbitration process, in India, will kick-in.<br />

8 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


INSIGHT<br />

MATT CUTLER<br />

Deputy Editor<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong><br />

COURT-SIDE ACTION<br />

TEAM OWNERS in the United<br />

States and beyond were due to<br />

discover in late August whether<br />

the competitiveness of their teams<br />

could be determined in a new arena<br />

- the divorce court.<br />

The prospect was raised by a bitter<br />

split between the owner of Major<br />

League Baseball’s LA Dodgers, Frank<br />

McCourt, and his ex-wife, Jamie,<br />

which prompted her to seek half the<br />

club as part of her settlement.<br />

Jamie McCourt married Frank in<br />

1979 and the couple has four grown<br />

sons. But she filed for divorce in<br />

2009 when acting as CEO of the<br />

team and drawing an annual salary<br />

of $2 million. The terms of an award<br />

were due to be thrashed out in a Los<br />

Angeles courtroom as SportBusiness<br />

<strong>International</strong> went to print.<br />

The acrimonious divorce has<br />

already been blamed for wrecking<br />

this season for the Dodgers, MLB’s<br />

fourth biggest franchise. McCourt<br />

installed his ex-wife as Dodgers CEO<br />

after buying the team from Rupert<br />

Murdoch’s News Corporation in<br />

2004. Their marriage imploded<br />

and she was sacked as the Dodgers<br />

exited the end-of-season play-offs in<br />

October 2009.<br />

The impact of the courtroom on<br />

the ballpark parallels two previous<br />

cases - the LA Lakers and San<br />

Diego Padres, both of which were<br />

ultimately sold to help settle divorce<br />

pay-offs - by paralysing team<br />

operations and limiting the amount<br />

of cash available to strengthen the<br />

playing roster. The $19 million<br />

spent by the McCourts on legal fees<br />

during their divorce are equal to<br />

the 2010 salary of the Dodgers’ star<br />

player, Manny Ramirez. Instead of<br />

high-profile young recruits, general<br />

manager Ned Colletti has been<br />

forced to recall a clutch of older<br />

players who had been sent out on<br />

loan to other teams.<br />

Lawyers claim circumstances<br />

in the case are not necessarily<br />

unique to the US but represent<br />

the latest example of a developing<br />

trend that could endanger sports<br />

teams worldwide.<br />

James Brown, associate with<br />

Manchester-based law firm<br />

Pannone, says one consequence<br />

of sports organisations being run<br />

along business lines is that stakes<br />

in sports clubs are no longer treated<br />

differently to any other asset to be<br />

divided on divorce. Pannone has<br />

handled many big-money divorces<br />

in the world of sport, including<br />

backers, boardroom members, star<br />

players and athletes.<br />

Judges have the power to divide<br />

a sports club as they would any<br />

other asset and, if a husband doesn’t<br />

have sufficient ready cash to settle<br />

a pay-out, can potentially order the<br />

sale of a club to raise the money.<br />

The implications for many clubs are<br />

acute, Brown argues, particularly<br />

for those reliant on support from<br />

banks: “No-one should be under<br />

any illusions that a football team is<br />

a ‘safe’ asset, immune to the reach<br />

The McCourts during the the 2009 Playoffs - Getty Images Sport<br />

English Premier League club owners will be among those reflecting on<br />

the outcome of a US divorce case with potentially significant ramifications.<br />

of a divorce court. It is very possible<br />

that the situation being played<br />

out in Los Angeles could be<br />

repeated elsewhere.<br />

“Many Premiership teams<br />

are heavily leveraged and the<br />

prospect of seeing ownership<br />

fought over can cause banks to pull<br />

funding in the same way that they<br />

can do with businesses in other<br />

sectors during marital battles.<br />

“That eventuality would, of<br />

course, have serious repercussions<br />

for the running of the club and<br />

even the on-field performance<br />

of the team by limiting the cash<br />

for wages, new players, stadium<br />

developments and so on.”<br />

Only last year, Veronica Lario<br />

was reported in the Italian media<br />

to be seeking a stake in AC Milan<br />

as part of her strategy in obtaining<br />

a generous pay-off from her<br />

ex-husband, Silvio Berlusconi.<br />

Brown adds the UK’s reputation<br />

for awarding settlements that are<br />

especially favourable to wives meant<br />

that even sport’s richest and most<br />

powerful figures are under pressure.<br />

In divorcing his wife, Slavica,<br />

Bernie Ecclestone was reported to<br />

have last year reached a generous<br />

settlement in order to retain his<br />

grip on world motorsport.<br />

Much of his $2 billion wealth had<br />

been built up during the couple’s<br />

24-year marriage and Slavica had<br />

been entrusted with looking after a<br />

family trust which controlled 10 per<br />

cent of the value of Formula One.<br />

Ryder Cup Director for The<br />

European Tour Richard Hills told<br />

me in May that golf’s biennial team<br />

event is the “transatlantic bridge<br />

in the world of sport.” He’s right<br />

– seldom do the sporting cultures<br />

of the USA and Europe cross other<br />

than at the Olympic Games.<br />

That said, the future growth and<br />

development of the Ryder Cup is<br />

unquestionably being driven from<br />

Europe. Bidding to host the event<br />

in eight years time is becoming the<br />

most competitive in golfing history,<br />

with several European nations<br />

willing to build bespoke courses<br />

and promising spectators a Ryder<br />

Cup that will raise their golfing<br />

experience to the next level.<br />

Interest in the USA has waned<br />

over the past 20 years, partly<br />

because of the strength of the<br />

European team (the USA’s record is<br />

two wins from the last seven played<br />

and Europe are strong favourites<br />

for Celtic Manor), but also from<br />

a significant proportion of the<br />

US golfing elite downplaying the<br />

event’s importance, believing the<br />

professional golf year is over once<br />

the PGA Championship is over.<br />

Add to that the Tiger Woods<br />

factor, a major draw for US<br />

television audiences. He didn’t play<br />

in 2008 through injury and despite<br />

still holding the number one<br />

ranking (albeit precariously), there<br />

are calls for him to not be part of<br />

the 2010 USA team given his poor<br />

form since his return from the<br />

extra-marital affair scandal.<br />

As you’ll see in our Ryder Cup<br />

feature starting on page 34, this<br />

year’s match is primed to have a<br />

positive economic impact of €100m<br />

to host country Wales, thanks in<br />

part to an influx of high-spending<br />

US sports fans, who at the 2006<br />

Ryder Cup in Ireland, spent on<br />

average €600 per day (compared<br />

to the €350 per day average)<br />

according to research by Deloitte.<br />

It’s a two-way relationship and<br />

the Ryder Cup relies on the US<br />

public’s engagement, and their<br />

desire to cross the Atlantic to<br />

come and watch.


AGENDA<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

2020 Olympics: The <strong>International</strong><br />

Softball Federation rejected an<br />

offer from its baseball counterpart<br />

to submit a joint bid for Olympic<br />

reinstatement in 2020. The two<br />

sports were dropped from the 2012<br />

London Olympic Games programme,<br />

then rejected last year when the<br />

<strong>International</strong> Olympic Committee<br />

voted in golf and seven-a-side rugby<br />

for the 2016 Rio Olympics.<br />

Athletics: <strong>International</strong> Association<br />

of Athletics Federations president<br />

Lamine Diack told the sport’s ruling<br />

Council in Kiev that prize money at<br />

major events will not be cut as part<br />

of $20m in cost-saving. The IAAF<br />

announced the planned cuts - which<br />

include $4m in 2010 – in May, saying<br />

they were needed for the sport to<br />

weather the global financial crisis.<br />

NASCAR: Atlanta Motor Speedway<br />

revealed that next season it will<br />

host only one of the two races it has<br />

been staging since 1960. Atlanta<br />

will keep its Labor Day weekend<br />

race. NASCAR chairman and chief<br />

executive Brian France said in July<br />

there could be “impactful changes”<br />

to the Sprint Cup schedule to<br />

address low attendances.<br />

Baseball: North America’s Major<br />

League agreed a deal with the<br />

Australian Baseball Federation to<br />

create a new league in the country<br />

to serve as a pathway for Australian,<br />

Japanese and Korean players to<br />

break into the game. The Australian<br />

Baseball League will relaunch in<br />

November with six teams from each<br />

major city in the country.<br />

Portsmouth FC: The English<br />

Championship club won its High<br />

Court fight with Her Majesty’s<br />

Revenue and Customs (HMRC),<br />

which claimed it was owed £13m<br />

more than the £24m the club<br />

acknowledged. According to the<br />

‘Football Creditor Rule’, footballrelated<br />

creditors should be favoured<br />

by the clubs when paying off debts.<br />

HMRC said it plans to question the<br />

status of the rule legally, but will not<br />

appeal in the Portsmouth case.<br />

Texas Rangers: The group led<br />

by Hall of Fame pitcher and team<br />

president Nolan Ryan won the<br />

auction to buy the bankrupt Major<br />

League Baseball franchise.<br />

WASTE OF SPACE<br />

Sponsors of the 2014 World Cup could be hit after<br />

220,000 of a total 3.1 million tickets were left available<br />

at the 2010 tournament. Alistair Grant reports.<br />

SPONSORS OF <strong>FIFA</strong> World<br />

Cup 2014 could have their ticket<br />

allocations trimmed after two-thirds<br />

of sponsor tickets for the 2010<br />

tournament went unused, leaving<br />

empty seats at most matches.<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> has pledged to ‘rip up’ its<br />

ticket structure as it looks to ensure<br />

that stadia are full In Brazil.<br />

Each of the 18 World Cup 2010<br />

partners had the right to buy and<br />

distribute some 30,000 tickets for<br />

the tournament. Traditionally they<br />

2010 World Cup Individual Ticket prices ($)<br />

A desperate fan’s plea - Getty Images Sport<br />

are used for client entertainment,<br />

staff or as prizes for promotional<br />

offers and competitions.<br />

But some 360,000 of 550,000<br />

available partner tickets were<br />

returned before the tournament<br />

and efforts to re-sell them on the<br />

local market were thwarted because<br />

of their high price. Category one<br />

tickets cost $160 for the group<br />

stages and $900 for the final.<br />

Although some observers<br />

claim to be surprised at the level<br />

Matches Cat. 1 Cat. 2 Cat. 3 Cat. 4 Wheelchair<br />

Opening Match 450 300 200 68 70<br />

Group Matches 160 120 80 19 20<br />

Round of 16 200 150 100 49 50<br />

Quarter-finals 300 200 150 73 75<br />

Semi-finals 600 400 250 97 100<br />

3rd/4th Place Match 300 200 150 73 75<br />

The Final 900 600 400 146 150<br />

Source: <strong>FIFA</strong><br />

$1=ZAR7.2; Category 4 tickets reserved for South African citizens<br />

of take-up most had predicted that<br />

it would be lower than at previous<br />

tournaments. South Africa’s<br />

isolation from the major markets<br />

of Europe, North America and Asia<br />

which meant sky high travel costs.<br />

The price of accommodation in<br />

South Africa was also a major issue.<br />

Richard Marke of Lawrence<br />

Graham solicitors, who specialises<br />

in sponsorship work, said: “People<br />

will be surprised sponsors’ tickets<br />

are down, as the World Cup is a<br />

premier event and no sponsors’<br />

tickets are usually left over.<br />

“But sponsors do not have<br />

the appetite to spend the money<br />

associated with giving tickets away<br />

tickets, such as flights and hotels.”<br />

Rupert Pratt, managing<br />

director of the Generate<br />

Sponsorship consultancy, added:<br />

“The economic climate means<br />

sponsors may have dropped ticket<br />

competitions. They also need<br />

to be seen to be cutting back on<br />

corporate hospitality activity.”<br />

Simon Rines, publisher of the<br />

<strong>International</strong> Journal of Sports<br />

Marketing and Sponsorship, said:<br />

“Sponsors’ ticket reductions were<br />

down to the practical difficulty of<br />

having a World Cup stuck out on a<br />

limb in South Africa.<br />

“It wasn’t near the world’s big<br />

economies. Sponsors offer tickets<br />

to distributors, but the big markets<br />

are Europe, Asia and North<br />

America - all an expensive flight<br />

from South Africa.”<br />

Multinational firms are also<br />

understood to have made the<br />

decision it was just not worth<br />

running competitions which usually<br />

see them give away eight out of<br />

every 10 tickets to fans, with the rest<br />

going to staff and business contacts.<br />

Most of the 13 principal sponsors<br />

refused to reveal how many tickets<br />

they had returned. However, a<br />

spokesman for Continental tyres<br />

confirmed the trend, saying: “The<br />

number of tickets we used was<br />

much lower than for previous<br />

events such as the 2006 World Cup<br />

and Euro 2008.<br />

“Associated costs were much<br />

higher, so we decided to offer<br />

more local activities in different<br />

countries, such as public viewings<br />

of games in connection with a<br />

product presentation.”<br />

10 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


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AGENDA<br />

DON’t GIVE uP ON DElHI<br />

Matthew Glendinning talks to Commonwealth Games chief Mike Hooper<br />

as he responds to yet more troubles in the lead up to Delhi 2010.<br />

tHE MAN At tHE HElM of the Commonwealth<br />

Games Federation (CGF) says he has not<br />

lost confidence in the Delhi 2010 organising<br />

committee (OC) despite the high-profile<br />

suspension of key personnel following<br />

corruption allegations.<br />

Along with delays on venue construction and<br />

questions over sub-standard materials used in<br />

some venues, recent charges against officials<br />

high up in the Delhi OC have painted a picture<br />

of an organisation spiralling out of control with<br />

little more than a month to go before the start of<br />

the Games in October.<br />

Despite calling the latest episode - in which<br />

the OC’s joint director general and deputy<br />

director general were suspended for financial<br />

irregularities over a promotional event in<br />

London - a “massive distraction”, CGF chief<br />

executive Mike Hooper believes the OC has<br />

taken the right course of action on the issue.<br />

“There have been allegations of overpricing<br />

and allegations relating to venue construction<br />

that must be properly investigated,” Hooper<br />

told SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>. “In terms of<br />

FACT OF THE MONTH:<br />

EUROPE LOOKS AT FOURTH CONSECUTIVE HOME-SOIL WIN<br />

the former, the OC themselves looked into the<br />

matter, starting with an internal enquiry. But<br />

the OC board is not a court of law so they have<br />

rightly passed on the case to the appropriate<br />

[government] authorities.<br />

“I hasten to add that the recent CVC (Central<br />

Vigilance Commission) report suggesting that in<br />

some instances sub-standard building materials<br />

were used in venues is not the OC’s direct<br />

responsibility, but we have asked them to follow<br />

up with the relevant government agencies…to<br />

ensure that all venues are fit for purpose.”<br />

With the October Games looming, Hooper<br />

maintains there is work to be done by all<br />

stakeholders in the Games - from the police to<br />

the authority that cleans up Delhi’s streets - and<br />

not just the OC.<br />

“If we all focus on the job in hand there’s a<br />

good chances of a successful Games,” Hooper<br />

adds. “Let the judgement come after the Games<br />

and from the athletes themselves. In Greece at<br />

the 2004 Olympic Games, people were asking<br />

similar questions and, at the end of the day, it<br />

went off very well.”<br />

On October 1 the 38th edition of the Ryder Cup will tee off at Celtic Manor in Newport, Wales.<br />

Having won five of the last seven ties, Team Europe will be confident of an 11th victory having<br />

won the last three Ryder Cup editions in Europe (1997, 2002 and 2006). Defending champions<br />

Team USA aim for back-to-back Ryder Cup wins, a feat they last accomplished in 1993.<br />

Overview of all Ryder cup matches<br />

Year Venue Location Home Away Result Series<br />

2010 The Celtic Manor Resort City of Newport, WAL EUR USA<br />

2008 Valhalla Golf Club Louisville, KY, USA USA EUR 16.5-11.5 USA lead 25-10-2<br />

2006 The K-Club Straffan, IRL EUR USA 18.5-9.5 USA lead 24-10-2<br />

2004 Oakland Hills CC Bloomfield Hills, MI, USA USA EUR 9.5-18.5 USA lead 24-9-2<br />

2002 The De Vere Belfry Sutton Coldfield, ENG EUR USA 15.5-12.5 USA lead 24-8-2<br />

1999 The Country Club Brookline, MA, USA USA EUR 14.5-13.5 USA lead 24-7-2<br />

1997 Valderrama GC Sotogrande, ESP EUR USA 14.5-13.5 USA lead 23-7-2<br />

1995 Oak Hill CC Rochester, NY, USA USA EUR 13.5-14.5 USA lead 23-6-2<br />

1993 The De Vere Belfry Sutton Coldfield, ENG EUR USA 13-15 USA lead 23-5-2<br />

1991 The Ocean Course Kiawah Island, SC, USA USA EUR 14.5-13.5 USA lead 22-5-2<br />

1989 The De Vere Belfry Sutton Coldfield, ENG EUR USA 14-14 USA lead 21-5-2<br />

1987 Muirfield Village GC Dublin, OH, USA USA EUR 13-15 USA lead 21-5-1<br />

1985 The De Vere Belfry Sutton Coldfield, ENG EUR USA 16.5-11.5 USA lead 21-4-1<br />

1983 PGA National GC Palm Beach Gardens, FL, USA USA EUR 14.5-13.5 USA lead 21-3-1<br />

1981 Walton Heath GC Surrey, ENG EUR USA 9.5-18.5 USA lead 20-3-1<br />

But the controversies don’t end there. The OC’s<br />

handling of its commercial programme has also<br />

become a source of dispute with Sport Marketing<br />

and Management (SMAM), the Australian<br />

company commissioned by the OC to sell the<br />

sponsorship rights, dismissed in August on the<br />

grounds of non-performance.<br />

Among the sponsors signed up are the<br />

big international names of Coca-Cola, adidas’<br />

Reebok brand and Hero Honda Motors, a local<br />

motorcycle joint-venture. The rest, however,<br />

consist of Indian public-sector firms such as<br />

Indian Railways, power generator NTPC and<br />

Air India, which critics in the OC say were<br />

contracted without SMAM’s assistance.<br />

The decision to offload the well-respected<br />

sports marketing firm appears difficult to<br />

reconcile with a statement released in May this<br />

year on the OC’s own website, where Hooper<br />

himself praised the company for its effort in<br />

raising a then total of $74 million.<br />

“We were particularly pleased with the<br />

in-roads being made in the area of sponsorship<br />

and the results achieved to date by the<br />

organising committee and their appointed<br />

agent for the Games, Sports Marketing and<br />

Management,” he wrote.<br />

Does Hooper stand by that comment?<br />

“Absolutely,” he responds. In fact, a recently<br />

released statement from SMAM suggests that<br />

the final figure will be nearer to $85 million -<br />

more than the total for Melbourne 2006.<br />

As for broadcast revenues for the Games,<br />

valued at $64 million, Hooper asserts that the<br />

OC-appointed Fast Track agency has exceeded<br />

sales expectations.<br />

“Fast Track have done a tremendous job for<br />

the OC,” he says. “Remember that Ron Walker,<br />

chairman of Melbourne 2006, congratulated<br />

12 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


COMMUNIQUE<br />

AUGUST 2010<br />

SINGAPORE<br />

THE INAUGURAL YOUTH OLYMPICS: BRINGING<br />

THE games TO A NEW GENERATION.<br />

Queen’s Baton Relay outside Buckingham Palace - Getty Images Sport<br />

them on the work they did with Melbourne<br />

2006, which exceeded targets and was the<br />

most successful sponsorship campaign in<br />

the history of the Commonwealth Games by<br />

a significant margin. Well, it’s the same for<br />

Delhi: they have blown the doors off the [2006]<br />

figure with much better sales than anticipated<br />

in a global context.”<br />

Meanwhile, ticket sales are set to hit around<br />

$13 million, making the Delhi Games worth well<br />

over $160 million for the organisers who are the<br />

beneficiaries of all three main revenue streams.<br />

Finally, the New Zealander who admits to<br />

a “glass half full” viewpoint on preparations<br />

remains firm on the priority-point of security:<br />

“We appointed our own security advisor and have<br />

regular feedback from, and interaction with, the<br />

Metropolitan Police on an informal basis.<br />

“John Yates, the Assistant Commissioner in<br />

the UK Metropolitan Police, has been out here<br />

and is happy with the plans in place.<br />

“The Indian government is committed to<br />

a safe and secure Games and nothing has<br />

happened to dissuade us that they have backed<br />

off from fulfilling their commitments. Delhi is<br />

a government city with a strong police presence<br />

and there will be a lot of police both in and<br />

outside the venues.”<br />

Despite the scepticism, it is unlikely that<br />

the Indian government and its agencies will<br />

allow the event to fail. The OC was handed a<br />

$345 million budget for the Games, all via an<br />

unsecured government loan.<br />

But outside estimates put the total Games<br />

costs, including stadium infrastructure,<br />

anywhere from $2 billion to $6 billion.<br />

As Hooper concludes: “[India] invested a<br />

massive amount of money in these Games, and<br />

we want it to succeed.”<br />

A rock tune is playing and green<br />

laser beams illuminate the interior of<br />

a revolving box on the corner of the<br />

wrestling arena.<br />

The door to the box opens and a<br />

wrestler emerges to face his opponent,<br />

introduced in the same fashion just a<br />

few seconds earlier.<br />

This isn’t a scene from the WWE,<br />

it’s the high-octane presentation of the<br />

Greco-Roman finals at the inaugural<br />

Youth Olympic Games in Singapore.<br />

The <strong>International</strong> Olympic<br />

Committee has long been confronted<br />

by the challenge of rejuvenating its<br />

audience.<br />

Recent research shows that today’s<br />

fans of the Olympics are<br />

practically the same as ten<br />

years ago. And cruel as<br />

it may seem , many<br />

of them will not be<br />

around for many<br />

more Games.<br />

The<br />

introduction of<br />

more extreme<br />

versions of classic<br />

sports to the<br />

programme, like the<br />

ski and snowboard<br />

cross or BMX cycling,<br />

have already shown how<br />

the Olympic movement is reching<br />

out to youth. And five years ago, IOC<br />

members were persuaded by a London<br />

Olympic bid that promised to inspire<br />

youngsters around the world, over what<br />

was seen as a technically flawless<br />

Paris candidature.<br />

The concept of the Youth Olympic<br />

Games, first announced by IOC<br />

president Jacques Rogge in 2007,<br />

follows in this trend.<br />

Without the weight of tradition<br />

on their shoulders, international<br />

sports federations have been able to<br />

experiment freely with different formats<br />

in a quest to attract new audiences.<br />

The most innovative of them all is<br />

certainly three-on-three basketball<br />

which, inspired by the street version<br />

of the game, had two games played<br />

at the same time on either half of the<br />

court to the sound of songs picked by<br />

a DJ on site.<br />

Other sports have also been<br />

audacious enough to feature mixed<br />

and continent-based teams, building<br />

bridges between genders and countries.<br />

New media has been wisely explored<br />

by a 12-strong team who tweeted live<br />

commentary of sailing races from<br />

powerboats to a screen set up at the<br />

National Sailing Centre on shore.<br />

You can’t help but think it would have<br />

been the perfect occasion for <strong>FIFA</strong> to test<br />

the long-awaited goalline technology,<br />

with all football games taking place at<br />

the same Jalan Besar Stadium. But the<br />

football’s world governing body stuck to<br />

the conventional format in a women’s<br />

and men’s tournament for 14 and<br />

15-year-olds.<br />

Singapore budget was already well<br />

over the amount estimated by the IOC<br />

and the Games will end up<br />

costing $290 million,<br />

almost three times the<br />

amount originally<br />

allocated for<br />

staging the event.<br />

Nevertheless,<br />

restrictions on<br />

new builds - the<br />

IOC required<br />

the Games to be<br />

held at existing<br />

facilities to keep<br />

costs to a minimum<br />

- forced organisers<br />

to come up with creative<br />

solutions that could be used to ensure<br />

sustainable Olympic Games in the<br />

future.<br />

Adopting mixed or combined<br />

teams has allowed competitions to<br />

take place with fewer athletes, and<br />

international federations have been<br />

more prepared to be flexible and work<br />

with what was available rather than<br />

make any costly demands.<br />

And in Singapore, the Youth<br />

Olympics had an ideal first host<br />

country. With the wealthy city-state<br />

keen to use sports to promote itself<br />

as not only an Asian business hub<br />

but also a fun place to live, the<br />

enthusiasm and involvement of the<br />

population was evident.<br />

From university students to<br />

government ministers, the sense of<br />

pride was summarised in the same<br />

sentence: “We’re a small country, but<br />

we can still do big things like this.”<br />

Bernardo Domingues<br />

SportBusiness Group<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 13


BRANDS & MARKETING<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

BRANDS + MARKETING<br />

Singha Beer: The Thai brand signed<br />

a four-year ‘platinum partnership’<br />

to become Chelsea’s official beer<br />

sponsor. The brand will be sold<br />

exclusively across the club’s Stamford<br />

Bridge from 2010-11 to 2013-14.<br />

Channel 4: BT and Sainsbury’s signed<br />

deals to become joint sponsors of UK<br />

commercial broadcaster’s coverage<br />

of the 2012 Paralympics. Sainsbury’s<br />

and BT will share sponsorship equally<br />

across a variety of programmes<br />

broadcast across the Channel 4<br />

network both in the lead up to and<br />

during the Paralympic Games. The deal<br />

started on August 29, exactly two years<br />

to the Opening Ceremony of the London<br />

2012 Paralympic Games which Channel<br />

4 marked with a weekend of dedicated<br />

programming.<br />

Football Association of Ireland: Mobile<br />

phone operator 3 became primary<br />

sponsor of the Irish national team in a<br />

four-year deal is worth €7.5 million The<br />

operator will offer customers access to<br />

match tickets and other football-related<br />

initiatives and will support grassroots<br />

initiatives across the country.<br />

Milwaukee Brewers: The Major League<br />

Baseball team extended its relationship<br />

with PNC Bank to include the naming<br />

rights for the club level at Miller Park<br />

stadium. It is the first time the team has<br />

had a sponsor for its club level.<br />

Swiss Indoors: Tobacco brand<br />

Davidoff’s sponsorship of the ATP 500<br />

tennis tournament in Basel will end<br />

after the 2010 event this November,<br />

tournament organiser’s said. The ATP<br />

World Tour told the Swiss Indoors in<br />

June that the existing sponsorship<br />

could not be extended because of<br />

worldwide laws restricting tobacco<br />

advertising on television.<br />

Suzuki: The Japanese car giant<br />

Suzuki Motor Corporation renewed its<br />

agreement with the Asean Football<br />

Federation to continue as title<br />

sponsorship of the AFF Suzuki Cup for<br />

2010. The agreement was brokered<br />

by the Singapore-based World Sport<br />

Group, the exclusive marketing<br />

partners of the AFF and organiser of the<br />

tournament. Suzuki first title sponsored<br />

the tournament in 2008.<br />

Toyota: The car producer extended its<br />

sponsorship of Munster Rugby in a new<br />

three-year deal worth €5.75m.<br />

AN OLYMPIC EFFORT<br />

ENCOURAGED BY THE RESULTS of a $15m<br />

partnership with the National Football League<br />

and a similar-sized deal with the US Olympic<br />

Committee for the 2010 and 2012 Olympic<br />

Games, P&G has committed a couple of<br />

hundred million dollars to be an official partner<br />

of the Olympic Games.<br />

Twenty-two of P&G’s brands, like Gillette,<br />

boast $1 billion or more in annual sales and are<br />

powerful enough to sustain a global sponsorship<br />

campaign in their own right. But in all the these<br />

sponsorship deals, P&G is the umbrella brand,<br />

and the marketing rights that come with the<br />

sponsorship are shared amongst a range of its<br />

subsidiaries - 13 of them, for instance, became<br />

NFL’s official locker room products.<br />

For its Olympic partnership, the company<br />

will be mirroring the activation around Team<br />

USA in Vancouver, says Marc Pritchard, P&G<br />

global marketing and brand building officer.<br />

“The way the partnership works and the way we<br />

market it is we have actually three major pillars,”<br />

he tells SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>. “One is our<br />

brands. We had each individual brand create an<br />

Olympic-themed idea and they tend to partner<br />

with or sponsor an athlete.”<br />

During Vancouver speed-skater Apolo Ohno<br />

endorsed cold and flu medicine line Vicks<br />

while ice skater Tanith Belbin was supported<br />

by women’s deodorant Secret. In the lead-up to<br />

London, at least 50 P&G brands are expected to<br />

partner with individual teams and athletes.<br />

Snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis - Procter & Gamble<br />

Procter & Gamble’s 10-year Olympic sponsorship will see it leverage sales<br />

across its whole multi-brand portfolio, Bernardo Domingues reports.<br />

A second element of P&G’s Winter campaign<br />

was activated on site. It set up a ‘Family Home’ in<br />

Vancouver, where US athletes could meet up with<br />

their families without having to face the access<br />

difficulties of the Olympic Village. There they<br />

could enjoy ‘branded services’ such as the Pampers<br />

playtime village and the Tide laundry centre.<br />

Post-Games research showed families engage<br />

strongly as an audience during the Olympics and<br />

this had clear consequences in the outcome of its<br />

television campaign.<br />

“Our advertising was thirty-to-forty per cent<br />

more effective during the Games than otherwise,”<br />

explains Pritchard. “A lot of that is because you<br />

have the entire family watching.”<br />

The company also flew a number of US<br />

athletes’ mothers to Vancouver who otherwise<br />

could not afford the trip. Its TV ads explored<br />

the concept of the Games seen through the<br />

eyes of a mother and at the end of the spots, as<br />

on in-store advertising, some of the company’s<br />

brands and products were displayed under the<br />

‘P&G - Proud Sponsor of Moms’ tag.<br />

Tim Crow, CEO at sponsorship consultancy<br />

Synergy, says the key is playing the “mom card”<br />

- something P&G has been doing since signing<br />

its NFL deal - because a mother “doesn’t just buy<br />

for herself: she buys for the family.<br />

“And if a consuming family passion is the<br />

NFL - which it absolutely is in the US - then<br />

connecting P&G’s products to that family<br />

passion is absolutely on the money.”<br />

14 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


EYE ON THE<br />

INDUSTRY<br />

GREAT HAUL OF CHINA<br />

For years the West has coveted the Chinese market, often using sponsorship<br />

for entry. Now traffic is flowing in the opposite direction, writes Barry Wilner.<br />

SPONSORSHIP OF sport in China by major<br />

global brands peaked before and during the<br />

Beijing Olympic Games. But now a new trend<br />

is emerging as Chinese companies become<br />

sponsors on the international scene as they look<br />

to build share in global markets.<br />

Li Ning, a sportswear company founded by<br />

the Olympic champion gymnast and six-medal<br />

winner at the 1984 games in Los Angeles,<br />

reached an agreement with Shaquille O’Neal in<br />

2006 and since then has sponsored Sweden’s<br />

Olympic teams, plus Spain and Argentina’s<br />

basketball teams.<br />

Additionally Anta sponsors tennis star<br />

Jelena Jankovic, Xtep partners English Premier<br />

League football club Birmingham City and most<br />

recently, Peak, which eventually hopes to be the<br />

Nike of its homeland, signed a five-year deal<br />

with the women’s tennis tour that is worth more<br />

than $1 million annually (see pp. 44-45).<br />

The idea is to use sponsorship of foreign<br />

athletes to boost brand image within China’s<br />

sporting goods market, which is worth more<br />

than $6 billion and is projected to grow 14 per<br />

cent a year.<br />

“More than 30 Chinese firms partnered with<br />

the Beijing Olympic Games, including PC-maker<br />

Lenovo as a global Olympic sponsor. Chinese<br />

electronic gadget-producer Aigo sponsored the<br />

McLaren-Mercedes Formula One team and<br />

Manchester United,” says Zak Brown, CEO of the<br />

Just Marketing <strong>International</strong> agency.<br />

“This trend will continue with more Chinese<br />

companies getting involved in international<br />

sports sponsorships, with an increased emphasis<br />

on activation beyond just having signs in the<br />

field...Motorsports would be among the naturals.<br />

“The massive global audience and gateway to<br />

Li Ning at the NBA signing ceremony in 2005 - Getty Images Sport<br />

eager buyers of automotive, consumer and tech<br />

products and goods should drive expansion of<br />

investment in motorsports.”<br />

But basketball remains the top target of these<br />

Chinese sponsors.<br />

Peak is the official sponsor of the NBA<br />

in China and is most competitive in the<br />

marketplace with its basketball shoes. It opened<br />

more than 1,000 new stores in the past year,<br />

with total revenues doubling to $456 million,<br />

and has deals with a dozen NBA players,<br />

including all-stars Jason Kidd and Ron Artest.<br />

“We just want to extend our brand name<br />

from basketball to tennis,” says Peak CEO Jim<br />

Xu. “China is our top market. Signing deals with<br />

international sports competitions is to attain<br />

our goal of becoming more global and more<br />

professional. But, of course, the primary impact<br />

will be on China and then the global market.”<br />

Still, attracting big names across a wide<br />

spectrum of sports eventually would be a<br />

wiser approach. “In general terms, the major<br />

international sports that have a big following<br />

in China are NBA, soccer [football] and golf<br />

- the latter among the sought-after wealthy<br />

professional Chinese demographic,” adds Brown.<br />

“As such, they attract foreign sponsorship<br />

and brands seeking penetration in the Chinese<br />

consumer market. English Premiership clubs<br />

such as Manchester United have established<br />

permanent relationships in the country through<br />

demonstration tours, academies and exchange<br />

programmes. This is a trend that will continue.”<br />

Next to look for might be more widespread<br />

involvement by Chinese food, beverage and<br />

transportation services. Eventually, it is also<br />

predcited, investment firms, banks and<br />

automakers will become big players too.<br />

BRANDS + MARKETING<br />

BACK THE BID?<br />

Adam Paker asks whether<br />

sponsoring bids to host major<br />

sports events is worth it.<br />

In December <strong>FIFA</strong> will, for the first time,<br />

select the host countries for not one but<br />

two World Cups.<br />

All of the bids have sponsors but is it<br />

worth backing an event bid considering<br />

the risks associated with it? The question<br />

was asked in England in May, when<br />

the country’s 2018 backers braced<br />

themselves for the fallout from then<br />

chairman Lord Triesman’s accusations of<br />

bribery against rival bids.<br />

Bid sponsors gain limited rights and<br />

a short time in which to activate them.<br />

Worst of all, sponsors of unsuccessful bids<br />

face reflected embarrassment – and live<br />

in fear they will be tarred with the same<br />

brush as the failed (and in the public’s eye,<br />

incompetent) bidding committee.<br />

Moreover, even sponsors of<br />

successful bids cannot be complacent,<br />

since the period of public jubilation<br />

is finite. Some brands (EDF Energy<br />

in relation to London 2012) choose to<br />

extend their relationship by sponsoring<br />

first the bid, then the event itself. But<br />

this inevitably entails much higher costs<br />

than may initially have been envisaged.<br />

Ultimately, backing a bid is a gamble<br />

and the smartest sponsors will treat it<br />

as such - in the first instance by paying<br />

an amount that reflects option pricing<br />

and a dispassionate assessment of the<br />

bid’s chances.<br />

Then, sponsors must activate their<br />

rights hard in the run-up to the decision,<br />

develop a game plan to capitalise on<br />

success and be prepared to turn the<br />

page and move on quietly to other<br />

marketing campaigns if the bid flops.<br />

The attractions are obvious. There’s a<br />

record 11 countries bidding or co-bidding<br />

for the 2018/2022 World Cups, and<br />

with no clear front-runner for either<br />

tournament, levels of interest should add<br />

up to a bonanza for the bid sponsors.<br />

A brand has the chance to appear<br />

both patriotic and public-spirited, while<br />

tapping into the public elation that comes<br />

with success - who can forget the scenes<br />

in London’s Trafalgar Square in 2005<br />

when the city celebrated a successful<br />

campaign to host the Olympics?<br />

It’s also a gilt-edged opportunity<br />

for some ‘legitimised ambushing’.<br />

Morrisons is sponsoring England’s<br />

2018 bid, even though the food retailing<br />

sponsor of the English Football<br />

Association (which is meeting most of<br />

the bid costs) is arch-rival Tesco.


ands brands & Marketing<br />

& KETING<br />

BRANDS + MARKETING<br />

United - LiCensed tO ring tiLLs<br />

Manchester United is the<br />

best performing sports team<br />

brand in the European licensed<br />

products market according<br />

a survey conducted exclusively<br />

for SportBusiness <strong>International</strong><br />

by Brand Licensing Europe,<br />

the major exhibition showcase<br />

for the industry.<br />

sOMe 400 seniOr licensing industry<br />

executives took part in a survey which aimed to<br />

create a snapshot of trends within the sector by<br />

examining which types of products sell best and<br />

through which channels.<br />

United was voted the most successful sports<br />

team licensing across Europe. They captured<br />

90 per cent of the vote and came in ahead of<br />

European rival Real Madrid.<br />

The sheer diversity of the European licensing<br />

market is demonstrated by the inclusion of a<br />

raft of US sports brands in the top eight. They<br />

are the New York Yankees, LA Lakers and Dallas<br />

Cowboys, all of which came in ahead of Serie A’s<br />

AC Milan and Formula One team Ferrari.<br />

Teams were voted the best performing sports<br />

licensing category, recording 65.3 per cent of<br />

the vote ahead of sports personalities (20.8 per<br />

cent), tournaments and competitions (11.6 per<br />

cent) and sports associations and governing<br />

bodies (2.3 per cent).<br />

Former England football captain David<br />

Beckham was voted the most successful sports<br />

Brand Licensing Europe’s Exhibitor Hall<br />

licensing personality in Europe, ahead of fellow<br />

football players Lionel Messi of Barcelona and<br />

Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo.<br />

Golfer Tiger Woods was placed fourth in the<br />

category and experts believe his licensing value<br />

has been adversely affected by the scandal over<br />

his complicated personal life, which has been<br />

followed by a significant loss of form.<br />

The US list was topped by the long-retired<br />

basketball star Michael Jordan with the<br />

NBA’s LeBron James and Indianapolis Colts<br />

quarterback Peyton Manning finishing higher<br />

than Kobe Bryant.<br />

The dominance of football in Europe was<br />

further underlined in the events category with<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup topping the vote ahead of<br />

UEFA Euro 2012, the 2012 London Olympic<br />

Games, Formula One races, the Tour de France,<br />

Wimbledon and the Rugby World Cup.<br />

In the US the vote was headed by the NFL<br />

Super Bowl and followed by the NBA Finals<br />

and motor racing’s NASCAR. The omission of<br />

baseball’s World Series from the top three is<br />

16 sportbusiness international • No. 160 • 09.10


ands & Marketing<br />

What do you think are the most productive<br />

routes to market for sports brands?<br />

Supermarket<br />

13.19%<br />

Fernando<br />

Torres<br />

4.9%<br />

Landon<br />

Donovan<br />

7.0%<br />

Kaka<br />

10.4%<br />

Online<br />

17.85%<br />

Sales at<br />

sports events<br />

18.16%<br />

Other<br />

6.2%<br />

General<br />

retail stores<br />

29.9%<br />

Club/stadium<br />

shops/<br />

concessions<br />

20.8%<br />

Who do you think has the most commercial<br />

licensing value from the following list of world<br />

cup players?<br />

Christiano<br />

Ronaldo<br />

39.9%<br />

BRANDS + MARK<br />

Mayur Pattni,<br />

Managing Director,<br />

Pattni Imaginations<br />

Pattni Imaginations<br />

designs and<br />

manufactures toys<br />

under license,<br />

including Premier<br />

League football<br />

action figures.<br />

“The future for sports licensing is a very<br />

exciting one. Pattni Imaginations will be<br />

developing a range of football player action<br />

figures under license from Arsenal, Chelsea,<br />

Liverpool and Manchester United, cobranded<br />

with Match-Stars. We believe<br />

football fans are extremely passionate,<br />

loyal and the level to which fans engage<br />

and interact with the club-brand is<br />

phenomenal. It is this level of engagement<br />

and interaction that not only football fans<br />

but sports fans in general have, which makes<br />

sports licensing an attractive option.”<br />

Chris Protheroe,<br />

Executive Vice<br />

President, CPLG<br />

Europe’s largest<br />

licensing agency<br />

working across sport,<br />

entertainment and<br />

brands.<br />

“The huge visibility that football has created<br />

since, really, the dawn of the Premier League and<br />

Sky’s broadcast of it has dominated the sports<br />

licensing market. Not just clubs but events and<br />

national team brands. Football fans at all levels<br />

love to identify with their club and country.<br />

“In the UK there’s a golden decade of sport to look<br />

forward to, starting with the Olympics in 2012<br />

which have already ignited consumer interest and<br />

created a retail appetite for sports brands. Then<br />

we move on to the Rugby League World Cup in<br />

2013, the Ashes in 2013, Rugby Union World Cup<br />

in 2015 and perhaps even the <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup in<br />

2018. This unprecedented number of tournaments<br />

will give retailers and their consumers an ongoing<br />

relationship with sport for years to come.”<br />

Wayne Rooney<br />

15.8%<br />

Sports<br />

associations<br />

Major<br />

2.3%<br />

tournaments<br />

11.6%<br />

Sports<br />

personalities<br />

20.8%<br />

Diego Maradona<br />

3.1%<br />

Pele<br />

28.1%<br />

Ronaldo<br />

4.4%<br />

Lionel Messi<br />

18.7%<br />

Which element of sports licenced merchandise<br />

performs best?<br />

Others<br />

3.4%<br />

Sports<br />

teams/clubs<br />

65.3%<br />

Who has the most commercial licencing value<br />

from the following list ot World Cup legends?<br />

David<br />

Beckham<br />

61%<br />

surprising given the popularity of other baseballrelated<br />

branded product.<br />

Turning to the 2010 <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup,<br />

respondents were asked to identify the players<br />

who delivered most commercial licensing value.<br />

Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo topped the poll<br />

(39 per cent) ahead of Lionel Messi of Argentina<br />

(18.7 per cent) England’s Wayne Rooney<br />

(15.8 per cent) and Kaka of Brazil (10.4 per cent).<br />

Interestingly Landon Donovan of the USA<br />

received seven per cent of the vote, perhaps<br />

reflecting football (soccer)’s growing popularity<br />

across the Atlantic.<br />

The extent that David Beckham’s personal<br />

brand transcends sporting achievement is clearly<br />

indicated in a poll to identify the footballer with<br />

most commercial licensing appeal. Beckham, who<br />

never progressed beyond the quarter finals of the<br />

World Cup, recorded 61 per cent of the vote, way<br />

ahead of Pele, twice a winner of the tournament<br />

and widely considered one of the finest players in<br />

history. Ronaldo of Brazil received 4.4 per cent of<br />

the vote and Diego Maradona, the main rival for<br />

the ‘Best Ever’ crown - just 3.1 per cent.<br />

Finally, respondents were asked to select the<br />

most productive routes to market for sportsbranded<br />

products. General retails stores were<br />

considered most important by 29.9 per cent,<br />

while sales at stadia and club shops accounted<br />

for 20.8 per cent per cent. Sales at sports events<br />

were voted by 18.16 per cent.<br />

There were two surprises in this category.<br />

Given their domination of the retail landscape<br />

in many key territories, supermarkets received<br />

only 13.19 per cent of the vote while online sales<br />

accounted for just 17.85 per cent.<br />

Brand Licensing Europe takes place at Olympia,<br />

London, from September 28-30.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 17


BRANDS BRANDS & MARKETING<br />

& KETING<br />

BRANDS + MARKETING<br />

NO BULL APPROACH<br />

Professional Bull Riders talk to Rick Burton about growth prospects in Brazil, a<br />

market primed to be more commercially significant than even the United States.<br />

The 2010 PBR Troy Dunn <strong>International</strong> in Australia - Getty Images Sport<br />

MANY GLOBAL sports business<br />

industrialists might think that<br />

professional bull riding is<br />

something only a handful of<br />

American cowboys take part in<br />

during sleepy State fairs and smalltown<br />

rodeos far off the beaten track.<br />

To the contrary, the Professional<br />

Bull Riders (PBR), which launched<br />

as a professional American circuit<br />

in 1992 - when 21 bull riders each<br />

tipped in $1,000 to start a brave<br />

new concept - now has more<br />

than 180 domestic US events<br />

with 30 major market events in<br />

its nationally-televised Built Ford<br />

Tough Series. With 800 riders<br />

worldwide and more than 400 of<br />

those athletes hailing from Brazil,<br />

Mexico, Canada and Australia,<br />

the PBR is rapidly becoming an<br />

international entity.<br />

That’s quite a jump forward for<br />

any sports property but the PBR,<br />

headquartered in Pueblo, Colorado,<br />

has taken the premier event of the<br />

traditional American rodeo circuit<br />

and not only built a significant<br />

domestic presence but expanded<br />

notably into Brazil, Canada and<br />

Australia. Mexico and parts of Asia<br />

may not be far behind.<br />

You could say the PBR has taken<br />

the bull by the horns. In fact, since<br />

expanding internationally in 2006,<br />

the PBR now stages nearly 200<br />

events annually overseas and sees<br />

Brazil as the next frontier.<br />

“Brazil is currently at a place<br />

similar to where PBR USA was<br />

five to seven years after breaking<br />

away from traditional rodeo,”<br />

David Cordovano, chief global<br />

events officer for the PBR, told<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>.<br />

“Further, we think Brazil has the<br />

potential to be larger than our<br />

domestic business.”<br />

That’s quite a growth projection,<br />

particularly for a US-based property,<br />

but it’s driven in large part by<br />

Brazil’s rapidly-developing economy<br />

and growing appetite for hosting<br />

dynamic sports competitions such<br />

as the 2014 <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup and<br />

Rio de Janeiro’s 2016 Summer<br />

Olympic Games. In that sense,<br />

Brazil, not China, is the new and<br />

expanding frontier.<br />

Brazil now features more than<br />

300 riders and has expanded<br />

from staging 27 events in 2009<br />

to almost 100 in 2010. They also<br />

have 30 televised competitions (10<br />

of them live) and will expand to 20<br />

live TV events in 2011.<br />

“Our combined worldwide prize<br />

money has increased to over $11<br />

million with $3 million coming<br />

internationally and we now reach<br />

more than over 400 million<br />

homes with international<br />

TV distribution,” adds<br />

Cordovano. “Thirty million of<br />

those homes are in Canada,<br />

Australia and Brazil, so if you’ll<br />

pardon the pun, we’re pretty<br />

bullish on where our international<br />

expansion can take us.”<br />

But what accounts for this<br />

growth? The answer may lie in<br />

two critical areas. The first is that<br />

every bull ride places the rider at<br />

extreme risk to serious injury and<br />

possible death. There is no telling<br />

how high a bull might jump,<br />

when it might turn suddenly and<br />

whether the rider will stay on for<br />

the full eight seconds.<br />

Secondly, and perhaps more<br />

importantly, the PBR has turned<br />

their single-focused attention to<br />

the comprehensive spectacle of the<br />

event. Big PBR events, sponsored<br />

by Ford trucks (‘The Built Ford<br />

Tough Series’) are akin to familyfriendly<br />

NASCAR weekends with<br />

musical concerts, pyrotechnic<br />

explosions and numerous<br />

interactive moments when riders<br />

can meet their fans.<br />

“The PBR is truly a gem,”<br />

says Jeffrey Pollack, the PBR’s<br />

new Executive Chairman. “It’s<br />

authentically American, fiercely<br />

competitive and yet there is<br />

nothing else like it anywhere in<br />

professional sports. What the<br />

PBR has achieved since<br />

its founding less than 20<br />

years ago, is remarkable<br />

but we’re about to take<br />

it to an entirely new level<br />

of excellence by going both<br />

digital and global.”<br />

Dynamic words and<br />

yet in a sport where<br />

a 2,000-pound bull<br />

can crush a man,<br />

whether he’s American,<br />

Australian or Brazilian,<br />

in seconds, why<br />

shouldn’t the PBR’s vision carry<br />

some international kick and snort?<br />

Rick Burton is the David B. Falk<br />

Professor of Sport Management at<br />

Syracuse <strong>University</strong>. He was formerly<br />

the Commissioner of Australia’s<br />

National Basketball League.<br />

18 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


THE FUTURE OF FOOTBALL<br />

The Future of Players’ Agents<br />

∑<br />

The Future of Football Stadiums<br />

∑<br />

The Future of Global Football Sponsoring<br />

∑<br />

The Future <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup Hosts 2018/2022<br />

FOOTBALLS GLOBAL PLAYERS MEET AT THE DOLDER GRAND HOTEL<br />

IN ZURICH FROM OCTOBER 25–26, 2010.<br />

Participation is by invitation only. To apply please contact Antje Hembd on ah@internationalfootball.com<br />

For Sponsorship contact Michael Stracke on mps@internationalfootball.com<br />

For Sponsorship contact Michael Stracke on mps@internationalfootball.com<br />

w w w.internationalfootball.com<br />

M A I N PA RT N E R S : S U P P O RT I N G PA RT N E R :


MEDIA<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

Total Sports Asia: The rights agency<br />

agreed a deal to distribute media<br />

content for Olympic boxing. The<br />

worldwide rights, which cover TV,<br />

broadband and mobile, were acquired<br />

in a deal with the <strong>International</strong><br />

Boxing Association. TSA will start by<br />

distributing this September’s Women’s<br />

World Boxing Championship.<br />

News Corporation: The global media<br />

company sold a controlling stake in<br />

Chinese television network Star China to<br />

investment group China Media Capital.<br />

ESPN STAR Sports: The Pan-Asian<br />

sports broadcaster appointed Wenjia<br />

Fang, formerly with mobile phone<br />

producer Nokia, as Managing Director<br />

and Chief Representative of its China<br />

office. Wenjia will responsible for the<br />

strategic direction and growth of ESS’<br />

operations in China.<br />

Kentaro: Frederick Ness was<br />

appointed German managing director<br />

at the sports media agency.<br />

ITV: The UK commercial broadcaster<br />

announced an October launch date for<br />

high-definition versions of its ITV2, 3<br />

and 4 digital channels. The three will<br />

be marketed as pay-TV services, the<br />

first step in a five-year strategy to<br />

reduce its dependence on advertising<br />

revenues.<br />

EA Sports: The North American sports<br />

video game developer signed a deal with<br />

Sportfive for the agency to activate its<br />

‘official sports technology’ sponsorship<br />

of the English Premier League.<br />

TVSPORTSMARKETS<br />

This month SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> showcases a selection of articles from sister publication TV Sports Markets,<br />

the specialist publisher providing information and analysis on the sports media industry. For more information about<br />

the newsletter or specialist market intelligence reports, contact Paul Santos on +44 207 954 3483 or paul.santos@<br />

tvsportsmarkets.com, or visit www.tvsportsmarkets.com, where you can sign up to a free weekly email news bulletin.<br />

HI-NOON FOR AFRICAN BOOM?<br />

Nigerian broadcaster HiTV’s loss of English Premier League rights has<br />

raised questions over how long the boom in African rights fees can continue.<br />

PAY-TV BROADCASTER HITV lost the rights for<br />

the English Premier League in Nigeria, for the<br />

2010-11 to 2012-13 seasons, in July after failing<br />

to provide bank guarantees to cover the fee in<br />

time. It was the second Premier League deal in<br />

Africa to fall through in the last two years - sub-<br />

Saharan operator GTV went bust in early 2009 -<br />

providing further evidence that the phenomenal<br />

rights growth on the continent in recent years<br />

has shaky foundations.<br />

Imtiaz Patel, chief executive of longstanding<br />

pan-African broadcaster Supersport, which has<br />

bought the Premier League rights in Nigeria that<br />

HiTV dropped, told TV Sports Markets that recent<br />

fees paid had created “an artificial bubble”.<br />

“There has to be a realignment of expectation<br />

in Africa,” Patel said. “The days of 1,000-per-cent<br />

increases are over. That kind of growth is just not<br />

sustainable. Rights-holders have got to start valuing<br />

a combination of reasonable increases and surety<br />

of delivery and start seeing deals as a partnership.”<br />

HiTV had committed to pay $125 million over<br />

three years for the Premier League rights, over<br />

three times what was paid in the previous Nigeria<br />

deal. It had successfully made a large up-front<br />

payment, and was hindered in providing the bank<br />

guarantees by new banking regulations in Nigeria.<br />

But sources close to the Premier League suggested<br />

it had “been more than lenient” with HiTV, which<br />

had missed several payment deadlines for the<br />

2007-10 contract.<br />

Nevertheless, some observers argued the<br />

league could have been more patient with HiTV,<br />

with a view to fostering long-term competition<br />

for Supersport. The South Africa-based company<br />

has now re-established the pan-regional hold on<br />

the Premier League it had up until 2007, after last<br />

year securing the rights for the next three seasons<br />

in South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa.<br />

But the Premier League’s main concern was<br />

securing for its shareholder clubs the monies it<br />

had been promised for Nigeria this time round.<br />

The next international sales process is over two<br />

years away and there is plenty of time for new<br />

players, or indeed HiTV, to challenge Supersport.<br />

Despite the collapse of GTV in 2009, Premier<br />

League rights in sub-Saharan Africa for the<br />

upcoming three-year contract still rose 135 per<br />

cent, with Supersport facing a strong challenge<br />

from Beijing-based Star TV. The league and<br />

other rights-holders can take some comfort from<br />

Supersport’s reputation as a fair partner and from<br />

the growth in recent years of the Nigerian paytelevision<br />

market.<br />

Formula One: The sport’s 2010 midseason<br />

report boasted a resurgence<br />

in Germany with viewing figures at a<br />

three-year high. The return of Michael<br />

Schumacher and success of Sebastian<br />

Vettel meant nine of the first 10 races<br />

achieved a larger TV audience than<br />

their corresponding race in 2009, with<br />

an average improvement of 27 per cent.<br />

MP & Silva: The agency signed a<br />

six-year deal with Arsenal Broadband<br />

Limited to co-produce the English<br />

Premier League club’s official<br />

international TV programming and new<br />

multi-platform content.<br />

Sogecable: The Prisa-owned paytelevision<br />

company agreed a deal to<br />

carry telecoms operator Orange’s<br />

flagship premium channel Canal Plus<br />

on the Orange IPTV network.<br />

Nigeria and Chelsea star John Obi Mikel - Getty Images Sport<br />

20 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


DEAL OF<br />

THE MONTH<br />

KEVIN McCULLAGH<br />

Senior Reporter, TV Sports Markets<br />

The Nimbus Communications agency,<br />

holder of the worldwide media rights for<br />

international cricket in India, agreed a<br />

carriage deal with US cable-television<br />

operator Comcast for new cricket<br />

channel Neo Cricket.<br />

PAY-TV MUST UP ITS GAME<br />

Christian Seifert, chief executive of the Deutsche Fussball Liga, told<br />

TV Sports Markets in an exclusive interview in July that Germany’s weak<br />

pay-television market was the biggest challenge facing the Bundesliga.<br />

GERMANY, Europe’s largest television market,<br />

must develop a genuine pay-television culture<br />

if its top football league, the Bundesliga, is to<br />

match the broadcast revenue-generating power<br />

of Europe’s other top leagues, the league said the<br />

week ending Friday July 2.<br />

The league will also need the national<br />

cartel authority, the Bundeskartellamt, to relax<br />

its restrictions on the league’s collective sale of<br />

rights, if it is to have a chance of realising its<br />

media value.<br />

Speaking exclusively to TV Sports Markets,<br />

Christian Seifert said that the weak German<br />

pay-television market was the single greatest<br />

challenge facing the league.<br />

“This is the biggest challenge - whether it<br />

will be possible to strengthen the pay-television<br />

culture. The growth rate on our international<br />

sales has been good, but this has not been<br />

reflected in our domestic sales,” he said.<br />

<strong>International</strong> sales for the present cycle will<br />

reach almost three times what was generated in<br />

the previous deal. Domestic broadcast fees, in<br />

contrast, rose less than two per cent - and the<br />

DFL won praise even for that.<br />

Seifert said the onus was on German paytelevision<br />

operators to create products that<br />

challenged the strong free-to-air operators in<br />

the market: “There is potential for growth for<br />

our broadcast revenues. But it is related to the<br />

ability of pay-television providers to address the<br />

German customer. Pay-television has a chance to<br />

grow as long as it offers a product which reflects<br />

the specific needs of the German market.”<br />

Pay-television penetration in Germany is at<br />

Christian Seifert - Getty Images Sport<br />

only 12 per cent, about a quarter of that in the<br />

UK and Italy and half that in Spain and France.<br />

That is partly a reflection of the strength of the<br />

German free-to-air market, which is a powerful<br />

brake on pay-television growth, but also on the<br />

past mistakes and failures of Germany’s leading<br />

pay-television broadcaster, Sky Deutschland,<br />

formerly Premiere. Losing the Bundesliga rights<br />

to cable operator Unity Media’s Arena operation<br />

in the 2006-07 season set back Sky’s growth by<br />

at least two years.<br />

The DFL is hoping for a more benign<br />

regulatory environment for the next round of<br />

sales. Last time it was forced to ditch a<br />

500 million per season, six-year deal with media<br />

mogul Leo Kirch that hinged on increasing the<br />

value of pay-television rights by pushing back<br />

the Saturday night free-to-air highlights from<br />

6.30pm to 10pm, similar to the English Premier<br />

League model. To the astonishment of competition<br />

lawyers, the cartel authority insisted on an early<br />

evening free-to-air highlights programme.<br />

“The last process was very much influenced<br />

by the fact that we had the obligation to show the<br />

free-to-air highlights programme before 8pm on<br />

Saturday”, said Seifert. “When it was clear that<br />

was fixed, there was only very limited competition<br />

on the most important live packages.”<br />

Seifert said that the league and its broadcasters<br />

were pleased with the new structure of Bundesliga<br />

coverage last season, the first of a new four-year<br />

cycle. New live match and highlights programme<br />

slots helped drive up revenues and have delivered<br />

good increases in total audiences for the<br />

Bundesliga on both pay-television and free-to-air.<br />

A cricket channel in the US? Where is<br />

the demand?<br />

The channel will cater mostly for the<br />

South-Asian expatriate population in the<br />

US. It will be included in pay-television<br />

channel bundles created specifically for<br />

this demographic. Nimbus is aiming to<br />

start with 200,000 to 250,000 subscribers,<br />

rising to around 500,000 after one year.<br />

There is demand for the channel from<br />

US pay-television companies - as well as<br />

the deal with Comcast, deals are in the<br />

pipeline with Time Warner, Cabelvision,<br />

Cox, Echostar and DirecTV.<br />

Why launch a channel? Why not just sell<br />

the rights to a US-based broadcaster?<br />

Nimbus sold the rights to satellite<br />

broadcaster Echostar in the previous fouryear<br />

cycle, 2006 to 2010, in a deal worth<br />

over $50 million. However demand for<br />

cricket content from US broadcasters has<br />

flat-lined since then. Competition between<br />

Echostar and DirecTV for control of the<br />

South Asian ex-pat market has faded, and<br />

the value of the rights was undermined by<br />

rampant internet piracy. Nimbus thinks<br />

that launching Neo Cricket will be more<br />

lucrative than selling the rights, but it<br />

arguably had no other option.<br />

Nimbus is also considering launching<br />

a UK channel, targeting around 200,000<br />

subscribers to South-Asian pay-television<br />

channel bouquets there. As in the US,<br />

Nimbus may be able to earn more from a<br />

channel than from selling the rights.<br />

What are the US channel’s prospects<br />

for success?<br />

Nimbus’s subscriber targets are<br />

considered ambitious. Echostar showed<br />

the Indian cricket rights on South Asian<br />

sports channel Zee Sports America last<br />

time. The channel attracted around 100,000<br />

subscribers. Potential barriers to growth<br />

include competition from Willow TV, which<br />

has the rights for World Cup cricket and<br />

the Indian Premier League. Also, Nimbus<br />

only has non-exclusive broadband rights<br />

for Indian cricket, meaning the Board of<br />

Control for Cricket in India could also sell<br />

these to another US broadcaster, or even<br />

exploit them itself.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 21


SHORTSTOP<br />

MEDIA<br />

English Premier League: Sports<br />

broadcaster ESPN sublicensed a<br />

number of games in the US from rival<br />

Fox Sports in a three-year deal from<br />

2010-11 to 2012-13. The deal covers<br />

rights for 74 matches per season on<br />

ESPN2, ESPN Deportes, ESPN3.com,<br />

and ESPN Mobile TV.<br />

Supersport: Imtiaz Patel, chief<br />

executive of the pan-African paytelevision<br />

broadcaster, was promoted<br />

to group chief executive of parent<br />

company Multichoice South Africa,<br />

effective from October 1.<br />

Olympics 2010/2012: Venezuelan paytelevision<br />

operator Telesur acquired<br />

the free-to-air, cable and radio rights<br />

for the two Games in a deal with the<br />

<strong>International</strong> Olympic Committee.<br />

Formula One: Pan-regional<br />

broadcaster Modern Times Group<br />

acquired the exclusive rights in<br />

Denmark, Norway and Sweden from<br />

2012 to 2015.<br />

Corinthians: The Brazilian top-flight<br />

football club announced its own TV<br />

channel would launch in October.<br />

Pay-television broadcaster Rede TV+<br />

was the winner of a tender process to<br />

become the club’s production partner.<br />

Ashes cricket: The IMG-owned CSI<br />

agency put out to tender the UK freeto-air<br />

highlights rights for cricket’s<br />

Australia-England series this winter.<br />

The bid deadline is August 31.<br />

Wimbledon: German-based paytelevision<br />

operator Sky Deutschland<br />

acquired the rights for the tennis<br />

championships in Germany and Austria<br />

in a three-year deal, 2011 to 2013,<br />

brokered by the IMG agency.<br />

Speedway: London-based media rights<br />

agency GSI acquired the media rights<br />

for the Polish Ekstraliga league in a<br />

three-year deal. The agreement gives<br />

GSI exclusive international rights<br />

across digital TV, internet and mobile<br />

platforms from 2010 to 2012.<br />

LeBron James: The live announcement<br />

confirming where the basketball star<br />

would be playing from 2010-11, shown<br />

live on sports network ESPN on July 8,<br />

peaked at a 9.6 overnight rating between<br />

9.15pm and 9.30pm. The rating was<br />

higher than any NBA regular season or<br />

play-off game during 2009-10.<br />

TVSPORTSMARKETS<br />

WORLD CUP GAME-CHANGER<br />

The 2010 Fifa World Cup in South Africa produced some record television<br />

audiences in the US, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands, according to data<br />

compiled by TV Sports Markets and Eurodata TV Worldwide.<br />

THE FACT THAT viewing records keep tumbling,<br />

despite continuing audience fragmentation<br />

across not only multiple channels but multiple<br />

platforms, is a testament to the remarkable<br />

pulling power of top sport, and in particular the<br />

World Cup.<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong>, world football’s governing body said<br />

that it was “very happy with the preliminary<br />

figures which we have from selected television<br />

markets, with extremely high market shares and<br />

high audience figures in general.”<br />

Niclas Ericson, <strong>FIFA</strong>’s director of television,<br />

said: “The <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup is an extremely strong<br />

TV product. As someone said, it empties the<br />

streets in cities during the matches. Everybody is<br />

watching. Very few events manage that.”<br />

In Spain, with the national team winning<br />

the World Cup for the first time, the 30 minutes<br />

of extra-time in the final attracted the country’s<br />

highest ever television audience at 15.6 million,<br />

combining pay-television and free-to-air audiences.<br />

Commercial broadcaster Telecinco drew an<br />

average of 13.4 million viewers for the final.<br />

That is higher than Spain’s highest audience for<br />

the 2006 event, when a combined audience of<br />

12.2 million watched the second-round defeat<br />

to France on free-to-air channels Cuatro and La<br />

Sexta. But it is down on the 14.5 million viewers<br />

that watched the Euro 2008 final, in which<br />

Spain beat Germany.<br />

World Cup 2010 TV viewing in selected territories<br />

In the Netherlands, the national team’s<br />

progress to the final attracted huge audiences, up<br />

nine per cent on average on the 2006 finals. The<br />

final produced the highest-ever Dutch television<br />

audience of any genre, with 8.513 million viewers<br />

and a 90.6-per-cent audience share. It pipped<br />

the previous record of 8.512 million (an 86.9-percent<br />

audience share) for the Euro 2004 semifinal<br />

between Holland and Portugal. Holland’s<br />

semi-final against Uruguay recorded the thirdhighest<br />

audience ever, with 8.501 million viewers<br />

and an 86.2 per cent share.<br />

Positives and negatives in Germany<br />

Germany also recorded its highest ever television<br />

audience of any genre with 31.1 million (an<br />

83-per-cent audience share) watching the<br />

national team’s semi-final defeat to Spain on<br />

public-broadcaster ARD.<br />

However, average audiences for the<br />

tournament were down on the 2006<br />

tournament, which Germany hosted. ARD’s<br />

audience over 25 matches fell 12 per cent, sister<br />

channel ZDF’s (24 matches) by eight per cent<br />

and commercial broadcaster RTL (nine matches)<br />

by seven per cent.<br />

In the US, the World Cup final drew a record<br />

audience for a football match of 24.3 million<br />

across free-to-air network ABC and Spanish<br />

language-channel Univision. This beat the<br />

Country Channel No. of matches 000s<br />

South Africa SABC1 56 4,329<br />

SABC2 8 1,060<br />

Spain Cuatro 17 4,113<br />

Telecinco 8 10,707<br />

Germany ARD 25 10,886<br />

ZDF 24 11,363<br />

RTL 9 9,359<br />

United Kingdom BBC1 29 6,341*<br />

ITV1 28 5,740**<br />

Netherlands NED 1 56 2,887<br />

NED 2 4 159<br />

NED 3 4 213<br />

Italy Rai Uno 25 8,705<br />

France TF1 27 7,106<br />

France 2 19 3,253<br />

France 3 10 2,456<br />

* combined average audience for BBC1 (5.809m) and BBC1HD (0.532m) ** combined average audience for ITV1 (5.248m) and ITV1HD<br />

(0.492m). Figures are overnight figures<br />

Sources: Eurodata TV Worldwide, TV Sports Markets; SAARF, Nielsen Audience Measurement (South Africa), Kantar Media (Spain),<br />

AGF-Gfk Fernsehforschung (Germany), Barb, Attentional (UK), Stichting Kijkonderzoek (Netherlands), AUDITEL - Nielsen Audience<br />

Measurement (Italy), MEDIAMETRIE (France).<br />

22 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


MEDIA<br />

Extra-time gave Spain its highest ever TV audience - Getty Images Sport<br />

previous record of 19.4 million, set in the<br />

second round by US-Ghana.<br />

Before the 2010 World Cup, the highest US<br />

audience for a men’s football match was<br />

18.1 million for the US-hosted 1994 World Cup<br />

final between Brazil and Italy.<br />

In host country South Africa, public-service<br />

broadcaster SABC’s average audience for the<br />

tournament was 129 per cent higher than for<br />

2006, when the Bafana Bafana did not qualify.<br />

Free-to-air World Cup audiences in Italy fell<br />

by 24 per cent on 2006, when the Azzurri were<br />

crowned world champions. This time round<br />

the team was eliminated in the group stages.<br />

Audiences for Italy’s group games were down<br />

13 per cent on the 2006 group matches.<br />

France also fell at the first hurdle, crashing<br />

out at the group stage amid dressing room<br />

discontent. Ratings on commercial channel TF1,<br />

which showed 27 matches live, were down<br />

36 per cent on 2006.<br />

In the UK, 57 matches were broadcast freeto-air<br />

on public service-broadcaster the BBC and<br />

commercial broadcaster ITV. BBC1 and ITV1<br />

between them, including audiences on their<br />

respective high-definition channels, attracted an<br />

average of 6.046 million per match, six per cent<br />

down on 2006. HD audiences accounted for<br />

about nine per cent of the total audience.<br />

Huge appetite for internet sport<br />

World Cup broadcasters in both Europe<br />

and the US hailed the 2010 World Cup as a<br />

breakthrough event for sports internet coverage.<br />

Dominic Coles, chief operating officer at the<br />

BBC, described the success of the corporation’s<br />

online audiovisual World Cup content “a turning<br />

point.” He said the medium has now become<br />

“a common part of a user’s daily broadband<br />

experience, especially for the major events.”<br />

The BBC had 38.1 million requests to view<br />

audiovisual content during the tournament,<br />

smashing the previous high of 5.1 million for<br />

Euro 2008. US sports broadcaster ESPN, a<br />

pioneer of online sports coverage, said that the<br />

World Cup had been “truly a breakout event” for<br />

its ESPN3 broadband service.<br />

ESPN3 generated 942 million minutes of<br />

World Cup viewing, with 7.4 million unique<br />

viewers each watching over two hours coverage<br />

on average. The semi-final between Spain<br />

and Germany drew ESPN3’s largest-ever live<br />

audience, 355,000 people per minute.<br />

ITV said that its figures for World Cup<br />

internet coverage illustrated that there was now<br />

“a huge appetite for consuming live action on<br />

the television and online simultaneously.” ITV<br />

attracted two million unique users to its online<br />

coverage during the tournament.<br />

Ericson said that the additional content <strong>FIFA</strong><br />

had made available this time was a factor in the<br />

amount of online viewing.<br />

“We wanted to offer more content than ever<br />

before from the event and we placed the rights<br />

somewhat differently in 2010 so broadcasters<br />

had more flexibility,” he said. He also expects<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> to deliver even more online content for the<br />

2014 World Cup in Brazil.<br />

Other European broadcasters reported<br />

record numbers for their internet coverage. In<br />

Germany, public-service broadcaster ZDF had<br />

35.9 million unique users on its main website<br />

during the tournament, almost 50 per cent<br />

above normal traffic volumes.<br />

The website zdf.sport.de had 12.7 million<br />

visits, a 381-per-cent increase on its average<br />

monthly traffic. Live match streams drew<br />

an average of 102,000 viewings, peaking at<br />

190,000 for Germany’s victory over Argentina.<br />

In Italy, state broadcaster Rai’s main website,<br />

Rai.it, had record traffic levels during the<br />

tournament, with 116 million page views and an<br />

average of 460,000 unique users daily. The<br />

Rai.tv website, which carries audiovisual<br />

content, had 37 million page views and a daily<br />

average of 233,000 unique users, a 289-per-cent<br />

increase on the same period in 2009.<br />

Rai’s total World Cup coverage, including<br />

match coverage and news, recorded 20 million<br />

page visits, with 250,000 unique users on its<br />

website every day during the competition. Rai’s<br />

peak audience for live streaming was over one<br />

million, for Italy’s group stage defeat to Slovakia.<br />

In France, TF1 had 31 million unique users,<br />

with 10 million videos viewed on its dedicated<br />

site. It drew 334,000 bets, and 40,000<br />

registered users, to its EurosportBET website.<br />

Several World Cup broadcasters were able to<br />

successfully expand the reach of their coverage<br />

through different forms of mobile coverage.<br />

One million unique viewers used ESPN’s<br />

mobile TV, registering 93 million minutes of<br />

viewing, and setting viewing records on major<br />

mobile TV platforms MobiTV and Flo TV. In<br />

total, World Cup content on ESPN’s mobile<br />

offerings generated 98 million visits and<br />

520 million page views. ITV reported 800,000<br />

downloads and two million content views of its<br />

World Cup iPhone app. TF1 recorded 250,000<br />

iPhone apps downloaded.<br />

Eurodata TV Worldwide is the leading provider of sports television<br />

audiences, with access to ratings and programming details for 2,000<br />

channels over five continents. Eurodata TV Worldwide offers a range<br />

of services to help clients successfully market TV programmes and<br />

monitor their broadcasts.<br />

Florent Simon<br />

Eurodata TV Worldwide Sport Manager<br />

Email: fsimon@eurodatatv.com<br />

Tel: +33 171 099 307<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 23


MEDIA<br />

TRIUMPH LOOKS TO THE FUTURE<br />

Thomas Martens’ Triumph Media Group has signed new business across each of its<br />

operating divisions in a range of sports including football, boxing and hockey.<br />

THE ANNOUNCEMENT earlier this<br />

year that Triumph’s CEO Martens<br />

had completed a funding deal with<br />

a major German private investment<br />

fund signalled not only a new<br />

chapter in his own career but, he<br />

believes, in the way that the global<br />

sports and entertainment rights<br />

market operates.<br />

Martens, a serial entrepreneur<br />

who has twice built and moved<br />

on from significant rights-base<br />

businesses, said he is delighted<br />

to be back in action after leaving<br />

Global Sportnet, a company he<br />

built from the ground-up before<br />

taking it into the global WPP<br />

communications services empire.<br />

He believes that the industry is<br />

crying out for fresh perspectives<br />

and new ways of operating and says<br />

that Triumph Media Group is just<br />

the vehicle to do that.<br />

He promises a new style of<br />

relationship with rights holders<br />

and says that, long-term, there is<br />

the potential for growth through<br />

acquisition of other agencies.<br />

“We have an initial five-year plan<br />

to grow Triumph Media Group,” he<br />

says. “In that period there are sure<br />

to be a lot of changes in the sector<br />

and we will be there to help rights<br />

owners and brands take advantage<br />

of them. The agency sector had<br />

changed radically over the years<br />

and I have spoken to rights owners<br />

who feel they have been dealing<br />

with dinosaurs.”<br />

“They told us they didn’t feel as<br />

though the agencies really cared<br />

about them or what they wanted.<br />

That’s why we aim to do things<br />

differently. We don’t just want to<br />

sell rights but to work alongside<br />

and on behalf of federations to<br />

develop the value of those rights as<br />

well. We will be their partners and<br />

will put our money into projects to<br />

prove that.<br />

“We feel that many rights<br />

in sports and entertainment<br />

are currently undervalued. Our<br />

role will be to develop a brand<br />

strategy for the federations and<br />

clubs we work for and to develop<br />

a commercial strategy to build<br />

and fully unlock the value of<br />

existing rights and create new<br />

opportunities.”<br />

To deliver on these plans<br />

Martens has built a team of<br />

experienced sector specialists<br />

including Christian Weddigen<br />

(former Chief Financial Officer<br />

of Sportfive), Daniel Schlösser<br />

(ex-FC Barcelona Chief Marketing<br />

Officer), Frederik Lütt (formerly<br />

Sportfive) and Liliana Martorel<br />

(former Vice President of<br />

Rights Acquisitions at Octagon).<br />

Additionally the team consists of<br />

Robin Taylor (VP Sponsoring),<br />

digital specialist Maurizio Barbieri<br />

and Caroline Furness (VP of the<br />

entertainment division).<br />

Triumph operates in five<br />

distinctly defined sectors across two<br />

markets, sport and entertainment.<br />

They are rights trading - a<br />

business model which<br />

Martens helped to establish<br />

nearly 20 years ago at UFA<br />

Sports - digital media, business<br />

consulting, bartering and branded<br />

content as well as brand consulting.<br />

Martens has long been a<br />

champion of the potential of<br />

bartering as a means of monetising<br />

rights when cash would otherwise<br />

be a barrier: “This is an area we<br />

have developed significant expertise<br />

in and I feel it has significant<br />

potential for further development.<br />

The same is true for the creation of<br />

branded content which is another<br />

part of our offering.”<br />

Triumph, which has<br />

representatives in London, Paris,<br />

Moscow, Istanbul, Athens, Dubai<br />

and Zagreb, has also set up an<br />

operation in India and is currently<br />

exploring partnerships in South-<br />

East Asia, Brazil and the US.<br />

Triumph is already working<br />

on a variety of projects including<br />

media rights to boxing, where it<br />

has provided the digital platform<br />

and has sold the exclusive and<br />

worldwide media rights for a<br />

number of Klitschko world title<br />

fights. In field hockey Triumph<br />

developed a digital platform for the<br />

World Championships in India in<br />

February this year.<br />

The company also represents<br />

the marketing rights of the oldest<br />

football club in the world, Sheffield<br />

FC, as well as representing some<br />

overseas rights for two of Europe’s<br />

leading football clubs. Triumph<br />

has also acquired the exclusive<br />

marketing rights to the World<br />

Team Cup, the international team<br />

championship of the ATP.<br />

It’s a solid start and Martens is<br />

convinced that he has the team and<br />

the infrastructure to make Triumph<br />

a genuine challenger to the current<br />

global agency hegemony: “I believe<br />

we will impact on the way that the<br />

business operates.<br />

“We will create new rights<br />

streams from existing events<br />

and increase the inventory of our<br />

federation partners and other<br />

clients to create new revenues.<br />

It is all about creating new and<br />

additional revenues. I am excited by<br />

the prospects and looking forward<br />

to the journey ahead.”<br />

24 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


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EVENTS<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

Rugby World Cup: Rugby Travel and<br />

Hospitality, the joint-venture between<br />

Sodexo and Mike Burton Group, was<br />

awarded the exclusive contract to<br />

create, implement and market the<br />

official corporate hospitality and travel<br />

programmes for the tournaments in<br />

2015 (England) and 2019 (Japan).<br />

Youth Olympic Games: Singapore<br />

2010 chief executive Goh Kee Nguan<br />

defended the cost of staging last<br />

month’s event. It was originally<br />

anticipated the Games would cost no<br />

more than $30m to stage, a figure that<br />

rose to $90m in February 2008 to an<br />

eventual cost of $286m.<br />

2018 Winter Olympics: The<br />

PyeongChang bid to host the event<br />

appointed South Korean bobsleigh<br />

coach and athlete Kwang-bae Kang as<br />

its sports director. Kwang-bae Kang,<br />

who competed in luge and skeleton at<br />

past Olympics and was his country’s<br />

flag-bearer in Vancouver this year, had<br />

been working with the bid committee<br />

since May as a member of the<br />

organisation’s athletes committee.<br />

2012 London Olympics: The<br />

<strong>International</strong> Olympic Committee’s<br />

broadcasting agency said it wants<br />

to black out the London velodrome’s<br />

360-degree glass wall during the<br />

Games so that it can be lit by artificial<br />

light. The Olympic Broadcasting<br />

Service wants to prevent natural light<br />

from coming in to the venue because<br />

artificial light is easier to control for<br />

television purposes.<br />

UEFA Europa League: The Georgian<br />

capital of Tbilisi has emerged as<br />

a contender to host the 2013 final.<br />

UEFA president Michel Platini made a<br />

protocol visit to the city last month to<br />

discuss the possibility of the Black Sea<br />

country hosting the game.<br />

IAAF: The <strong>International</strong> Association of<br />

Athletics Federations chose the city<br />

of Kavarna in Bulgaria as host for the<br />

2012 edition of the World Half Marathon<br />

Championships. Kavarna is a major<br />

tourist resort attracting more than<br />

500,000 people a year.<br />

Women’s Cricket Challenge: The city<br />

of Potchefstroom in South Africa was<br />

chosen by the <strong>International</strong> Cricket<br />

Council to stage the inaugural event.<br />

The host country will compete against<br />

West Indies, Pakistan, Sri Lanka,<br />

Netherlands and Ireland in a series<br />

of one-day and Twenty20 games from<br />

October 6 to 16 this year.<br />

2006 World Equestrian Games in Aachen - Getty Images Sport<br />

HORSE PLAY IN KENTUCKY<br />

Adrian Hill assesses the commercial success of the FEI’s World Equestrian<br />

Games, strategically-positioned held in between Olympic Games.<br />

NEWS THAT A major multi-national company<br />

is interested in sponsoring a putative `European<br />

Games` in horse sport may be seen as evidence<br />

that the FEI’s decision to market major, multidiscipline<br />

events has proved its commercial value.<br />

The forthcoming World Equestrian Games<br />

(WEG) - hosted this year outside of Europe for<br />

the first time in the heartlands of equestrianism<br />

in Lexington, Kentucky, USA - suggests the<br />

FEI got it right when it decided various horse<br />

sport disciplines should hold their World<br />

Championships at one time and place.<br />

The first WEG was held in Stockholm in 1990<br />

with six disciplines - Show Jumping, Dressage,<br />

Eventing, Driving, Endurance and Vaulting.<br />

Reining (the North American cousin of<br />

Dressage) joined the spectacle in 2002 and this<br />

year Para Dressage comes on board.<br />

“The purpose of hosting one major event<br />

such as the World Equestrian Games was not<br />

only to attract a wider audience but also to<br />

promote the sports among potential sponsors,”<br />

Alex McLin, the FEI Secretary General, told<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>.<br />

“The World Equestrian Games also helps<br />

to promote the non-Olympic disciplines. It is<br />

not always easy for Vaulting or Reining to gain<br />

wide public attention, but the World Equestrian<br />

Games offers a stage for these disciplines to<br />

present eye-catching, highly technical and often<br />

breathtaking performances.”<br />

A 30,000-capacity outdoor stadium has been<br />

developed for the Games, but it is the temporary<br />

structures in the Hospitality Village, Trade Show<br />

and `Kentucky Experience` where much of the<br />

revenue that could secure the future of the less<br />

well-known disciplines must be earned.<br />

The first-ever title sponsor of a WEG is animal<br />

health company Alltech in a $10 million deal,<br />

with others including luxury watchmaker Rolex<br />

backing individual disciplines. The FEI receives<br />

revenue from TV rights sales including NBC<br />

Sports in the host territory. There is no funding<br />

from federal or state governments but the Games<br />

are expected to have an economic impact of $167<br />

million in the state of Kentucky.<br />

Equestrianism seems to have led the way<br />

in developing the concept of one festival for<br />

many disciplines.<br />

The first SportAccord Combat Games,<br />

for example, will be staged in Beijing this<br />

month, featuring 13 different sports ranging<br />

from Martial Arts through to Olympic staples<br />

Boxing and Wrestling. Other candidates for the<br />

approach could be snow, cue and racket sports.<br />

“A collective approach is becoming more<br />

popular,” says Simon Chadwick, professor<br />

of Sport Business Strategy at Coventry<br />

<strong>University</strong>. “We’ve seen from the UEFA<br />

Champions League how a constellation of<br />

brands can be assembled around a new<br />

product...It’s a tacit acknowledgment that sport<br />

is in a different environment.<br />

This collectivisation in the free market context<br />

to ensure commercial appeal says something<br />

about the dynamics of the market place...Creating<br />

allegiances between events that have some<br />

affinity or synergy can generate value for the<br />

whole, but also for the individual parts.”<br />

The World Equestrian Games was dreamt<br />

up long before the Champions League and<br />

Twenty20 cricket. So can Equestrian sport<br />

be lauded as being visionary? “It’s the sports<br />

under most pressure that are being the most<br />

innovative,” argues Chadwick.<br />

“We’ve seen some of the most innovative<br />

marketing in rugby union since it went<br />

professional and Equestrian sport has also made<br />

a statement with the World Equestrian Games<br />

concept. It’s almost as though these sports have a<br />

cultural tension that means they have to change,<br />

or they will die.”<br />

26 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


EVENTS<br />

SHORTSTOP<br />

2018 Winter Olympics: Financial<br />

services giant Allianz became a<br />

partner of Munich’s bid to host the<br />

event, joining a group of sponsors that<br />

includes adidas, BMW and Lufthansa.<br />

2012 London Olympics: Bidders<br />

interested in taking over the Olympic<br />

Stadium after the Games were due to<br />

submit fully costed and financed plans<br />

by the end of September. West Ham<br />

and AEG, which owns the O2 arena, are<br />

two of the frontrunners.<br />

2009 winner Nikolay Davydenko serves - Getty Images Sport<br />

ROCK CONCERT ATMOSPHERE<br />

Bernardo Domingues talks to ATP World Tour chairman and president<br />

Adam Helfant about plans for the second Finals at London’s O2 this November.<br />

HARVARD LAW GRADUATE and former Nike<br />

executive Adam Helfant was tasked last year with<br />

steering the ATP World Tour, the professional<br />

tennis circuit organised by the Association of<br />

Tennis Professionals, through its biggest overhaul<br />

since its inception in 1990. With a large number<br />

of fundamental changes already decided before he<br />

took office, his concern has been to better promote<br />

men’s professional tennis and broaden its fanbase.<br />

“This year we’ve already seen attendance<br />

records at Indian Wells, Miami, Rome and<br />

Madrid, so we’re optimistic that we will<br />

equal or better the mark that we set last year<br />

(4.4 million spectators),” says Helfant, speaking<br />

to SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> as the Tour reached<br />

News York for this month’s US Open.<br />

One of the biggest achievements of Helfant’s<br />

initial year was the success of the ATP World<br />

Tour Finals at the O2 Arena in London. The<br />

year-end tournament, featuring the Tour’s eight<br />

best players and eight best doubles teams of the<br />

season, moved from Shanghai in 2009 and will be<br />

staged in London until at least 2013 after last year’s<br />

triumphant showcase. The creation of a unique<br />

and compelling event - in what the executive calls<br />

“a rock concert-like atmosphere” - was crucial to<br />

building an environment that surprised tennis<br />

fans and attracted first-timers to the ATP offer.<br />

The 2009 Finals broke the record for<br />

most spectators at an indoor tennis event:<br />

256,000 people over 15 sessions in eight days.<br />

Additionally non-ticket holders were catered for<br />

with a practice court outside the main venue to<br />

engage the 5,000 to 7,000 people that visit the<br />

O2 everyday. This year there will be two practice<br />

courts instead of one set up outside the main<br />

venue and a new 6,725-square-metere fanzone<br />

will be introduced, with seating for 400 people<br />

accessible to non-ticket holders.<br />

“It’s our jewel event and in the first year the<br />

bar was set pretty high, but we’re working hard<br />

to make sure we surpass that,” he says. “We do<br />

want to give greater access to the sport and it<br />

was a big deal last year.”<br />

This May organisers sold 100,000 tickets for<br />

the 2010 edition within 12 hours of going on<br />

sale and research conducted during and after the<br />

2009 event showed 98 per cent of those who<br />

attended would buy a ticket again and 95 per<br />

cent would make a recommendation to a friend.<br />

Helfant has also pushed through a change based<br />

on negative feedback. Session start times will<br />

be brought forward by 45 minutes to allow fans<br />

enough time to catch regular public transport<br />

after the last evening match.<br />

The re-naming of the Tennis Masters Cup<br />

to ATP World Tour Finals in 2009 and its<br />

move from Shanghai to London were part of<br />

a series of significant adjustments to the core<br />

product - the tour itself- decided under Helfant’s<br />

predecessor, Etienne de Villiers, who left amid<br />

criticism that he excluded players from the<br />

decision-making process.<br />

De Villiers introduced a re-vamped top tier,<br />

the Masters 1000; a new brand look and identity<br />

linking the tournaments to the number of ranking<br />

points awarded to their winners (1000, 500<br />

or 250); and the centralisation of media rights<br />

distribution for the ATP World Tour 500 series.<br />

The results so far have been pleasing, but<br />

those changes are all still being evaluated and at<br />

the same time a good look at the calendar<br />

is taken. Ideas like a season launch to create<br />

more buzz at the start of the year or an NBAinspired<br />

all-star event with skills competitions<br />

and pro-am celebrity doubles matches have been<br />

put on hold until a way can be found to create a<br />

longer off-season.<br />

“That is a Tour issue, not just a player issue,”<br />

says Helfant, “ We want to give the guys a better<br />

chance to staying healthier longer and therefore<br />

play more years on the tour.”<br />

World Cup 2018/22: Russian Prime<br />

Minister Vladimir Putin told Fifa the<br />

country will waive visa requirements<br />

for participants if it wins the right to<br />

host either tournament. Russia has<br />

axed visa requirements for sports<br />

events before, allowing Manchester<br />

United and Chelsea fans at the 2008<br />

Champions League final to simply show<br />

their tickets at passport control.<br />

Youth Olympic Games: The Netherlands<br />

said it will consider launching a bid<br />

to host the Youth Olympic Games if its<br />

joint bid with Belgium for the 2018 or<br />

2022 <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup fails.<br />

2012 London Olympics: The All<br />

England Club said it will drop its allwhite<br />

clothing rule for the Olympic<br />

tennis tournament.<br />

World Cup 2018/22: Event branding<br />

specialist Icon was appointed as an<br />

official supplier to England’s bid to<br />

host the event. The company will<br />

supply city and venue brand dressing<br />

for <strong>FIFA</strong>’s inspection visit.<br />

FIBA: Basketball’s 2014 World<br />

Championship for Women will be held<br />

in Australia, Brazil or Turkey, the<br />

sport’s governing body has announced.<br />

The FIBA Central Board will make a<br />

final decision, following a close review<br />

of the bids, in spring 2011.<br />

2022 Winter Olympics: Sergey Bubka,<br />

President of Ukraine’s National Olympic<br />

Committee, announced plans to bid<br />

for the Games. “Usually it takes seven<br />

years to get ready to host the Olympics.<br />

Other countries have also started from<br />

scratch - and we will do the same.”<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong>: World football’s governing<br />

body was revealed to be budgeting<br />

$16m for the London 2012 Olympic<br />

football tournament, according to<br />

insidethegames.biz. The figure is less<br />

than the $22m of expenses incurred<br />

by <strong>FIFA</strong> for the football tournaments at<br />

the Beijing Olympics in 2008.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 27


EVENTS<br />

PRESSURE ON BRAZIL EXTRAVAGANZA<br />

Before the sports world sambas down to Brazil for the 2014 World Cup and<br />

2016 Summer Olympic Games, the hosts must answer some difficult questions<br />

and overcome some significant obstacles. Barry Wilner reports.<br />

SOME CRITICS would suggest there are billions<br />

of roadblocks, all carrying dollar signs, to the<br />

first football championship in South America<br />

since 1978 - and the first Olympics ever staged<br />

on the continent.<br />

“Just four years away from the 2014 World<br />

Cup, Brazil remains drastically behind in terms<br />

of both infrastructure and stadium development<br />

or improvement,” says Scott Minto, director<br />

of the Sports MBA programme at the San<br />

Diego State <strong>University</strong>. “Major challenges that<br />

Brazil faces are improving its airport passenger<br />

capabilities, network of trains connecting major<br />

host cities, lodging capacity and other tourismrelated<br />

industries.”<br />

The Brazilian government recently addressed<br />

the issues with a series of numbers. Minister of<br />

Sports Orlando Silva Jr., scoffing at those who say<br />

the nation is in way over its head, promised an<br />

investment of $18.7 billion in infrastructure - a<br />

staggering amount of money that even the most<br />

developed economies would struggle to meet.<br />

More than 75 per cent and as much as 80 per<br />

cent will be allocated by the public sector, while<br />

the rest will come from the private sector.<br />

“These are the opinions of those who ignore<br />

the reality of the country,” Silva said of the<br />

doubters, adding that <strong>FIFA</strong> will soon “see the<br />

reality close up. They will be surprised by the<br />

preparations for the World Cup.”<br />

Football’s world governing publicly criticised<br />

Brazil’s preparations in May, saying “it is amazing<br />

how Brazil is already late” and that a number of<br />

stadium projects were facing “red lights already”<br />

despite four years of construction still to go.<br />

The government created an executive group<br />

to supervise preparations for World Cup 2014,<br />

which will have matches in Rio de Janeiro, Belo<br />

Horizonte, Brasilia, Salvador, Porto Alegre,<br />

Recife, Natal, Manaus, Curitiba, Fortaleza,<br />

Cuiaba and perhaps Sao Paulo.<br />

Included are representatives of the Office of<br />

the Chief of Staff and the ministries of sports,<br />

planning, finance and tourism. Each of the<br />

host cities signed an agreement that defines the<br />

responsibilities of each for the organisation of<br />

World Cup. So <strong>FIFA</strong> will know who is carrying<br />

their weight and who is falling short.<br />

A breakdown of those expenditures goes like<br />

this. Urban Mobility will cost $4.4 billion, added<br />

to $2.1 billion from states and municipalities.<br />

This money will be applied to the development<br />

of monorail lines, subways, light rail transit<br />

systems, transit terminals and other modes of<br />

transportation. Some of these projects, Silva<br />

notes, are already well under construction.<br />

Airports will cost $3.1 billion. The federal<br />

government predicts a 10 per cent increase in<br />

traffic at Brazilian airports during the World<br />

Cup. Brazil’s civil aviation agency will speed<br />

up renovation of 13 airports expected to be<br />

heavily used in the 12 host cities. Because other<br />

modes of transportation are so lacking in the<br />

large country and roads between cities range<br />

from problematic to non-existent, a strong air<br />

travel system will be vital. “Now we have the<br />

investments for some of the sensitive areas such<br />

as the airports,” says Silva.<br />

“We expect 600,000 international visitors and<br />

another three million Brazilians to travel through<br />

Brazil and to the matches.”<br />

The hotel sector will receive $556 million of<br />

investment. Brazil’s National Bank for Economic<br />

and Social Development allocated the money to<br />

finance construction of new hotels or remodel<br />

others, offering lower interest terms than the<br />

market price at the time. Those resources could<br />

be expanded according to demand from the<br />

private sector. Ports around the country will<br />

receive $420 million in investment.<br />

28 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


EVENTS<br />

Mané Garrincha Stadium (L), Arena da Baixada (C), Vivaldão Stadium (R) - JorgeBrazil<br />

Stadia<br />

The stadium issue is the most contentious<br />

criticism of Brazil’s preparations and will likely<br />

remain so. The overall cost of stadia stands at<br />

$2.7 billion: $226 million for each.<br />

“In terms of stadia, the plan was to keep<br />

government funds restricted to infrastructure<br />

improvements and create partnerships between<br />

stadium owners and corporations to fund<br />

stadium expansion and renovation plans,”<br />

Minto notes. “However, with football club’s on<br />

task to meet <strong>FIFA</strong> deadlines to raise funds for<br />

renovations of their stadia, progress was slow,<br />

and recently Morumbi, a major stadium in Sao<br />

Paulo, the financial centre of the country and<br />

Brazil’s largest city, was crossed off of <strong>FIFA</strong>’s list.”<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> would like to have Sao Paulo, the<br />

largest city in Latin America, as a site, but<br />

none of the current proposals has met with the<br />

world governing body’s approval. The idea of a<br />

completely new stadium was floated - local club<br />

Corinthians would be the primary tenant and the<br />

national team would frequently play there - but<br />

Sao Paulo officials will not commit municipal<br />

monies to the project.<br />

Another major local club, Palmeiras, is<br />

renovating its stadium along <strong>FIFA</strong> guidelines,<br />

but it has been proposed only as a training<br />

ground, not as a venue. Capacity at the Palestra<br />

Italia will increase from 30,000 to 45,000 by<br />

2012, big enough to be the site of some games,<br />

but not the opening match. Morumbi would seat<br />

about 70,000 post-renovation, but after a May<br />

deadline to commit $135 million to the project<br />

was not met <strong>FIFA</strong> dropped the venue. One other<br />

stadium in Sao Paulo, Pacaembu, seats about<br />

40,000, but has not been part of planning for<br />

the tournament.<br />

Yet optimism abounds in the city. “We will do<br />

everything possible for the opener of the World<br />

Cup to be in Sao Paulo,” said Brazilian soccer<br />

federation president Ricardo Teixeira says. “We<br />

will find solutions, there is still time,” adds Sao<br />

Paulo state governor Alberto Goldman, although<br />

not as much time as Teixeira and Goldman<br />

might believe. Silva claims additionally that<br />

Sao Paulo is “the only bottleneck” in the 2014<br />

preparations because the other 11 cities are<br />

“preparing at a very good pace”.<br />

Budgeting for several other areas of concern<br />

has not yet been announced, but Brazil will<br />

almost certainly face heavy costs for security.<br />

South Africa spent millions more dollars in<br />

that area than was projected and South African<br />

organisers will help Brazilian security advisers<br />

in their planning.<br />

“Brazil may be the world’s eighth-largest<br />

economy, claim the most World Cup titles in<br />

history, and boasts an undeniable passion for<br />

football, but its infrastructure may just be too<br />

far behind to give <strong>FIFA</strong> what it expects of a<br />

host nation for the spectacle that the World<br />

Cup has become,” adds Minto. “President<br />

Lula won international acclaim and generated<br />

nationalistic fervor within Brazil with his<br />

successful bids for both the World Cup and<br />

Olympic Games, and for Brazilians, hosting<br />

their first World Cup since 1950 will be three<br />

weeks of unparalleled celebration.<br />

“However, with the current administration<br />

funding many of the required investments and<br />

his term set to end in October of 2010, Lula’s<br />

successor, and future generations of Brazilians,<br />

will be stuck with a very expensive tab.”<br />

For all of these expenditures, what will Brazil<br />

get out of hosting the next World Cup - and then<br />

the Olympics beyond it? The federal government<br />

forecasts the 2014 World Cup will generate an<br />

additional $104 billion in economic activity for<br />

Brazil through investment, tourism, an increase<br />

in household consumption, and the recycling<br />

of resources. If Brazil pulls it off, the Olympics<br />

could be even more lucrative for Rio.<br />

“We will work in a timely and transparent<br />

manner to prepare Brazil for the World Cup<br />

and for the future,” adds Minister Silva. “We are<br />

focusing on sustainable development, which will<br />

not only result in Brazil successfully hosting the<br />

2014 matches, but also improve the country for<br />

the Brazilian people.”<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 29


BUD BLOOMS AT<br />

THE WORLD CUP<br />

Eelco van der Noll, Global Director, Sports & entertainment at AB InBev,<br />

tells Kevin Roberts how the brewer’s multi-brand approach and digital<br />

strategy paid dividends at the 2010 World Cup and urges rights owners to<br />

step up to the plate to add value.<br />

While the football played at the 2010 <strong>FIFA</strong><br />

World Cup may not linger long in the memory,<br />

other aspects of Africa’s first football world<br />

championship certainly will.<br />

South Africa didn’t simply host the<br />

tournament; it left an unforgettable African<br />

stamp on it. This was a tournament in which<br />

the host nation - not its Bafana Bafana team<br />

but the country itself - took centre-stage. It was<br />

a tournament whose signature sound was the<br />

monotone drone of the vuvuzela and which was<br />

characterised by a spirit of friendly co-operation,<br />

leading most of the hovering international media<br />

to wonder what all the pre-event wailing and<br />

gnashing of teeth had been about.<br />

In short, South Africa had done it. In the<br />

face of significant doubt, and predictions of all<br />

manner of chaos, it had pulled it off. South Africa<br />

had justified <strong>FIFA</strong> president Sepp Blatter’s faith<br />

and taken its place in Word Cup legend.<br />

And according to Eelco van der Noll, global<br />

director, sports & entertainment at <strong>FIFA</strong> partners<br />

AB InBev, South Africa still hasn’t received all<br />

the plaudits it deserves: “I was in the country for<br />

six weeks and South Africa simply exceeded all<br />

expectations.<br />

“They are not getting nearly enough credit<br />

for what was achieved by a country that is still a<br />

young democracy.<br />

“The world may take a World Cup for granted<br />

but South Africa as a nation absolutely delivered.<br />

It was as smooth an operation as it could possibly<br />

have been.”<br />

That’s praise indeed from a man who has seen<br />

the Word Cup and many other events from both<br />

sides of the sponsorship fence. Van der Noll has<br />

worked for major brands including MasterCard<br />

and Canon and for <strong>FIFA</strong> itself, giving him a<br />

fascinating perspective on the nature of the<br />

relationship between properties and their partners.<br />

South Africa 2010 was Van der Noll’s first<br />

World Cup at the helm of AB InBev’s sponsorship<br />

operation, and it is one which highlights the<br />

complexity and sophistication of modern day<br />

partnerships in sport and the ways in which<br />

rights owners are recognising the realities of 21st<br />

century business needs by being more flexible in<br />

the way that their rights are utilised by brands. All<br />

of which requires a little background.<br />

AB InBev was created by the $52 billion<br />

takeover of leading US brewer Anheuser Busch by<br />

InBev, the world-leading Belgium-based brewer.<br />

The company’s portfolio now includes Stella<br />

Artois, Becks andBudweiser.<br />

The acquisition became a major issue in<br />

the United States where Anheuser Busch is<br />

something of an institution. But today the<br />

company is not only the world’s biggest beer<br />

company (with revenues of $9.2 billion and a<br />

profit of $1.15 billion in the second quarter 2010)<br />

but one of the five biggest consumer goods<br />

corporations on the planet.<br />

Merging these two mega-corporations was<br />

never going to be a straightforward exercise and<br />

one of the areas that needed attention was the<br />

legacy of sponsorship deals on the AB books.<br />

Over the years Anheuser Busch has become<br />

one of the world’s biggest spending sponsors as<br />

it promoted its Budweiser and Bud Light brands<br />

heavily in the United States and worldwide. The<br />

brand was everywhere, from NASCAR to the NFL<br />

and, of course, the <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup.<br />

“The issue we faced was transferring the rights,<br />

which AB held through to 2014, to the new<br />

corporation and to make sure that they could be<br />

used in a way which offered AB InBev the best<br />

possible value,” explains Van der Noll.<br />

In essence that meant enabling AB InBev to<br />

harness the power of the World Cup to meet<br />

specific needs in individual markets around the<br />

world - something which had never done before.<br />

And naturally, <strong>FIFA</strong> “took some convincing” to<br />

take what some felt was a fairly radical step.<br />

Van der Noll was ideally placed to do the<br />

convincing. His four years at <strong>FIFA</strong> as head of<br />

marketing and a member of the federation’s<br />

management team gave him a unique insight<br />

into the way the organisation works which, he<br />

says, gave him “a better understanding and<br />

respect for <strong>FIFA</strong> and the reasons they sometimes<br />

push back against brands.”<br />

“Our strategy was to maximise the footprint<br />

of our sponsorship. Overwhelmingly that meant<br />

30 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


promoting the Budweiser brand but there are<br />

certain markets around the world where we<br />

wanted to activate on other AB InBev brands.<br />

These included Brahma in Brazil (the brand<br />

already sponsors the Brazilian national teams),<br />

Jupiler in Holland and Harbin in China.<br />

“We are not like Coca-Cola which has one brand<br />

across all territories. The creation of AB InBev<br />

opened the floodgates to a number of brands and<br />

this became the cornerstone of our strategy. To<br />

make the sponsorship worthwhile we simply had<br />

to involve multiple brands and, naturally, <strong>FIFA</strong> was<br />

initially very protective because it was concerned<br />

about the possibility of clutter around the beer<br />

category,” Van der Noll said.<br />

With the agreement of <strong>FIFA</strong> in place, AB InBev<br />

developed a two-phase approach. In-country<br />

activations for key individual brands made full<br />

use of the World Cup assets while Budweiser,<br />

which was promoted across some 80 territories<br />

worldwide, was supported by a global digital<br />

overlay built around the concept of Budweiser<br />

United, a social network-based programme<br />

drawing the world together around its love of<br />

football, reality shows and, of course, beer.<br />

Here was an example of how partnerships<br />

between brands and sports properties have<br />

delivered over the years and how the apparently<br />

limitless potential of the digital universe is<br />

encouraging creativity.<br />

The Bud House was an online reality show<br />

Eelco van der Noll<br />

Global Director, Sports &<br />

Entertainment, AB InBev<br />

A marketing graduate from Rotterdam’s<br />

Institute for Business Administration &<br />

Economics, van der Noll joined Japanese<br />

multinational Canon in 1990 where he<br />

developed several integrated marketing<br />

programmes for the company.<br />

He joined global payments solutions<br />

company MasterCard in 1995, where<br />

as Vice-President he negotiated and<br />

contributed to multi-million dollar<br />

partnership agreements with sports bodies<br />

including <strong>FIFA</strong>, UEFA, Jordan F1 and<br />

Manchester United. He also developed<br />

programmes to promote the <strong>FIFA</strong> World<br />

Cup and Pelé-themed payment cards.<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> soon came calling, and van der Noll<br />

assumed the position of Head of Marketing,<br />

overseeing the development and the<br />

commercialisation of football worldwide.<br />

In his four years with <strong>FIFA</strong> he generated<br />

incremental revenue of $80 million through<br />

the sale of sponsorship packages.<br />

After a brief spell at Momentum<br />

Worldwide, van der Noll joined Anheuser<br />

Busch InNev in June 2009.<br />

along the lines of Big Brother, but with a<br />

difference. The inhabitants of the house, in Cape<br />

Town, represented the 32 nations which qualified<br />

for the World Cup finals. As the teams were<br />

eliminated, so was their Bud House counterpart.<br />

Available on and linked to the leading social<br />

media platforms, it quickly created a global<br />

community united by its engagement in and<br />

willingness to talk about the project.<br />

This online offering was complemented by a<br />

global Man of the Match vote, while the Bud Cup<br />

was organised to bring teams of consumers to<br />

South Africa for their own knockout competition.<br />

“This was a truly global programme based<br />

around a beer to unify soccer fans, and the huge<br />

digital platform we created was certainly one of<br />

the highlights,” says Van der Noll.<br />

The programme delivered results on a range<br />

of measures, including ensuring that Budweiser<br />

was the top-selling drink - soft drinks and bottled<br />

water included - at World Cup stadiums.<br />

In addition, Budweiser’s Facebook fanbase<br />

added one million ‘likes’ during the five weeks<br />

of the tournament, while over 2.7 million fans<br />

showed their colours using the brand’s ‘Paint Your<br />

Face’ application on Facebook.<br />

Bud House attracted more than seven million<br />

views on syndicated channels while more than 1.5<br />

million fans voted for their Bud Man of the Match<br />

after each of the 64 games.<br />

In a press release issued along with the<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 31


There is a significant risk of major properties<br />

pricing themselves out of the market.<br />

Current price levels for major events are just<br />

astronomical and very difficult to justify.<br />

company’s second-quarter and half-year results<br />

for 2010, World Cup-related activity was credited<br />

with enabling AB InBev to maintain sales levels<br />

in a difficult global market and gain significant<br />

traction in key territories worldwide.<br />

Not least of these is the hard-to-crack Russian<br />

market, where the American icon Budweiser was<br />

successfully launched on the back of its World<br />

Cup involvement.<br />

And it was the success of the digital strategy<br />

which most clearly highlights the potential for<br />

a gap to emerge between properties and their<br />

sponsors as fast-moving brands continue to<br />

embrace digital opportunities, leaving rights<br />

owners trailing in their wake.<br />

The rationale for and execution of<br />

sponsorships is changing and Van der Noll<br />

believes that will be a major factor for companies<br />

seriously reflecting on the opportunity to renew<br />

deals with major sports properties.<br />

“The situation is different now. In the 1970s<br />

and 80s, these brands were involved in major<br />

sports events because they were in the process of<br />

building global brands.<br />

“Most of them now have close to 100 per<br />

cent awareness and, quite simply, brands are no<br />

longer in it for exposure.<br />

“There are two key elements which need to be<br />

linked into sponsorships, now and in the future.<br />

“The first is that marketing is all about<br />

building a relationship with consumers.<br />

Brands want to be able to tell their story and<br />

have customer tell them theirs. We want to tell<br />

the world who we are, what we stand for. The<br />

sponsorship should be a platform to allow the<br />

brand to do that.<br />

“While major sports events like the World<br />

Cup are a passion point which provides the basic<br />

connection with consumers, <strong>FIFA</strong> and other<br />

rights owners have to recognise the transition<br />

which is taking place and look at how they can do<br />

more to facilitate this story-telling.<br />

“Where I think <strong>FIFA</strong> still has room to add value<br />

for partners is in the whole social media space.<br />

That is where the fish are, it is where we need<br />

to be fishing and <strong>FIFA</strong> could do more to help us<br />

connect with consumers in the online world.<br />

“They don’t technically allow us to use their<br />

marks in the social media space and that is<br />

something we would like to see changed. They<br />

could also do more with their own digital offering<br />

which is run by real professionals but which, at<br />

the moment, provides only limited opportunities<br />

for partners.”<br />

Van der Noll believes that the future is<br />

bright for those properties able to embrace the<br />

marketing realities of the digital age and move<br />

away from traditional methods of evaluating and<br />

selling sponsorship.<br />

“The bigger properties need to become more<br />

realistic about pricing,” he says.<br />

“At the moment there is a significant risk<br />

of them pricing themselves out of the market.<br />

Current price levels for major events are just<br />

astronomical. For example the fees for the World<br />

Cup rose 250 per cent between the 2006 and<br />

2010 tournaments and that sort of increase is<br />

very difficult to justify.<br />

“I see massive prices for the Sochi 2014<br />

Winter Olympics and future Olympic Games as<br />

well as the World Cup, and I just don’t believe<br />

that trend can continue.”<br />

In fact, Van der Noll believes high prices may<br />

simply force brands away from sport and into<br />

taking a more creative approach to the use of<br />

social media: “Our Bud House programme was a<br />

tremendous success during the 2010 World Cup<br />

and the fact that we were associated with the<br />

event certainly helped us.<br />

“But the point is that the association was not<br />

critical. With new media it becomes easier to<br />

develop programmes without paying expensive<br />

rights fees.”<br />

It’s a view which might just send a shiver down<br />

the spine of some rights owners who have become<br />

accustomed to year-on-year increases in sponsordriven<br />

revenue, and might just act as a wake-up<br />

call for those properties that continue to offer<br />

much the same package of sponsorship rights that<br />

was on the market a couple of decades ago.<br />

Times have changed. And the question is<br />

whether or not sport has the ability or appetite<br />

to change with them. Away from the World<br />

Cup there are likely to be further changes to AB<br />

InBev’s approach to its Budweiser partnerships<br />

in the United States. But, as Van der Noll is quick<br />

to point out, there will be no reduction in the<br />

company’s appetite for sport any time soon.<br />

“It’s simple. Beer, sports and entertainment<br />

go hand-in-hand so while there may be changes<br />

in the way we activate our sponsorships there<br />

will be no change of direction in terms of<br />

commitment to sports.<br />

“We have to engage with our customers<br />

through their passion points and sport is key<br />

among them.”<br />

In the United States that change of approach<br />

marks a shift away from the massive, “in your<br />

face” Bud-branding exercises of the past towards<br />

what van der Noll describes as a “smarter, more<br />

sophisticated and creative era.”<br />

“The US is by far the biggest market for<br />

Budweiser and the brand has associations with<br />

many properties. The NFL ( for Bud Light) is our<br />

biggest sponsorship in sport - bigger even than<br />

the World Cup and was secured at the expense of<br />

Coors Light.<br />

“While we have reviewed our US properties<br />

and may lose some smaller ones, in the main it<br />

is a steady portfolio which, of course, includes<br />

two other massive properties in Major League<br />

Baseball and NASCAR.”<br />

Outside the US it is likely that the AB InBev<br />

portfolio will expand further with the emphasis<br />

still on football.<br />

“We want to build on the momentum of the<br />

World Cup and will be looking at events and<br />

leagues rather than clubs or individual players,”<br />

explains Van der Noll who believes that the<br />

sponsorship sector continues<br />

to mature and, when executed effectively,<br />

continues to have much to offer unique<br />

opportunities to marketers.<br />

“Sponsorship is no longer a surrogate media<br />

buy. It is a discipline that can deliver measurable<br />

results in its own right,” he adds. “At AB InBev<br />

we have developed the most sophisticated<br />

measurement dashboard I have ever seen.<br />

“A lot of money and human resources have<br />

been invested in the system and at the core of<br />

it is a brand tracking system in 10 key markets<br />

which measures not only awareness but also<br />

preference and brand health.<br />

“These are areas we take very seriously and<br />

are at the heart of everything we do. As for the<br />

World Cup, it has been the proof point for a new<br />

era in marketing at AB InBev.<br />

32 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


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RYDER CUP<br />

LET<br />

BATTLE<br />

COMMENCE<br />

Over the past two decades the Ryder Cup has become established as one of the<br />

world’s truly great global sports events. Development of the Ryder Cup brand has<br />

been accompanied by ever-growing media interest and has sparked bidding<br />

battles between cities and nations anxious to host future editions of the event.<br />

Andy Fry examines the growth of the Ryder Cup against the background of<br />

the 2010 edition in Celtic Manor, Wales, from October 1 to 3.<br />

THERE’S NO QUESTION The Ryder Cup, the<br />

biennial showdown between the US and Europe’s<br />

best golfing talent, is a spectacle comparable to<br />

Grand Slams, NFL Super Bowl, The America’s<br />

Cup, Formula One and The Tour de France.<br />

The competition jointly-run by the PGA of<br />

America and PGA European Tour is regularly<br />

cited as one of the world’s top ten sporting<br />

events and is beamed into 750 million homes<br />

worldwide. No doubt this is partly down to<br />

the quality and depth of the individual talent<br />

on display, but European Ryder Cup director<br />

Richard Hills believes the real key to the event’s<br />

popularity is its team component.<br />

“Fans of The Ryder Cup recognise there’s<br />

something very special about players who<br />

normally compete with each other coming<br />

together as a part of a US or European team,” he<br />

tells SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>. “The passion of<br />

the players is partly explained by patriotism - but<br />

it’s also because many would have started their<br />

careers pulling together as part of teams.”<br />

The headline numbers underline the growing<br />

appeal of the event. Back in 2006, TV rights<br />

sales meant that around 480 million homes in<br />

40 countries were able to watch the Ryder Cup<br />

in Ireland. Roll forward to 2010 and 750 million<br />

homes in 195 countries will be able to tune in -<br />

courtesy of broadcasters including pay-operator<br />

Canal Plus in France and Spain, state-broadcaster<br />

CCTV in China and NBC in the US.<br />

NBC, to cite one example, consistently<br />

secures robust ratings for the event - with<br />

particularly impressive figures when the US<br />

won the event in September 2008 without<br />

the aid of Tiger Woods (up 22 per cent on the<br />

2006 defeat at K Club, Ireland albeit with a<br />

time-slot difference). UK pay-platform Sky is<br />

another which secures strong viewing figures<br />

for the event, and it plans to use The<br />

Ryder Cup as the launch-pad for<br />

its ambitious new residential 3D<br />

offering. This widespread fan appeal<br />

means that The Ryder Cup is generally<br />

able to deliver a robust commercial<br />

story. Hills is frank enough to admit that<br />

the recession has made selling the 2010<br />

edition tough, “but we are certainly not<br />

dragging along the bottom.<br />

“In line with other leading sports<br />

franchises, hospitality has been a<br />

difficult market in the current climate<br />

- with the result that we have released<br />

some corporate ticket inventory to<br />

the general public. But we have sold<br />

sponsorship packages to brands including<br />

BMW, Emirates Airline, KPMG, Rolex and<br />

financial services company Citi.”<br />

BMW’s recent renewal was a particular boost<br />

for the event - since it runs right through to the<br />

2014 edition at Gleneagles in Scotland.<br />

“We see golf as an ideal environment through<br />

which to communicate with our customers<br />

and promote BMW values such as precision,<br />

dynamism and sportsmanship,” explains Ian<br />

Robertson, a board member for BMW Group<br />

with responsibility for sales and marketing.<br />

“Having been involved in golf for more than 20<br />

years our commitment is long-term.”<br />

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of<br />

this latest edition of The Ryder Cup is that it<br />

is being held in Wales for the first time - at a<br />

purpose-built course on the Celtic Manor Resort.<br />

The brainchild of Wales’ first-ever billionaire,<br />

entrepreneur Sir Terry Matthews, the arrival of<br />

The Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor is being heralded<br />

as the biggest ever sports event to come to Wales<br />

- with both the country and the nearby city of<br />

34 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


RYDER CUP<br />

Celtic Manor’s 18th hole - lhourahane<br />

Ian Poulter (Europe) and Phil Mickelson (US)<br />

- Getty Images Sport<br />

Newport expected to benefit. The decision to<br />

award the event to Celtic Manor was made<br />

before the course had been built.<br />

Although this may have been viewed as<br />

something of a risk, there are clear upsides<br />

says Celtic Manor marketing director Gareth<br />

Rees Jones: “There’s always been an issue with<br />

getting 45,000 spectators close enough to<br />

see the action at a Ryder Cup - because of<br />

the nature of team play. So Celtic Manor has<br />

created a stadium course - which provides<br />

fans with maximum viewing opportunities at<br />

key points on the course.<br />

“Because we were designing the<br />

course with The Ryder Cup in mind, we<br />

were also able to work with the rights<br />

holder to<br />

make sure we selected the best<br />

hospitality and camera position.<br />

There are vast platforms for<br />

corporate hospitality running<br />

almost the entire length of the<br />

final three holes.”<br />

‘The Twenty Ten Course’,<br />

running along the floor of the<br />

Usk Valley, combines nine new<br />

holes with nine holes from the<br />

Wentwood Hills course which<br />

have been remodeled. Because it<br />

was new, there were numerous<br />

factors to take into account. “It<br />

has been a great privilege to<br />

create a golf course that is not<br />

only capable of challenging the<br />

world’s greatest players but can also deal with all<br />

the requirements of staging a Ryder Cup,” says<br />

course designer Ross McMurray of European<br />

Golf Design. “It has been interesting to balance<br />

the requirements of engineers, archaeologists,<br />

ecologists and the European Tour Staging<br />

Department with the need to create a golf course<br />

that will host both The Ryder Cup and The<br />

Celtic Manor Wales Open as well as provide a<br />

high quality golfing destination for visitors to<br />

the resort.”<br />

Putting Wales on the map<br />

Celtic Manor’s Rees Jones estimates that Sir Terry<br />

has spent about £120 million on the resort - of<br />

which £50 million was about bringing The Ryder<br />

Cup to Wales. All of which begs the question -<br />

how will Celtic Manor generate a return on an<br />

event which only lasts for three days?<br />

“Clearly with that level of investment, Sir<br />

Terry wasn’t simply looking at recoupment<br />

for the resort. He was interested in helping<br />

Wales attract inward investment - both in<br />

terms of tourism and support from industry.<br />

Not to be overlooked either are infrastructure<br />

improvements that derive from Ryder Cup<br />

investment - notably the transport network.”<br />

In terms of golf tourism, there’s no question<br />

that winning The Ryder Cup is having a positive<br />

effect. “We have some great courses here,” says<br />

Rees Jones, “including links courses. But Wales<br />

just wasn’t on the map when compared to Ireland<br />

or Scotland. Now, The Ryder Cup means it now is<br />

and we are getting more people coming.”<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10 35


RYDER CUP<br />

Captains Corey Pavin (US) and Colin Montgomerie (Europe) - Getty Images Sport<br />

This claim is borne out by figures from<br />

Ryder Cup Wales (RCW), the public-private<br />

partnership which has driven the agenda in the<br />

run up to the Celtic Manor event. According<br />

to John Jermine, chairman of RCW, golfing<br />

tourism contributed around £34.7 million to<br />

the Welsh economy in 2009 - an impressive<br />

increase of £18 million on 2002 - and in 2009<br />

Wales also enjoyed a 15 per cent increase in golf<br />

visitors - against the overall UK trend.<br />

This is exactly the kind of outcome that Hills,<br />

as a Ryder Cup director, is looking for: “Wales<br />

has done a very creative job of delivering long<br />

term benefits for the sport. They’ve even gone<br />

as far as using golf as a tool for the national<br />

curriculum for six-to-10-year-olds.”<br />

Raising interest at home<br />

Highlights of the pre-Ryder Cup period include<br />

a range of initiatives from Golf Development<br />

Wales which have introduced around 75,000<br />

seven-to-17-year-olds to the sport. At the same<br />

time, the £2 million Ryder Cup Legacy Fund<br />

has funded 41 pay-and-play facilities that will<br />

include 200 holes and 32 greens across Wales.<br />

In terms of encouraging the widest possible<br />

fan engagement, there are also plans for a<br />

fanzone in Newport. Here, 2,000 spectators<br />

who can’t get tickets to the event will be able to<br />

watch it live on big screens.<br />

All for which makes for good golf-based<br />

headlines. But when public money is involved<br />

in bringing sports events to countries, how can<br />

stakeholders be sure there is a tangible benefit<br />

to be had? Well, to its credit, Europe’s Ryder<br />

Cup team has worked hard to try and deliver<br />

some hard facts regarding economic impact.<br />

After 2006’s edition at K Club in Ireland, for<br />

example, Ryder Cup Europe and Fáilte Ireland<br />

commissioned Deloitte & Touche to produce<br />

a report which claimed the event generated<br />

spending of around €240 million across the<br />

FACTS AND FIGURES<br />

Celtic Manor expects 45,000 spectators<br />

to watch the match on each day of the<br />

competition. A further 7,000 on each day<br />

will be made up of members of staff and<br />

course marshals, emergency services<br />

and the media. Similar numbers will<br />

attend official Practice Days. Around<br />

1,200 representatives of the media are<br />

expected to attend in 2010. Four TV<br />

studios will be built, along with 30 outside<br />

broadcast vehicles and 30 scaffolding<br />

camera towers at strategic points on<br />

the course, all served by 80km of TV<br />

fibre cables. The 2010 event is likely to<br />

be covered by 50 TV stations, beaming<br />

pictures into 750 million homes in over<br />

195 countries. On course infrastructure<br />

includes: 195 mobile offices/toilets,<br />

a 2,000-square-metre merchandise<br />

tent, 40,000 sqm of other tentage,<br />

3,700 metres of perimeter fencing, 18<br />

grandstands with over 15,000 seats, nine<br />

electronic screens on the course, practice<br />

ground and tented village displaying live<br />

coverage and scores, 13,000 chairs, 300<br />

flag poles 90 BMW courtesy cars and 240<br />

Club Car electric buggies.<br />

country - much higher than the pre-event<br />

prediction of €130 million.<br />

The fact that Sir Terry was the driving<br />

force in winning the event for Wales is to<br />

be applauded. But with the likes of France,<br />

Germany, Portugal, Spain and The Netherlands<br />

all now interested in hosting this prestigious<br />

event in 2018, it could be decades before Wales<br />

gets another look in (particularly as hosting<br />

is shared with the US (Medinah, Chicago,<br />

in 2012). So how will Celtic Manor justify its<br />

existence going forward?<br />

The answer, says Rees Jones, is the<br />

diversified structure of the business: “Our<br />

main revenue streams are the conference<br />

and leisure markets - with many companies<br />

and families using our facilities. But we<br />

also recently extended our contract with the<br />

European Tour for The Celtic Manor-sponsored<br />

Wales Open until 2014. That means highprofile<br />

golf will continue to play a part here for<br />

at least another three years.”<br />

Of course, one of the biggest innovations<br />

was the decision to go to Wales for the first<br />

time. If the event is a success, then the way<br />

is open for other non-traditional markets to<br />

present a new kind of blueprint to The Ryder<br />

Cup’s organisers. To cite an example, the 2018<br />

Germany bid (see pp. 38-40) is based on plans<br />

for another custom-built course - to be financed<br />

by car giant Audi.<br />

Leaving aside the potential for commercial<br />

conflict between Audi and Ryder Cup partner<br />

BMW, the move towards purpose-built courses<br />

in a more diverse range of countries could<br />

reinforce the Ryder Cup’s profile as one of the<br />

great international events in the calendar.<br />

36 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


DELIVERING TOTAL EVENT SOLUTIONS<br />

FROM THE RYDER CUP TO THE<br />

COMMONWEALTH GAMES IN 2010<br />

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RYDER CUP<br />

2006 Ryder Cup at the K Club - Getty Images Sport<br />

EUROPEAN PRIZE<br />

The Ryder Cup has only once taken<br />

place in Europe outside the British<br />

Isles, at Valderrama, Spain, in 1997.<br />

However European nations are<br />

increasingly recognising that golf’s<br />

flagship team event, which rotates<br />

from the USA to across the Atlantic<br />

every two years, as a vehicle to bring<br />

both economic and social benefits<br />

and global exposure as a host nation.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> profiles<br />

the five bids for 2018 and asks them<br />

why Ryder Cup should choose them<br />

as hosts in April next year.<br />

FRANCE<br />

The French government<br />

has created a special body,<br />

‘Interministerial Commission<br />

for Major Sporting Events’, for its intention<br />

to regularly host major sports events. This<br />

commission has three primary objectives: Euro<br />

2016 (won this May), Winter Olympic Games<br />

2018 Annecy (announced mid-2011) and of the<br />

Ryder Cup 2018.<br />

Ryder Cup 2018 France would be staged at<br />

Golf National, a course situated half-an-hour<br />

outside Paris in Guyancourt, surrounding the<br />

historic Chateau of Versailles. The course can<br />

accommodate up to 70,000 spectators per day,<br />

20,000 above the capacity normally required for<br />

a Ryder Cup venue.<br />

“Hosting the next Ryder Cup is a natural<br />

evolution of the ‘boom’ of golf in France,” says<br />

Pascal Grizot, President of the French Ryder<br />

Cup committee. “Ryder Cup 2018 France will<br />

leave a long-lasting legacy and will be utilised<br />

as the key inspirational driver to boost the<br />

growth of French golf: our objective is to go<br />

from 400,000 members in 2010 to 700,000<br />

in 2022 and to drive significant participation<br />

beyond this through the development of 100<br />

short courses in urban areas.”<br />

Grizot adds there will be an “outstanding”<br />

opening ceremony at the Eiffel Tower, where<br />

the two team captains will be pitted against each<br />

other in a driving contest from the first floor of<br />

the Eiffel Tower trying to reach greens in the<br />

shape of Europe and the USA.<br />

France’s bid is funded in partnership<br />

between the country’s national federation and<br />

the nation’s golfers. Each registered member of<br />

the French Golf Federation (410,377 members<br />

at the end of 2009) has agreed to a €3 levy on<br />

their membership fee up until 2022. The French<br />

government and major French firms have also<br />

contributed to the bid fund.<br />

GERMANY<br />

The German proposal is being led<br />

by RC Deutschland, the specialist<br />

body formed in October 2008,<br />

and is supported by specialist engagement<br />

marketing agency GMR Marketing. Six-time<br />

European Ryder Cup winner Bernhard Langer is<br />

patron of the German campaign.<br />

A new tailor-made golf course will be built <br />

38 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


RYDER CUP<br />

to host the event, as will a high-performance<br />

training-centre, a German hall of fame for golf<br />

and a high-class hotel. The new venue will<br />

accommodate more than 50,000 spectators<br />

per day. The bid team says German efficiency<br />

and reliability will serve as an engine to drive a<br />

smooth-running 2018 Ryder Cup.<br />

“Spectators arriving by air, rail or car can<br />

expect smooth passage into Germany,” the<br />

bid team told SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>.<br />

“<strong>International</strong> airports in Munich, Nuremberg<br />

and Frankfurt will speed visitors on their way,<br />

as will modern rail stations all over the country<br />

and high-speed ICE trains will make travelling a<br />

pleasure. The iconic German autobahns need no<br />

introduction for drivers.<br />

“Hotel accommodation comes in all<br />

categories, from five-star deluxe palaces to the<br />

typical Bavarian Gasthaus - something for every<br />

possible taste and budget. The Land of Bavaria<br />

will also offer visitors a beautiful surrounding<br />

with a lot of historical cities, the alps, the lakes<br />

and castles, including nice weather in fall, to be<br />

compared with the Indian summer. And due to<br />

fortuitous timing…the world-famed Oktoberfest<br />

beer festival takes place in Munich at the same<br />

time as the Ryder Cup.”<br />

HOLLAND<br />

Holland’s bid proposes hosting the<br />

2018 Ryder Cup at the<br />

Colin Montgomerie-designed<br />

course, The Dutch, currently under construction<br />

45 minutes from both Rotterdam and<br />

Amsterdam. The bid team emphasises that<br />

the course-design concept, which will provide<br />

spectators with clear views of multiple holes, will<br />

increase viewer satisfaction of the Ryder Cup and<br />

allow for a higher number of spectators on site.<br />

Smart ticketing will allow spectators to prebook<br />

seating locations and upgrade to other<br />

tickets on-site. This way, says Niek Molenaar,<br />

Director of the 2018 Dutch Ryder Cup bid,<br />

Holland will get more revenues out of ticketing,<br />

which represents around the 35 per cent of the<br />

bid team’s total budget. The majority of revenues<br />

(40 per cent) will come from the support of<br />

long-term business partners with 25 per cent of<br />

funding from the Dutch government.<br />

Molenaar says “bonding corporate Holland”<br />

is the key factor that puts the Dutch bid on a<br />

different level from the four other territories<br />

vying for 2018: “We have developed a sponsor<br />

programme that attracted a diversified and solid<br />

portfolio of our many business partners for<br />

Ryder Cup 2018 and in the process realised longterm<br />

sponsor commitments for future Dutch<br />

European Tour events.”<br />

Molenaar adds: “The Ryder Cup will give<br />

a huge boost for golf in the Netherlands. It<br />

has already grown fast to become the third<br />

participant sport but is still underdeveloped in<br />

attention from the media and the government.<br />

AN EXPERT’S VIEW<br />

A study commissioned by the European<br />

Tour and the Irish Tourism Development<br />

Authority estimated that the 2006 Ryder<br />

Cup, staged at the K Club, generated<br />

€143 million of direct expenditure for<br />

the Irish economy.<br />

“The Ryder Cup has proven to generate<br />

significant economic benefits to its host<br />

nation,” says Andrea Sartori, head of<br />

KPMG’s Golf Advisory Practice in Europe,<br />

Middle East and Africa - whose latest<br />

study about the professional tournament<br />

golf sector will be launched during the<br />

2010 Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor. “Besides<br />

the organisers’ expenditure, the event is<br />

known to attract a considerable number<br />

of international visitors, whose spending<br />

before, during and after the event<br />

contributes to the national economy.”<br />

“In addition to these tangible economic<br />

benefits,” adds Sartori, “the event enables<br />

the host nation to position the country as a<br />

golf tourism destination and showcase its<br />

tourism offering to a worldwide audience<br />

through the extensive media coverage,<br />

available to approximately 500 million<br />

homes across 180 countries.<br />

“The Ryder Cup also has a significant<br />

legacy effect and may help to grow golf<br />

locally by introducing new players to the<br />

game. This in turn may facilitate further<br />

investment in the supply of golf courses.<br />

Furthermore, the 2018 event will see the<br />

Ryder Cup return to continental Europe<br />

for only the second time in history,<br />

adding an additional prestige factor to<br />

securing the bid.”<br />

The Ryder Cup will motivate more juniors<br />

to play golf which eventually will lead to<br />

Dutch Ryder Cup stars of the future. From an<br />

economic perspective we see the direct positive<br />

impact of a large-scale sporting event for the<br />

Rotterdam area, but also in the longer term it<br />

will help to develop golf tourism.”<br />

PORTUGAL<br />

Portugal’s 2018 bid promises to<br />

host the event at a venue in “one<br />

of the last unspoiled pieces of<br />

land in continental Europe”. Comporta is a<br />

12,500-hectare area that incorporates two tourist<br />

areas of approximately 365 hectares each. The<br />

proposed golf course, the Comporta Dunes,<br />

designed by specialist architect Tom Fazio<br />

and European Golf Design, will be built over<br />

140 hectares.<br />

“From a sporting perspective the 2018<br />

Ryder Cup would serve as catalyst to develop<br />

the number of golf players in our country<br />

and turn golf into a popular game, such as<br />

football or athletics,” says Miguel Franco de<br />

Sousa, Technical Director of the Portuguese<br />

Golf Federation. “Portugal has great natural<br />

conditions to play golf and many golf courses,<br />

if we have a tool like a Ryder Cup to develop the<br />

game of golf in our country we believe we can<br />

grow from 15,000 players exponentially.<br />

“Golf has a tremendous impact in Portugal’s<br />

economy and currently represents 20 per cent<br />

of tourism revenue and is growing. Golf is<br />

a strategic tourism product which has been<br />

marketed over the last 15 years in Portugal. Now<br />

is the opportunity to promote a new concept of<br />

golf tourism where sustainability and quality will<br />

play major roles.”<br />

Portugal’s bid costs are being financed<br />

through the Portuguese State through Turismo<br />

de Portugal, the promoter Herdade da Comporta<br />

and the Portuguese Golf Federation.<br />

SPAIN (MADRID)<br />

The strongest asset of Madrid’s<br />

2018 Ryder Cup bid is the purposebuilt<br />

course at Tres Cantos, situated<br />

26 kilometres from the centre of Madrid. The<br />

course’s pinnacle hole, the 16th known as the<br />

‘Bullring’, will be able to accommodate up to<br />

25,000 people around the green.<br />

“Celtic Manor has rebuilt the course in order<br />

to meet all of the requirements for a Ryder<br />

Cup so in this sense there are similarities with<br />

our proposed purpose-built course at Tres<br />

Cantos,” says Gonzaga Escauriaza Barreiro,<br />

President of the Royal Spanish Golf Federation.<br />

“We will be visiting Celtic Manor to watch the<br />

Ryder Cup this year and will be looking at all<br />

of the organisational and logistical elements<br />

closely to hopefully learn some important facts<br />

for our own bid.”<br />

Barreiro adds: “Our infrastructure is as<br />

good as any city in the world, as shown when<br />

we presented a strong bid to host the [2016]<br />

Games in Madrid - the public will be able to<br />

travel from the centre of Madrid to our course<br />

in the space of 28 minutes. We also have a<br />

range of support across all major institutions<br />

including the Royal Family, Government of<br />

Madrid, National Sports Council, the media<br />

and the Spanish players.”<br />

Madrid has 10 former European players<br />

supporting its bid, including Severiano Ballesteros<br />

as its bid patron. The golf industry already<br />

generates €2.375 billion per year for the Spanish<br />

economy and, says Barreiro, “hosting the 2018<br />

Ryder Cup would provide the focus and attention<br />

necessary to continue attracting investment at<br />

all levels of the game and support our existing<br />

calendar of events on the European Tour.”<br />

Despite announcing an intention to bid for the<br />

2018 Ryder Cup, Sweden withdrew its application<br />

in March this year.<br />

40 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


eastern<br />

promise<br />

china moves to centre stage of THE sony ericsson wta TOUR


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

stacey aLLaster<br />

ON<br />

TRACK<br />

FOR SUCCESS<br />

Stacey Allaster - Getty Images Sport<br />

Sony Ericsson WTA Tour Chairman and CEO Stacey Allaster tells Kevin Roberts how women’s<br />

tennis is progressing on all fronts and bucking economic trends.<br />

IT’S NOW LITTLE MORE than a year since<br />

Stacey Allaster became Chairman and Chief<br />

Executive of the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour. And<br />

what a year it has been.<br />

While much of the world took cover from the<br />

fall-out of the recession, women’s tennis appears<br />

to be emerging fitter and commercially stronger<br />

as the Tour continues to reap the benefits of its<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 43


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

stacey aLLaster<br />

restructuring under the continuing<br />

Road Map programme instigated under the<br />

stewardship of Allaster’s predecessor Larry<br />

Scott, who is now at the Pac-10 Conference<br />

in the USA’s National Collegiate Athletic<br />

Association (NCAA) .<br />

“As the global economy has gone backwards,<br />

women’s tennis has gone forwards,” says<br />

Allaster. “There is no doubt that we are in good<br />

shape and that the future is bright. The Tour<br />

has become truly global in every respect. We<br />

stage events in 33 different countries and there<br />

have been as many as nine nations represented<br />

among the top 10 players at any one time.”<br />

She believes that level of globality delivers an<br />

enticing matrix of opportunities for sponsors,<br />

something born out by recent events and the<br />

signing of key commercial partnerships in both<br />

Asia and Europe.<br />

“We have an incredibly strong product on the<br />

court and the streamlining of the circuit under<br />

the Road Map means that we have been able to<br />

deliver more of our top players at the top events,”<br />

she adds. “Withdrawals (of players) are down and<br />

attendances are up by 11 per cent at our premier<br />

events. That has to tell you something.”<br />

Strong partnerships<br />

The statistics certainly seem to have told sponsors<br />

something. Of a total 53 tournaments, only one<br />

title sponsor has been lost and that was quickly<br />

replaced - a record which other sports properties<br />

must envy in these more trying times.<br />

Critically, Sony Ericsson - the mobile<br />

telecoms brand which had become almost<br />

umbilically linked with women’s tennis<br />

over the past decade - renewed its association to<br />

include the 2011 and 2012 seasons earlier this<br />

year. The new agreement frees-up the naming<br />

rights for the end-of-season Championships<br />

- which move from Doha, Qatar, to Istanbul,<br />

Turkey, from 2011-13, and allows the WTA to<br />

build its own brand equity.<br />

Elsewhere Allaster and colleagues are<br />

delighted at signing Chinese clothing<br />

manufacturer Peak and the Swedish beauty<br />

products company Oriflame, the latter of which<br />

has signed a two-year partnership covering<br />

Europe, Russia, the Middle East and Africa.<br />

“The thing about the WTA is that we are<br />

a team organisation,” explains Allaster. “The<br />

athletes are the stars both on and off the court.”<br />

And the stars of the WTA are critical to<br />

its efforts to build a strong and commercially<br />

compelling brand. Tennis, like so many other<br />

sports, has been player-driven. And nothing, it<br />

appears, drives interest in a player or the sport<br />

more than a national affinity. In the days when<br />

Steffi Graf ruled the women’s game and Boris<br />

Becker was king of the men’s domain, tennis<br />

rivalled football for popularity in Germany,<br />

such is the level of identification with a fellowcountryman<br />

at the top of their sport.<br />

Now with the spread of talent better<br />

reflecting the broad geographic footprint of the<br />

circuit events, the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour is<br />

exceptionally well-placed to develop traction and<br />

commercial strength in a range of new markets.<br />

But none of these, says Stacey Allaster, is<br />

currently as important as China.<br />

“China is our number one strategic priority<br />

right now. We need to develop the opportunities<br />

we currently face in that huge marketplace. But<br />

that doesn’t mean we intend to neglect those<br />

which exist elsewhere.<br />

“Naturally we are looking at India, where<br />

there is strong interest to stage a new event as<br />

early as 2012 or 2013, and of course we would<br />

love to have a stronger presence in South<br />

America, particularly Brazil which is such a<br />

massive market.”<br />

While it is certain that new territories<br />

will be added over time, the WTA calendar is<br />

already fairly jam-packed and, given the struggle<br />

to streamline the competition in recent years,<br />

it would make little sense to start adding new<br />

events which could once lead to a dilution of the<br />

competition.<br />

Tricky balance to strike<br />

This is just one of the tricky strategic<br />

development decisions facing Allaster and her<br />

team and the glamorous end-of-season WTA<br />

Championships provide a case in point.<br />

Next year the event switches homes from<br />

44 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 146 • 06.09


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

stacey aLLaster<br />

“The thing about<br />

the WTA<br />

is that we are a<br />

team organisation.<br />

The athletes are<br />

the stars both on<br />

and off the court.”<br />

Doha - where it has been something of a<br />

feather in the cap of the resolutely-focused<br />

and determined Qatari sports authorities - to<br />

Istanbul, the major city in another country<br />

where sport is beginning to play an important<br />

role as its economy develops.<br />

“We have some important decisions to<br />

take,” adds Allaster. “After 2013, should the<br />

championships return to a more robust media<br />

market or be used to break new ground?”<br />

Whatever the outcome of this discussion,<br />

one thing is for certain. The continued growth<br />

of women’s tennis will be driven in part through<br />

the channels of social media, making the<br />

continuing relationship with Sony Ericsson<br />

particularly pertinent and valuable to both sides.<br />

“The focus is certainly on social media and<br />

encouraging people to share video, pictures<br />

and editorial content through Facebook and<br />

YouTube,” Allaster explains.<br />

“The Williams sisters and Maria Sharapova<br />

already have around five million fans on<br />

Facebook while users of the WTA’s own<br />

Facebook offering have accelerated from just<br />

5,000 to 250,000 very quickly.<br />

“The packaging of the product in digital<br />

mini-bites is a given and, of course, part of the<br />

reason Sony Ericsson renewed was our existing<br />

digital strategy. Just look at their products. We<br />

are able to provide a great network or them!”<br />

So when she reflects on the past 12 months<br />

in women’s tennis, what have been Stacey<br />

Allaster’s highlights?<br />

“Having Kim Clijsters and Justine Henin back<br />

on the tour and the emergence of players like<br />

Victoria Azarenka and Caroline Wozniacki means<br />

that we have had a very deep bench,” says Allaster.<br />

“This is probably the best product we have<br />

had in the history of the WTA. Our athletes have<br />

stepped up to support the Tour and all know<br />

their responsibilities and the role they can play<br />

as individuals in the development and continued<br />

success of women’s tennis.”<br />

“Attendance is up at our events and there<br />

is more sponsorship and prize money in the<br />

sport than ever before. To have renewed our<br />

relationship with Sony Ericsson and have signed<br />

two new sponsors makes it a hat-trick.<br />

“In fact, it has been a great year both on and<br />

off the court.”<br />

Focus on the future<br />

But while she is happy to reflect on the last 12<br />

months or so, as Chairman and CEO, Allaster’s<br />

focus is naturally on the future: “Taking the 2011<br />

Championships to Istanbul presents us with<br />

a great opportunity to take our sport and our<br />

athletes to a new territory and to engage with<br />

new audiences.<br />

“Much of my focus will be on the<br />

development and exploitation of our digital<br />

platform because that is a priority for growth.<br />

“And, of course, we have to maintain and<br />

build on the momentum we’ve established<br />

in the last year and make sure prize money<br />

continues to increase.”<br />

As the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour and its<br />

galaxy of stars prepare to battle for the China<br />

Open title in Beijing, they are likely to be<br />

focused on their game rather than their role<br />

in making history.<br />

But their Chairman and CEO remains<br />

confident that the Tour is in better than good<br />

shape and that this current crop of players really<br />

does have the whole world in its hands.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 45


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

UP AND COMING<br />

MOVING ON UP<br />

Around 2,200 players currently represent 96 nations on the WTA. We’ve picked out<br />

10 of this year’s top performers primed to hit the headlines in the not-too-distant future.<br />

Li Na<br />

Li Na is spearheading the Chinese tennis revolution.<br />

Born in 1982, she turned professional in 1999 and now<br />

ranks 10th in the world - highest of three Chinese in<br />

the top 50. Li Na is coached by Thomas Hogstedt and<br />

husband Jiang Shan. She was introduced to tennis<br />

aged 9 after playing badminton for two years.<br />

Zheng Jie<br />

The 27-year-old is number 23 in the WTA Singles<br />

Rankings. Born in Cheng Du, China, she took up<br />

the game aged 10 - inspired by her older sister.<br />

Coached by husband Chang Yu, Zheng Jie graduated<br />

from Si Chuan Sports Academy in 2000 and turned<br />

professional in 2003 after which she had a storming<br />

few seasons before an ankle injury blighted 2007.<br />

Caroline Wozniacki<br />

One of the most exciting young talents on the WTA,<br />

Danish golden girl Caroline Wozniacki has<br />

won seven titles and is ranked fourth. Coached<br />

by father Piotr and Morten Christensen at the<br />

National Tennis Centre in Denmark, 20-year-old<br />

Caroline began playing tennis aged seven and turned<br />

professional in 2005. In addition to her seven wins,<br />

Samantha Stosur<br />

Australia’s top female tennis player, Samantha Stosur,<br />

was born in 1984 and turned professional in 1999.<br />

Long regarded as a doubles specialist, she defied<br />

critics in 2009 when she won the WTA event in Osaka,<br />

Japan. This year, she showed Osaka was no fluke by<br />

winning in Charleston. Samantha was introduced to<br />

Aravane Rezai<br />

Rising French star Aravane Rezai was born<br />

in St Etienne in 1987 and would have been an<br />

astrophysicist if she hadn’t pursued her love of<br />

tennis. Proof she chose the right path are four WTA<br />

singles titles wins since turning professional in 2005.<br />

The 2009 season was her breakthrough with two<br />

Described as a baseliner who prefers hardcourts, she<br />

has won three WTA events - including Birmingham<br />

in 2010. Her ambition is to win a Grand Slam though<br />

she describes Miami as her favourite tournament.<br />

This year, she donated prize money from Madrid to<br />

earthquake relief efforts in Yushu, China.<br />

Prior to that setback, Zheng Jie won two Tour events<br />

in 2006 (Estoril, Stockholm) and one in 2005 (Hobart).<br />

She came back strong in 2008 - reaching a Grand<br />

Slam singles semi-final at Wimbledon. The year<br />

2009 saw her consolidate her status while 2010 saw<br />

her reach her second Grand Slam semi-final at the<br />

Australian Open. Her favourite shot is her backhand.<br />

Caroline has been in seven finals - underlining her<br />

ability to perform under pressure. She won Junior<br />

Wimbledon in 2006 and was voted Tour Newcomer of<br />

the Year in 2008. Regularly seeded at major events,<br />

Caroline is much younger than any of the other top 10<br />

women players in the world. Victory for her in one of<br />

the four Grand Slams seems imminent.<br />

tennis aged eight and is now coached by David Taylor.<br />

A happy, easy-going person, her relaxed manner<br />

hasn’t stopped her storming up the rankings to<br />

number five. Outside her wins, the career achievement<br />

to date came at Roland Garros this year where she<br />

reached the final, losing to Francesca Schiavone.<br />

event wins and a top 30 ranking. This year she has<br />

recorded victories in Madrid and Bastad and has<br />

reached a ranking of 20. Aravane, coached by Patrick<br />

Mouratoglou, is a right-handed baseliner whose<br />

favourite surface is hardcourt. Her favourite player is<br />

22-time Grand Slam winner Steffi Graf.<br />

46 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

UP anD coming<br />

Agnieszka Radwanska<br />

Agnieszka Radwanska is Poland’s top female tennis<br />

player. Born in Krakow in 1989, she is coached by her<br />

father and turned professional in 2005 - the same<br />

year she won the Junior Wimbledon title. In 2007,<br />

she received the Tour Newcomer of the Year Award.<br />

Agnieszka began playing at age four when her father,<br />

Victoria Azarenka<br />

Victoria Azarenka, 21-years-old, is destined for great<br />

things. Born in Belarus, she trains in Scottsdale,<br />

Arizona, with coach Sam Sumyk. Victoria started<br />

playing aged seven and turned professional at 14.<br />

Now ranked 18, she showed great promise as a<br />

youngster - winning Junior Grand Slam singles<br />

a club pro in Germany, introduced her to the sport.<br />

She is a baseliner whose favourite shot is the<br />

forehand and favourite surface is clay. She has won<br />

four singles titles - most recently in 2008 (Pattaya<br />

City, Istanbul, Eastbourne) - and one doubles title.<br />

Consistent performances have kept her ranking high.<br />

titles at the 2005 Australian Open and 2005 US Open.<br />

In terms of the WTA, 2009 was an exceptional year -<br />

with Tour title wins in Brisbane, Memphis<br />

and Miami propelling her to a top 10 ranking finish.<br />

In Memphis, she also won the Doubles title with<br />

Danish player Caroline Wozniacki.<br />

Yanina Wickmayer<br />

Belgian star Yanina Wickmayer is 21-years-old. She is<br />

coached by father, Marc, and does off-court training<br />

with Marc Frey. She trains at Mouratoglou Academy<br />

in Paris. Yanina started playing tennis at the age of<br />

nine and cites Kim Clijsters as the person she most<br />

admires. Ranked 17th, she turned professional in 2004<br />

and was last year named the WTA’s Most Improved<br />

Player - the result of winning two singles titles and<br />

reaching the semi-final of the US Open. Her good<br />

form continued with a title in January 2010 - this time<br />

in Auckland. Success on the court has won Yanina a<br />

sponsorship deal with with Belgian telco Telenet.<br />

Andrea Petkovic<br />

Brought up in Germany, 23-year-old Andrea Petkovic<br />

was born in Bosnia in 1987. She turned professional<br />

in 2006, played Roland Garros in 2007 and is now a<br />

top 40-ranked player. A baseliner who prefers clay,<br />

Andrea started playing at the age of six. Today she is<br />

coached by Glen Schaap. At the Australian Open in<br />

Alexandra Dulgheru<br />

Romanian star Alexandra Dulgheru was born in 1989<br />

and introduced to tennis by her parents at the tender<br />

age of four. Having turned professional in 2005, she<br />

won two WTA titles at her favourite tournament,<br />

Warsaw, in 2009 and 2010. Ranked 28, Alexandra is a<br />

baseliner whose favourite shot is a high backhand.<br />

2008, she suffered a cruciate ligament rupture which<br />

kept her out for eight months. But 2009 saw Andrea<br />

bounce back with a WTA win in Bad Gastein, Austria, a<br />

result which propelled her up the rankings. Her most<br />

admired people are Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and<br />

Argentinean revolutionary Che Guevara.<br />

There is also more to Alexandra than tennis ability.<br />

After her professional sport, she would like to be<br />

a designer or architect. Romania is very proud<br />

of Alexandra’s achievements and has given her<br />

numerous awards - including one from Romanian<br />

Tennis Federation president Ruxandra Dragomir.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 47


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

china<br />

CHINA: LAND OF<br />

With its booming economy, burgeoning middle class and rich tradition in racket sports such as badminton<br />

and table tennis, the WTA has been targeting China for tennis ascendancy for nearly a decade.<br />

IN THE PERIOD since the WTA first entered the<br />

mainland Chinese market in 2003, with<br />

the launch of Beijing-based event The China<br />

Open, the Tour has made the kind of in-roads<br />

most leading international sports franchises<br />

can only dream about.<br />

Whether you measure the WTA’s<br />

performance by TV ratings, sponsorship<br />

revenues, digital media engagement or event<br />

attendance, there’s plenty to be proud of, says<br />

WTA president David Shoemaker - who showed<br />

his own commitment to China by spending two<br />

years in Beijing.<br />

“It was quite a culture shock moving from<br />

St. Petersburg, Florida,” he recalls, “but it was<br />

an amazing experience to see first-hand how<br />

passionate people are about tennis. I learned a lot<br />

personally and professionally during that time.”<br />

Shoemaker, who continues to oversee the<br />

WTA’s strategy in Asia-Pacific, says the Tour’s<br />

rapid growth in China is closely linked to the<br />

success of a handful of women tennis stars<br />

affectionately known as the ‘Golden Flowers’.<br />

“We had a sense that China could be an<br />

important market for the WTA - which is why we<br />

were keen to establish The China Open. But the<br />

turning point was when Li Ting and Sun Tiantian<br />

won doubles gold at the 2004 Athens Olympics.<br />

“After that, we saw a wave of top female<br />

talent come through - culminating with Li Na<br />

who is now a top 10 ranked player in the WTA<br />

singles rankings.”<br />

As a groundswell of local support developed<br />

around the Golden Flowers, who also include<br />

WTA star Zheng Jie, the Tour decided to raise its<br />

game in China: “In 2007, we took the decision to<br />

upgrade the China Open and make it one of four<br />

WTA mega-events alongside Miami, Indian Wells<br />

and Madrid,” says Shoemaker. “That meant prize<br />

money jumped from $600,000 to $4.5 million<br />

and it became mandatory for our top 50 players<br />

to participate [see panel for more details].<br />

“We put in place a series of measures to<br />

make women’s tennis front of mind all year<br />

round - not just the nine days of the Open,” he<br />

continues. These included the creation of a WTA<br />

Asia-Pacific HQ in Beijing, a comprehensive<br />

media strategy and the launch of Chinese Tennis<br />

Festivals in Beijing and Guangzhou - the latter of<br />

which is also home to a WTA event.<br />

“The Festivals were a great success - drawing<br />

crowds of 200,000 over three days,” adds<br />

Shoemaker. “We’re so pleased we’re looking at<br />

expanding the concept across China, starting<br />

with a third Tennis Festival in Cheng Du<br />

[Zheng Jie’s home town].”<br />

As for media, a key development was a fouryear<br />

exclusive rights deal with state broadcaster<br />

CCTV which now airs the WTA’s top 20 events.<br />

“CCTV has a reach of 330 million households,<br />

which is great for us in terms of exposure,” says<br />

Shoemaker. “Not only that, we’re one of the few<br />

sports rights holders to have secured a fee from<br />

CCTV - which goes to show the massive appeal of<br />

top players like Li Na, Maria Sharapova and the<br />

Williams sisters. We’ve reached the point where<br />

women’s tennis is out-performing traditional<br />

favourites like table tennis and badminton.”<br />

The WTA’s media activities in China aren’t<br />

just based around TV however, says Shoemaker:<br />

“One of the big stories in China is the rapid<br />

expansion of the digital space - which has been<br />

very fertile ground for us. There’s massive<br />

interest in social media among Chinese<br />

consumers which has made destinations<br />

like Sina, Sohu, Tudou and Youku extremely<br />

important. We’ve seen a huge audience spike -<br />

particularly around fans who are interested in<br />

the lifestyle of the players off-court.”<br />

All of this activity has not gone unnoticed<br />

by sponsors. There’s no question the WTA’s<br />

expansion in China was one reason Sony<br />

Ericsson renewed its partnership with the<br />

Tour - since it regards China as a crucial growth<br />

market. In its turn, Sony Ericsson has played a<br />

key part in activating the WTA’s strategy.<br />

Perhaps even more significant in terms of<br />

establishing a presence in China was the recent<br />

news that the WTA had managed to secure a<br />

sponsorship deal with sportswear company Peak.<br />

The deal is covered in more detail on pp. 48-49,<br />

but Shoemaker says it will contribute hugely to<br />

the 24/7 exposure the WTA aspires to: “It’s hard<br />

to overstate what this partnership will do for our<br />

brand both in China and across Asia-Pacific.<br />

Peak has taken a view that tennis will play a key<br />

role in its activities right across the region, which<br />

is great news for us.”<br />

While the existence of world-beating Chinese<br />

talent has been critical to the WTA’s success,<br />

so has the federation’s warm relationship with<br />

Chinese stakeholders: “It’s been said many<br />

48 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

china<br />

OPPORTUNITY<br />

“We’ve reached a<br />

point where women’s<br />

tennis in China<br />

is out-performing<br />

traditional favourites<br />

like table tennis and<br />

badminton.”<br />

Chinese star Li Na - Getty Images Sport<br />

times before by sports marketers - but doing<br />

business in China requires a real commitment<br />

to understanding the local culture and<br />

delivering mutual benefits. There was never any<br />

question of the WTA trying to impose a plan on<br />

China. Instead, the key was developing a good<br />

dialogue and relationship with the Chinese<br />

Tennis Association - for which the Golden<br />

Flowers take a lot of credit - and the Beijing<br />

municipal authorities.”<br />

Fortunately, the WTA has made some friends<br />

in high places - notably Wang Qishan, the former<br />

Mayor of Beijing who is now Vice Premier<br />

of China with responsibility for financial and<br />

economic affairs. An avid tennis fan, Wang<br />

Qishan has been highly influential in the<br />

development of the China Open - and is even<br />

known to have played the odd set with WTA stars.<br />

Clearly, such activities are useful in opening<br />

doors. But there’s a much more serious side to<br />

what the WTA is giving back to China, explains<br />

Shoemaker: “The expansion of the China Open<br />

means that Beijing’s fantastic Olympic tennis<br />

facilities are being put to good use. There’s often<br />

a problem making sure facilities are still put to<br />

use after major events, but the expansion of the<br />

China Open has created a legacy.”<br />

So does Shoemaker think the WTA is on track<br />

in terms of hitting its targets? “Before I went to<br />

China I was warned by people to be patient and<br />

have modest expectations in the<br />

short-term,” he asserts.<br />

“I can safely say we have<br />

exceeded our targets by some<br />

margin thanks to the work we have<br />

done with our partners in China.”<br />

So what would it take for the WTA to reach the<br />

next level in terms of fan support and revenues?<br />

“There are various things we’d like to do - such<br />

as expanding our Festival programme across the<br />

country and developing our relationship with<br />

fans through digital platforms. I also expect our<br />

relationship with Peak to make a difference at<br />

retail. But the thing that would transform our<br />

fortunes is if China could get a world number one<br />

- though we don’t have control over that!”<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 49


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

china<br />

National Tennis Centre<br />

- Getty Images Sport<br />

THE 2010 CHINA OPEN<br />

C<br />

M<br />

SINCE OCTOBER 2009, the China Open has<br />

been one of the crown jewels of women’s<br />

professional tennis. With a prize fund of<br />

$4.5 million it is playing a central role in<br />

growing the sport in the fast-emerging China<br />

market, says WTA president David Shoemaker.<br />

The Open’s venue is the Olympic Green<br />

Tennis Centre, a state-of-the-art complex<br />

purpose-built for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.<br />

The fact the Olympic Green Centre hosts<br />

a high-profile WTA event is important -<br />

since there is a keen desire to keep legacy<br />

venues busy. Underlining this point, Beijing<br />

Sports Bureau director Sun Kanglin recently<br />

explained how, after the Olympics, “the<br />

utilisation of all stadia and manpower has<br />

become a long-term strategy to grow Beijing<br />

as a sports centre.” To support this goal,<br />

Beijing has set aside $62.5 million to host<br />

international tournaments. The former<br />

Olympic venue is also now home to the<br />

Chinese Tennis Federation (CTA).<br />

Unsurprisingly, the new-look China Open<br />

is well-supported by sponsors, suppliers and<br />

other commercial partners. Among these are<br />

Mercedes-Benz, a premier sponsor, while<br />

Kappa, Sony Ericsson, ThinkPad, China Citic<br />

Bank and Rolex are Platinum Sponsors.<br />

Those lucky enough to get tickets to this<br />

year’s WTA event will find a 10-court venue,<br />

with features that include state-of-the-art aircooling<br />

technology for spectators.<br />

Situated just 2.7 kilometres from the<br />

Beijing National Stadium (‘The Birds Nest’),<br />

the largest court can seat 12,000 spectators<br />

and is shaped like a lotus flower. Total venue<br />

capacity is 17,400. However a sign of Beijing’s<br />

faith in the future of tennis is the news that<br />

another 10,000-seat court, with a retractable<br />

roof, is being built at the venue.<br />

Also interesting to note is that renovations<br />

have been undertaken to transform the<br />

venue into a fully-functioning commercial<br />

enterprise, with designated zones for players,<br />

sponsors and VIPs. As Sun Kanglin has<br />

acknowledged, this kind of detail can prove<br />

decisive when Beijing is faces off against<br />

other Asian cities for the right to host events.<br />

Dubai, Japan and Thailand were all on the<br />

WTA’s shortlist as potential venues for an<br />

Asian mega-event.<br />

For 2010, Beijing’s Tennis Centre will host<br />

both the WTA Premier and the ATP World<br />

Tour 500 China Open between September 25<br />

and October 10 (total prize fund $6.1 million).<br />

The reigning WTA champion is Svetlana<br />

Kuznetsova, after she defeated Agnieszka<br />

Radwanska 6-2, 6-4 in October 2009.<br />

Y<br />

CM<br />

MY<br />

CY<br />

CMY<br />

K<br />

50 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

sPonsorshiP<br />

BUCKING<br />

SPONSORSHIP<br />

TRENDS<br />

It’s not hard to see why the WTA is such an attractive sponsorship property for blue-chip<br />

international brands such as Sony Ericsson, Peak, Dubai Duty Free and Oriflame.<br />

FOR A START, there’s the<br />

WTA’s global spread. With 52<br />

tournaments a season held in 32<br />

countries (the itinerary for the<br />

2011 season), the WTA reaches a<br />

huge audience via TV, online and<br />

attendance at its events.<br />

Not only that, but because<br />

the Tour is played in multiple<br />

locations it means there are<br />

numerous opportunities to<br />

activate and engage locally with<br />

fans. From the Americas to<br />

Asia-Pacific via Europe, there’s a<br />

high-profile WTA event in almost<br />

every major city.<br />

Not to be overlooked either is<br />

the massive appeal of the players<br />

themselves - who are inspirational<br />

icons to many young people. While<br />

the Williams sisters and Maria<br />

Sharapova have been grabbing<br />

the headlines in recent years, the<br />

likes of Jelena Jankovic, Caroline<br />

Wozniacki, Samantha Stosur, Kim<br />

Clijsters, Francesca Schiavone and<br />

Li Na provide fans in numerous<br />

territories with a focal point for<br />

their enthusiasm.<br />

Factors like these explain why<br />

lead global partner Sony Ericsson<br />

has just signed up with the WTA<br />

for another two years - despite the<br />

financial pressures caused by the<br />

recession. In doing so, it means the<br />

WTA and Sony Ericsson will have<br />

been working together for eight<br />

years by the end of the contract<br />

(from 2005 to 2012).<br />

Of course, the big difference<br />

this time is that the WTA will not<br />

be branded with Sony Ericsson<br />

in its title. But this should not<br />

be regarded as a dilution of the<br />

partnership, says Aldo Liguori,<br />

Corporate Vice President and<br />

Head of Global Communications<br />

& PR at Sony Ericsson.<br />

“The new structure makes<br />

sense for both sides,” he explains.<br />

“For the WTA it is an opportunity<br />

to focus more on their own brand.<br />

For Sony Ericsson, it’s a sign the<br />

company has moved on.”<br />

So what has changed? “One<br />

thing is that we have made a lot<br />

of progress in building brand<br />

awareness - so don’t need the same<br />

kind of association,” adds Liguori.<br />

“There have also been internal<br />

changes which have seen us fall<br />

in behind Sony’s new marketing<br />

strap line - ‘make.believe’ - which is<br />

about interactivity, playfulness and<br />

innovation. As far as the WTA is<br />

concerned, that means our focus is<br />

more on how we can work with the<br />

WTA and its top players to engage<br />

with their fans.”<br />

Reaching young women<br />

Since starting work with the WTA<br />

in 2005, Sony Ericsson has gained<br />

access to properties such as the<br />

<strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup - thanks to a deal<br />

done by parent Sony.<br />

However the unique profile of<br />

the WTA continues to make sense<br />

for the Sony Ericsson brand, says<br />

Liguori: “The WTA is a great way<br />

of reaching young affluent women<br />

- whereas most sports properties<br />

have a strong male bias.<br />

“Not only that, but fans are<br />

interested in what the players<br />

do when they are away from the<br />

tennis court - in terms of fashion,<br />

food and health choices. That’s an<br />

added social dimension we are also<br />

able to tap into.”<br />

While Sony Ericsson remains<br />

the WTA’s top-tier partner, the fact<br />

that it is no longer a title sponsor<br />

is helping the WTA win over new<br />

partners - since there is less of a<br />

perception that the mobile company<br />

is overshadowing the entire<br />

property. Timing-wise, for example,<br />

it’s no accident the WTA has been<br />

able to sign-up two important<br />

new sponsors since Sony Ericsson<br />

elected to change its approach.<br />

One of these is Swedish beauty<br />

brand Oriflame, which has just<br />

signed a two-year deal with the<br />

WTA. Like Sony Ericsson, it is<br />

attracted by both the on-and-off<br />

court activities of the players,<br />

according to Magnus Brännström,<br />

CEO of Oriflame.<br />

“Women’s tennis combines the<br />

perfect balance of athleticism and<br />

glamour, and through this new<br />

partnership Oriflame wants to help<br />

inspire women around the world to<br />

look great, have fun and be the best<br />

that they can be,” Brännström says.<br />

Oriflame, which will become<br />

an official partner of the Tour from<br />

the start of 2011, has done a deal<br />

which covers Europe, Russia, the<br />

Commonwealth of Independent<br />

States (a group of former Soviet<br />

Republics), the Middle East and<br />

Africa. This is typical of the WTA’s<br />

approach, which is generally<br />

awards of regional partnership<br />

rights (with the exception of Sony<br />

Ericsson’s global deal).<br />

The other big new partnership,<br />

for example, is an Asia-Pacific<br />

sponsorship deal with Chinese<br />

sports shoe and apparel firm Peak.<br />

This seven-figure annual deal,<br />

which lasts for five years, will see<br />

Peak receive a rich package of<br />

entitlements.<br />

Aside from being the official<br />

shoe and apparel partner at a series<br />

of WTA events in Asia-Pacific, it<br />

will become a partner of the Tour’s<br />

mainland China Tennis Festivals.<br />

In addition, it has secured<br />

licensing and merchandising rights<br />

to develop a co-branded WTA-Peak<br />

line of apparel.<br />

Learning from Nike<br />

From Peak’s perspective, the deal<br />

is an opportunity to hold off the<br />

mounting challenge of foreign<br />

sportswear brands, at a time when<br />

the Chinese middle-class is earning<br />

enough money to start pursuing<br />

more leisure activities.<br />

“Right now we’re learning from<br />

Nike,” says Peak’s entrepreneurial<br />

young chief executive Jim Xu. “But<br />

we’re different because we have<br />

products that are better suited to<br />

the Chinese market…We can give<br />

consumers another choice.”<br />

At the same time, the deal is<br />

also of massive importance to the<br />

WTA - which wants to increase its<br />

exposure in the world’s fastestgrowing<br />

economy (see story pp.<br />

44-45) - so there’s no question that<br />

the deal with Peak is a key element<br />

of the WTA’s strategy.<br />

The WTA’s regional<br />

sponsorship structure also<br />

encompasses a deal with airport<br />

retailer Dubai Duty Free, another<br />

partner with a focus on the fastgrowing<br />

Asia-Pacific region.<br />

52 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

sPonsorshiP<br />

When the initial contract was<br />

signed in 2004, a few eyebrows<br />

were raised. But Dubai Duty Free<br />

was quick to identify the way<br />

in which WTA players straddle<br />

the worlds of sport, lifestyle<br />

and digital media (the digital<br />

component of the deal is explained<br />

more fully on pp. 50-51).<br />

An interesting example of how<br />

the two partners have worked<br />

together is ‘The Best of the Sony<br />

Ericsson WTA 2010 Zagat Guide’<br />

- a must-have handbook detailing<br />

the best shopping and dining in<br />

24 of the world’s top tournament<br />

cities.<br />

In the guide, popular welltravelled<br />

athletes such as Serena<br />

Williams, Maria Sharapova,<br />

Venus Williams, Dinara Safina,<br />

and Caroline Wozniacki offer<br />

suggestions ranging from five-star<br />

“Fans are<br />

interested in<br />

what the players<br />

do when they are<br />

away from the<br />

tennis court...<br />

That’s an added<br />

social dimension<br />

we are able to<br />

tap into.”<br />

Russia’s Maria Kirilenko - Getty Images Sport<br />

restaurants in glamorous capitals<br />

to boutique shops in such Tour<br />

destinations as Miami, Dubai and<br />

Doha. This guide is available both<br />

in hard copy and digitally on<br />

www.sonyericssonwtatour.com.<br />

“Dubai Duty Free is known for<br />

luxury and innovation,” says Dubai<br />

Duty Free managing director Colm<br />

McLoughlin says. “By partnering<br />

with the Tour, we’ve been able to<br />

continuously offer its stars and<br />

tennis fans around the globe new<br />

experiences.”<br />

Dubai Duty Free’s satisfaction<br />

with the partnership was<br />

underlined in 2008 when it<br />

extended the sponsorship to<br />

2011 in a multi-million dollar<br />

agreement. This deal, which<br />

positioned Dubai Duty Free as<br />

the WTA’s premier sponsor in<br />

Asia-Pacific and the Middle East,<br />

is another one with elements of<br />

mutuality which go beyond<br />

a simple financial transaction.<br />

Aside from any revenues<br />

generated, there’s a halo effect<br />

that benefits the Tour and its<br />

players, explains Stacey Allaster,<br />

chairman and CEO of the Sony<br />

Ericsson WTA.<br />

“Dubai is one of the world’s<br />

most exciting destinations, and by<br />

partnering with Zagat and Dubai<br />

Duty Free to create this Guide, we<br />

are able to offer the stars of the Tour<br />

a unique opportunity to get closer to<br />

their fans by sharing their personal<br />

experiences,” she says.<br />

“It is because of Dubai Duty<br />

Free’s belief and commitment to<br />

women’s tennis that we can produce<br />

such exciting products.”<br />

Opportunities in Istanbul<br />

Another interesting upshot of<br />

the new partnership between the<br />

WTA and Sony Ericsson is that it<br />

frees up the rights to the Tour’s<br />

prestigious end-of-season WTA<br />

Championships - which until now<br />

has been wrapped up as part of the<br />

title sponsorship deal.<br />

No decision has been made<br />

on a partner yet, but WTA<br />

marketing chief Andrew Walker<br />

believes the event represents<br />

another valuable way for leading<br />

brands to buy into the WTA.<br />

“From 2011 to 2013 the end of<br />

season event is in Istanbul, which<br />

is an exciting development both<br />

for the WTA and for international<br />

brands seeking to establish a<br />

foothold in this fast-emerging<br />

market,” he says.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 53


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

meDia<br />

EMBRACING<br />

THE DIGITAL<br />

OPPORTUNITY<br />

Sports rights holders have taken a lot of wrong turns and gone down many dead ends in pursuit<br />

of a workable digital strategy. But the WTA’s approach to new media demonstrates a very effective<br />

grasp of how to engage with audiences via emerging platforms.<br />

THIS IS EVIDENT in a number of ways.<br />

Firstly, there is the sophisticated editorial<br />

offering available at the WTA’s website www.<br />

sonyericssonwtatour.com. Next, there is the<br />

Tour’s progressive approach to social media.<br />

And finally there is a realisation that brands<br />

have a key part to play in helping harness the<br />

power of digital media.<br />

Andrew Walker, the WTA’s senior VP in<br />

marketing and communications, says there<br />

are both promotional and revenue-generating<br />

opportunities in the digital space. Looking first<br />

at the promotional side of the WTA’s activities,<br />

he says: “We’ve shifted our marketing spend<br />

almost entirely into the digital space over the<br />

last two years. It’s gone from something like<br />

85 per cent investment in traditional media to<br />

around 85 per cent in digital media.”<br />

He cites a couple of key reasons for this:<br />

“I think digital platforms are better suited to<br />

our global structure than broadcast media -<br />

because it is easier for us to keep up a day-today<br />

relationship with fans. At the same time,<br />

we’ve noted that we reach a much younger<br />

demographic via digital. Around 75 per cent of<br />

our fans online are aged 13 to 24 whereas TV<br />

delivers us an older audience. There’s a seismic<br />

shift in media consumption patterns that’s very<br />

attractive to our brand partners.”<br />

A large part of the WTA’s energy goes into<br />

making sure they have a presence on landmark<br />

sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube:<br />

“Facebook has been a very powerful medium for<br />

the WTA’s players,” says Walker. “All told, the top<br />

players have in excess of five million Facebook<br />

fans who are equally interested in their off-court<br />

lifestyle as their play on the court.”<br />

This kind of fanbase has positive<br />

implications for the WTA’s commercial strategy,<br />

adds Walker: “Audience engagement and<br />

accurate targeting is attractive to sponsors -<br />

and can be used as part of our ticketing and<br />

licensing strategy.<br />

“The kind of activity we engage in on<br />

Facebook is also valuable for our TV rights<br />

holders, because it means we can drive<br />

audiences to their services from the internet.”<br />

As for YouTube, “we have a partnership<br />

based around an ad revenue model,” Walker<br />

says. “They sell the advertising space around our<br />

content and we collect a share of it.”<br />

SuperFans meet online<br />

One of the WTA’s most interesting social<br />

networking innovations has been the creation of<br />

SuperFans, a one-stop hub showcasing the top<br />

stars (www.WTASuperFans.com). In a nutshell,<br />

SuperFans is designed to become the key<br />

destination for women’s tennis fans to get close<br />

to their favourite players. The initiative, which<br />

is the first time a major sports franchise has<br />

endorsed, promoted and aggregated the social<br />

media channels of its athletes, brings together<br />

all of the conversations and content produced<br />

by its players into one place - which is a pretty<br />

heavyweight proposition when you look at the<br />

number of online fans collected by Venus and<br />

Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova.<br />

According to Walker, the SuperFans<br />

platform is then made available through Twitter<br />

and Facebook, while videos and images attached<br />

by the players are visible via YouTube and<br />

(photo-sharing platform) Flickr. Players will also<br />

have the opportunity to interact with each other<br />

and tag one other in photos while promotion of<br />

the initiative will be supported through a series<br />

of online viral videos.<br />

Of course, the industry trend towards digital<br />

content partnerships hasn’t negated the need<br />

for a strong WTA-branded web presence which<br />

can act as an anchor for the WTA’s advanced<br />

media strategy. Working in partnership with<br />

digital solutions provider Perform Group, the<br />

WTA has constructed a rich media website<br />

which offers fans a mix of news, statistics,<br />

event data, video and retail. In video, there’s<br />

a combination of live pay options and free<br />

archive and highlights. There’s also an off-court<br />

section which reinforces the link between<br />

player lifestyle and fan aspirations.<br />

The website is run as a complementary<br />

medium, supporting rather than competing with<br />

the WTA’s TV rights partners, says Walker: “The<br />

real purpose of a service like this is two-fold.<br />

“Firstly to provide fans with video content<br />

they can’t get elsewhere - for example WTA fans<br />

in countries where there isn’t broadcast coverage<br />

of a live event. Secondly, to provide a platform<br />

which allows the most enthusiastic fans to<br />

immerse themselves in the life of the Tour.”<br />

With the latter point in mind, the WTA<br />

website is constantly upgraded to make sure<br />

it meets fan expectations. Earlier this year,<br />

for example, the WTA unveiled a new mobile<br />

website and a Spanish-language version of<br />

its main site, adding to existing versions in<br />

English and Chinese. For WTA chairman<br />

and CEO Stacey Allaster, both were obvious<br />

enhancements which mean “fans can stay<br />

connected to the sport and its stars anytime,<br />

anywhere in multiple languages.<br />

“With billions of mobile users worldwide,<br />

it is a natural extension for the WTA to create<br />

a deeper level of engagement and interaction<br />

with our fans and literally place the sport in the<br />

palms of their hands.”<br />

In terms of content, the Spanish-language<br />

version of the site will feature most of<br />

the elements available on the English version -<br />

such as weekly rankings updates, player<br />

profiles and statistics, latest news, live match<br />

scores, player blogs and video highlights. In<br />

many ways, it is a no-brainer when you consider<br />

the size of the global Spanish-speaking market<br />

(330 million) and the fact the Tour has events in<br />

destinations such as Colombia and Mexico. When<br />

you also factor in the WTA’s close links with<br />

Hispanic HQ Florida, then the Spanish version is<br />

a timely development which will provide a richer<br />

and more personalised experience for the current<br />

fanbase while offering new fans engagement and<br />

interaction in their native language.<br />

54 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SONY ERICSSON WTA TOUR<br />

meDia<br />

Later this year, the WTA is planning to launch<br />

a Russian-language version of its website as<br />

well. Given the strength of its Russian talent<br />

pool (currently nine players in the top 40) and<br />

the global appeal of Maria Sharapova, such a<br />

decision has obvious logic to it.<br />

Given the close allegiance between the<br />

WTA and Sony Ericsson, the addition of a<br />

mobile site also makes a lot of strategic sense.<br />

Echoing the website, the new site will provide<br />

fans with content options such as live scores,<br />

weekly rankings, player profiles, rolling news,<br />

video highlights, player features and wallpapers<br />

and information on the Race to the WTA<br />

Championships - Doha 2010. Other features in<br />

the pipeline include recorded messages from<br />

players, games, and animations of WTA stars.<br />

Overarching maketing programme<br />

As mentioned at the outset, the WTA’s<br />

emphasis on linking digital content with brand<br />

communications and objectives is one of its<br />

strengths. So it’s no surprise to note that the<br />

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 mobile phone is being<br />

used by players to create photo, video and text<br />

content for SuperFans.<br />

This in turn fits into the overarching<br />

consumer marketing programme developed by<br />

Sony and Sony Ericsson, says Lennard Hoornik,<br />

Corporate Vice President and Global Head of<br />

Marketing at Sony Ericsson: “For millions of<br />

tennis fans around the world, SuperFans is a<br />

service that delivers on our brand promise of<br />

make.believe, which aims to build a fun, playful<br />

and inclusive interaction with consumers.<br />

SuperFans will bring audiences closer to tennis,<br />

giving them a greater access to unique fan<br />

experiences.”<br />

In a similar vein, Dubai Duty Free sponsors<br />

the WTA’s video-on-demand service as part of the<br />

renewed partnership in 2008. It puts the airport<br />

retailer at the heart of a service which features<br />

on-court match highlights, off-court player<br />

personality features and a host of new content<br />

designed to enhance behind-the-scenes access<br />

to players. In addition, benefits to Dubai Duty<br />

Free included a link with the WTA’s expanded<br />

television news service which brings the brand<br />

to fans throughout the world through highlights,<br />

interviews and off-court coverage.<br />

The key to all of the above activities is<br />

relevance, says the WTA’s Walker: “You need<br />

valuable and relevant content which can’t be<br />

sourced anywhere else,” he stresses.<br />

“If you’re not adding value then you’re just<br />

overloading people. But if you deliver unique<br />

and compelling content then there is real<br />

revenue-generating potential for the WTA<br />

and its players.”<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 55


Ultimate Mobile Apps for Sport 2010<br />

Exploiting New Mobile Media Opportunities<br />

Philip Savage<br />

This fast moving media opportunity<br />

offers huge potential to connect with<br />

new audiences for sport.<br />

The Ultimate Mobile Apps for Sport<br />

review and report is the latest technology<br />

resource from SportBusiness:<br />

l Exploit new commercial models for<br />

paid-for and sponsored mobile content<br />

l Learn from the best with our ranking<br />

of top sports apps for events, teams,<br />

federations and portals<br />

l Understand how new generations are<br />

connecting and communicating via<br />

mobile technology<br />

l Explore opportunities for mobile video<br />

on iPhone and iPad<br />

l Discover how your sport can use this<br />

new medium to best advantage<br />

Unless you put your sport literally into the<br />

hands of users you risk being overtaken<br />

by those that do. Use this valuable<br />

resource to avoid being left behind.<br />

For further details and an executive summary call the SportBusiness<br />

team on +44 207 954 3514 or email infoteam@sportbusiness.com


SPORTS APPS<br />

THE ULTIMATE SPORTS<br />

APPS AWARDS 2010<br />

The explosion of apps - small pieces of software optimised for mobile devices<br />

- has continued across all content types in 2010. Downloads reached the three<br />

billion mark at the turn of the year while the launch of the iPad tablet computer<br />

instantly set pulses racing. Phil Savage, author of the SportBusiness 2009 Mobile<br />

Apps for Sport report, analyses 2010’s best sports apps and delivers his final<br />

verdict with the first edition of the SportBusiness Ultimate Sports Apps Awards.<br />

WHEN COMMENTING on such a fast-moving<br />

area as mobile technology, stopping to draw a<br />

line in the sand can be a hazardous business.<br />

When the 2009 Mobile Apps for Sport<br />

report went to press in September last year,<br />

consumer electronics manufacturer Apple was<br />

on track to hit one billion downloads, tennis<br />

was leading the field in event applications and<br />

Arsenal had just released the first Premier<br />

League club app.<br />

Barely nine months later and the landscape,<br />

although not unrecognisable, is quite markedly<br />

different. In many cases the first movers of<br />

2009 are still leading the pack but what has kept<br />

them ahead is continued innovation.<br />

A great deal more events and sports<br />

properties have managed to clamber aboard this<br />

speeding wagon, but in too many cases they<br />

have simply presented something reminiscent<br />

of those trailblazers.<br />

They have often been saved, however,<br />

by being able to provide genuinely new and<br />

compelling content and today no self-respecting<br />

event is complete without an app. As predicted<br />

in last year’s report, audiences in both the<br />

stadium or on the move now have a rich menu<br />

of ways to interact via this mobile technology.<br />

Our 2009 review highlighted business<br />

models from other sectors which have yet<br />

to be explored in sport, suggesting there are<br />

commercial possibilities still to be exploited even<br />

for the most advanced of sports apps.<br />

Final Judging<br />

In determining the SportBusiness Ultimate<br />

Sports Apps Awards 2010 many hundreds<br />

of downloads were reviewed in four major<br />

categories: sport/league/tour; event; club/team/<br />

athlete; and multi-sports portal.<br />

The categories were chosen to cover the<br />

different types of application whilst allowing for<br />

sensible comparison between them. Points were<br />

awarded up to a maximum of five according to<br />

the following eight criteria:<br />

(1) Content: SportBusiness’ ranking of the<br />

quality and comprehensive nature of the<br />

editorial, photo, data and other content.<br />

(2) Video: Points awarded for value, immediacy<br />

and uniqueness as well as simply providing video.<br />

(3) Design: A recognition of attractive, clear<br />

and functional design as well as innovative<br />

navigation or layout of features.<br />

(4) Audio: Many apps have recognised the<br />

weaknesses of video at the present stage of<br />

technological and infrastructure development.<br />

Radio or other audio can be a useful and<br />

attractive add-on feature.<br />

(5) Extras: Many apps demonstrate remarkable<br />

creativity and provide unique value-added<br />

services which are recognised separately from<br />

other features.<br />

(6) Download: Corresponding to the actual<br />

cost users pay to download the app which<br />

is typically up to £5 or equivalent in local<br />

currency. The one exception to this is in<br />

the sport/league/tour category where some<br />

products command a premium price of up to<br />

£20. Here points have been awarded on a scale<br />

where £20 would score a maximum 5 and a<br />

£9 app would score 2.25.<br />

(7) Sponsors: Business models often involve<br />

exposure for sponsors who may be the technical<br />

or financial supporters of the product.<br />

(8) Monetisation: Where a product is not<br />

supported by a sponsor or provided for a<br />

download fee, there should be some other<br />

commercial rationale underpinning the<br />

provision of information. For some apps this is a<br />

subscription model, some accept advertising and<br />

others cross promote other products.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 57


SPORTS APPS<br />

SPORT/LEAGUE/TOUR AWARD:<br />

F1 TIMING<br />

IT WAS A PHOTO FINISH for the top two<br />

places for this category although more data on<br />

downloads could have indicated a clear winner.<br />

However, leaving aside which app has made<br />

most money, both the top-ranked apps - the F1<br />

Timing and Major League Baseball’s At Bat -<br />

offer innovations of a different kind, making<br />

each worthy of a winning score.<br />

Ultimately the exceptionally high value of the<br />

Soft Pauer-developed F1 Timing App (£19.99),<br />

combined with its technical excellence, make it<br />

both the winner of this category and, on a the<br />

basis of total points scored, overall winner in<br />

the 2010 apps ranking.<br />

For the Formula 1 racing aficionado this<br />

download offers the ultimate value-added<br />

experience to both practice and race days. On<br />

television or at the racetrack in particular there<br />

can be frustratingly little information as to<br />

timings and standings.<br />

The F1 Timing app offers the chance to<br />

follow the cars around the twists and turns<br />

of the track in real time. There is wealth of<br />

background data, statistics and facts, archive<br />

video and an audio commentary option.<br />

Design is clear and functional giving users<br />

the chance to select and follow their favourite<br />

1. F1 Timing<br />

2. MLB At Bat<br />

3. Euroleague Basketball<br />

3. Aussie Rules football<br />

5. UEFA<br />

6. NBA Game Time<br />

7. FEI<br />

8. F1 app<br />

9. World Rally Championship<br />

10. NHL<br />

team. New for the 2010 version is a unique<br />

playback feature where the action can be<br />

delayed and replayed.<br />

A close second place in the category went<br />

to MLB’s At Bat app (MLB Advanced Media,<br />

£8.99) which has also received a makeover for<br />

2010. When it launched last year, MLBAM set<br />

a new standard in mobile service by offering<br />

video to subscribers for the first time. Not<br />

content to stand still in this fast moving field<br />

- and perhaps reflecting the limitations of<br />

mobile video that remain - the 2010 version<br />

sports a radio option which survives the<br />

vagaries of cellular networks that are creaking<br />

with demands for data.<br />

Also new for this year is a considerably<br />

lower price point although users are asked<br />

to pay a premium for the iPad version. What<br />

does remain in 2010 however is MLB’s<br />

blacking out of coverage in the city of teams<br />

playing home fixtures, despite there being<br />

little evidence of cannibalisation.<br />

There is no football in the top three<br />

although UEFA does make an appearance at<br />

number five overall. Golf, tennis, cricket, rugby<br />

(union or league), athletics and American<br />

football are also conspicuous by their absence<br />

from the top spots, however these major sports<br />

leave the way open to two sports in joint third<br />

place: Euroleague Basketball (Genera Mobile,<br />

£1.19) and Aussie Rules Football (AFL, £2.99).<br />

Euroleague is the warmer and friendlier of<br />

the two, delivering all the usual features plus<br />

an unusual ‘Devotion’ section with blogs,<br />

interviews and podcasts.<br />

58 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SPORTS APPS<br />

EVENTS AWARD:<br />

WIMBLEDON 2010<br />

ALTHOUGH WIMBLEDON 2010 is the winner<br />

of this year’s top event app award, just ahead<br />

of Australia Open Tennis 2010, the real winner<br />

across this category is IBM, which produced<br />

both tennis apps as well as the golf apps in<br />

third and fourth spots.<br />

Whilst not the most technically innovative<br />

this year, these products offer a great service<br />

for the fan in the stands and in the office.<br />

When they first appeared in 2009, the<br />

navigation was ground-breaking and sponsors<br />

IBM set a standard that has been followed by<br />

many other apps in the sports space.<br />

In 2010 the design still looks fresh,<br />

particularly the Australian Open Tennis<br />

interface, but the Wimbledon app pipped the<br />

others by offering a slightly better range of<br />

services including ticketing and debenture<br />

information and travel updates.<br />

The app, which was free to Apple iPhone<br />

users and those tennis fans with phones<br />

running Google’s Android operating system,<br />

combined live video streams from showcourt<br />

matches, ‘Murray Mount’ (a spectator site<br />

on the Wimbledon grounds also known as<br />

‘Henman Hill’) and even taxi queues.<br />

The software was also able to determine<br />

1. Wimbledon 2010<br />

2. Australia Open Tennis 2010<br />

3. US Masters Golf<br />

4. US Open Golf<br />

5. Giro d'Italia 2010<br />

6. Vancouver 2010<br />

7. NBC Olympics<br />

8. Volvo Ocean Race<br />

9. Commonwealth Games 2010<br />

10. Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games<br />

a user’s location and supply geo-specific<br />

information on everything from the length<br />

of queues for strawberries and cream, to the<br />

location of the nearest cash machine.<br />

This year is an ideal time to be reviewing<br />

apps in the event space as it includes some<br />

of the giants of major sports events, namely<br />

the Winter Olympic Games and the <strong>FIFA</strong><br />

World Cup - and it is important to explain why<br />

neither the Vancouver nor South Africa event<br />

hit the top spots.<br />

The <strong>FIFA</strong> event is easiest to explain: there<br />

was no official app other than an Electronic<br />

Arts World Cup game, leaving the market wide<br />

open for literally dozens of products. Perhaps<br />

the most downloaded was ESPN’s Soccernet<br />

2010 (ESPN, free) but this reflects the unique<br />

size of the US market and the company’s reach<br />

elsewhere. In the UK, the Telegraph World Cup<br />

app was popular and the England App provided<br />

some unique behind the scenes video from FA<br />

TV, but both were created with the domestic<br />

market in mind.<br />

In contrast, Vancouver 2010 dominated the<br />

app downloads for the event but made it to just<br />

sixth position in the rankings. It had a bright<br />

intuitive design and, as we might expect,<br />

offered good exposure for its sponsors, but<br />

on the downside the content was surprisingly<br />

limited despite the event comprising dozens<br />

of individual championships and thousands<br />

of competitors. Other apps have showed what<br />

the media can do in providing the chance to<br />

drill down to a very granular level and this one,<br />

whilst of a high quality, simply did not.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 59


SPORTS APPS<br />

CLUB/TEAM/ATHLETE AWARD:<br />

MERCEDES MCLAREN F1<br />

TOP OF THE LEAGUE TABLE in this category<br />

is the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes F1 team<br />

app. It packs a huge amount into a tiny space<br />

and for a free app offers great value for iPhone<br />

users and the team sponsors alike.<br />

Navigation is clear and the information<br />

comprehensive with some beautifully produced<br />

video interviews with drivers Jenson Button<br />

and Lewis Hamilton. There is some useful<br />

background on tracks and standings and the<br />

obligatory news feed, but the app really comes<br />

alive on race days when users benefit from a<br />

unique real-time feed of the in-car telemetry.<br />

Nothing like this has so far appeared<br />

elsewhere and the feature is a significant<br />

enhancement for racing aficionados who<br />

can see RPM, gear selection, speed and<br />

breaking force. A couple of tiny niggles:<br />

accessing video takes the user out of the<br />

app and multi-tasking on the iPhone can be<br />

irritating. Finally, fans could have been given<br />

more information about the car.<br />

It should be noted that the Vodafone<br />

McLaren Mercedes F1 team also launched a<br />

bespoke app for individuals using hospitality<br />

facilities at this year’s British Grand Prix at<br />

Silverstone. On arrival at the racetrack, those<br />

1. Vodafone Mercedes McLaren F1<br />

2. Chelsea FC<br />

3. Istanbul 05: LFC Glory<br />

4. Real Madrid<br />

5. England<br />

6. FC Barcelona<br />

7. AC Milan<br />

8. Tottenham Hotspur<br />

9. Arsenal FC<br />

10. Liverpool FC<br />

guests with the app, designed for the Android<br />

platform, were able to download exclusive<br />

team content and access a guide featuring a<br />

number of bars and on-site attractions.<br />

Despite a plethora of club and team apps<br />

there are precious few that stand out from the<br />

crowd. By no means do the majority of clubs<br />

or teams have an official presence in the App<br />

Store and the ones that do bear a striking<br />

similarity to each other. The winners, however,<br />

are worthy of the prize, each displaying<br />

an originality and flair that lives up to the<br />

reputation of the teams they represent.<br />

This category’s second placed app is<br />

Chelsea FC’s download (CFC, £1.79), which<br />

stands head and shoulders above the rest in<br />

the genre. Its landscape orientation and glossy<br />

design are immediately striking and much<br />

more reminiscent of its Flash-rich website.<br />

The app scores well across the range and<br />

has some nice added extras including chants,<br />

ticketing information and travel assistance<br />

to away fixtures included in the price of the<br />

download. On match days there is a live text<br />

commentary and as we might expect with this<br />

most commercial of clubs, there is opportunity<br />

to purchase extras and merchandise.<br />

Taking an honourable third place is another<br />

football app, although one that is unique and<br />

shows the way for others to follow. Istanbul<br />

05: LFC Glory (Liverpool FC, £2.99) captures<br />

the memory of one of the team’s greatest<br />

ever moments when Liverpool came back<br />

from 3-0 down to AC Milan to steal their fifth<br />

Champions League title on penalties in 2005.<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

CM<br />

MY<br />

CY<br />

CMY<br />

K<br />

60 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


Consumer Insights<br />

Sponsor Valuations<br />

Strategy & Evaluation<br />

Econometrics<br />

Opinion Polling<br />

Feasibility Studies<br />

Consultancy<br />

Media Analysis<br />

Benchmark & Audit<br />

SPORTS APPS<br />

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info@smg-insight.com<br />

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SPORTS APPS<br />

PORTAL/MULTI-SPORT AWARD:<br />

ESPN SCORECENTER<br />

MULTI-SPORT PRODUCTS tend,<br />

unsurprisingly, to focus on the markets for<br />

which the parent company’s media provides<br />

content. This can make them hard to compare:<br />

one market’s perfect news source is another’s<br />

tedious irrelevance. However, our scoring<br />

system allows us to award a ranking.<br />

Top in this category is an app which is<br />

a long way from providing the best service<br />

or experience but does give us the chance<br />

to acknowledge the absolute best in the<br />

exploitation of mobile sports content.<br />

ESPN launched its ScoreCenter app in June<br />

2009 and proceeded to attract over five million<br />

downloads in the following months pushing it<br />

comfortably ahead of nearest rival, Sportacular.<br />

Users can personalise the product with their<br />

teams and get push notifications, results and<br />

data from a wide range of sports.<br />

What sets ESPN apart is the follow-up<br />

approach they employed to turn this enormous<br />

subscriber base into a powerful revenue stream<br />

for the company, one which has contributed<br />

to a 78 per cent growth across the channel.<br />

Not content with one successful app, ESPN<br />

followed up with several premium products<br />

(ESPN Radio is particularly noteworthy) which<br />

1. ESPN Scorecenter<br />

2. Sky Mobile TV Sport and News<br />

3. ESPN Radio<br />

4. NBC Sports Mobile<br />

4. Eurosport TV<br />

6. ITV<br />

7. Gazetto dello Sport<br />

8. Racing Post<br />

9. Le Monde<br />

10. BBC Sport<br />

effectively monetised this lucrative database.<br />

According to Nielsen Mobile, ESPN’s<br />

mobile web traffic now averages 8.93 million<br />

unique visitors a month, up 35 per cent<br />

year-on-year. Visits to ESPNSoccernet Mobile<br />

grew 379 per cent over 2008, and visits to<br />

ESPNCricinfo Mobile increased 113 per cent.<br />

ESPN Mobile TV delivered almost 850 live<br />

events in 2009, and total viewership minutes<br />

increased 186 per cent over 2008 totals.<br />

Not all ESPN’s apps are centred<br />

around sport but each is focused on a<br />

key demographic represented among its<br />

ScoreCenter downloaders. There are a number<br />

of fantasy games based on football and<br />

basketball complete with draft versions, but<br />

there is also a money competition, Streak for<br />

The Cash, and a Spelling Bee app. Each uses<br />

powerful, cross-selling links to migrate users<br />

from one app to another and the collection of<br />

personal information along the way enables<br />

the company to target users cleverly.<br />

In an environment where there is a morass<br />

of free content and many question the value,<br />

ESPN ScoreCenter has shown how the<br />

provision of sports content can drive its brand,<br />

enhance knowledge of its customers and<br />

generate real and sizeable profits.<br />

In second place is Sky’s popular Mobile TV<br />

Sport and News product (Sky, £6 per month/<br />

£35 per month on the iPad). With clear sound<br />

and video, subscribers get unlimited access<br />

to four Sky Sports channels plus Sky Sports<br />

News and Sky News making it tremendous<br />

value given Sky’s extensive rights portfolio.<br />

62 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


SPORTS APPS<br />

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ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

WIMBLEDON<br />

THE HOME OF TENNIS<br />

For two weeks each year the sleepy London suburb of Wimbledon becomes the epicentre of world<br />

tennis. Adrian Hill looks behind the scenes in the planning process and tells the story of Wimbledon in<br />

the words of the organisers, contractors and suppliers responsible for tennis’ truly iconic event.<br />

WIMBLEDON IS MORE than just<br />

the leading tennis tournament in<br />

the world, it’s a British institution.<br />

When Rafael Nadal claimed<br />

his second men’s singles title<br />

this July it concluded the 124th<br />

Championships...and almost<br />

immediately the planning for the<br />

125th edition was underway.<br />

The need to cater for hundreds<br />

of thousands of spectators, deliver<br />

a massive hospitality operation,<br />

implement significant temporary<br />

facilities and overlay, carry out<br />

intense but unobtrusive security,<br />

and facilitate thousands of media<br />

personnel from around the world<br />

make organising and delivering<br />

this event a major management<br />

challenge for the organisers.<br />

“We do not rest on any laurels,<br />

we want to stay at the top of<br />

the pyramid,” Ian Ritchie, chief<br />

executive of the All England Club,<br />

tells SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>.<br />

“I’ve done five Championships<br />

now and you need to make every<br />

year different, and to innovate. We<br />

try to improve the experience for<br />

everyone who comes here - both<br />

players and public.”<br />

Ritchie has overseen the<br />

landmark redevelopment of the<br />

Centre Court with the installation<br />

of a roof during his tenure of one<br />

of the most prestigious roles in<br />

British sport.<br />

“People said to me when I got<br />

the job: ‘That’s great - two weeks<br />

preparation and two weeks for<br />

the Championships.’ But it’s a<br />

year-round job...Even without<br />

structural improvements we have<br />

185 countries taking television<br />

coverage which means that there<br />

are always contracts up for renewal<br />

and negotiation.<br />

“September and October starts<br />

a whole series of detailed review<br />

meetings of what happened the<br />

previous year. A chunk of research<br />

comes in, committee members<br />

state their views and we review<br />

correspondence from the public.<br />

If I, or any of my management<br />

colleagues, get a letter and there<br />

are improvement ideas in there we<br />

take them away and look at them.<br />

“When we get towards<br />

Christmas we start to work on<br />

improvements; that last quarter<br />

of the year is also about strategic<br />

improvements, January and<br />

February sees the practical<br />

implementation.”<br />

Ritchie is coy about revealing<br />

how much this huge operation<br />

costs but the level of commitment<br />

required from his organisation,<br />

and the group of suppliers and<br />

contractors involved, indicates a<br />

massive financial outlay. After all,<br />

each year in excess of £25 million<br />

is handed over to British tennis<br />

from the ‘surplus’ generated by<br />

the Championships.<br />

The club employs 150 fulltime<br />

staff and has nearly 10,000<br />

accredited to work during the<br />

Championships as it plans to<br />

deal with 500,000 spectators,<br />

3,500 members of the media, 560<br />

players and over 300 court officials.<br />

The multitude of personnel<br />

required range from carpenters<br />

to cleaners, and from honorary<br />

stewards to physiotherapists.<br />

“People come back year after<br />

64 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


what we want them to do. Failure<br />

to deliver is not accepted. They see<br />

us as a ‘trophy’ contract and I hope,<br />

and believe, this means they give us<br />

special attention.<br />

“They are under no illusions. It’s<br />

a two-week event attracting half-amillion<br />

people here. Everything has<br />

to be of the right quality and price,<br />

and everyone needs to feel that<br />

they have been served well with an<br />

attention to detail.”<br />

‘Henman Hill’ (left) and No. 1 Court - Getty Images Sport<br />

year. I met someone who said that<br />

he had been coming here to work<br />

for 48 years,” adds Ritchie. “A large<br />

number of volunteers take holidays<br />

to work here - they just love it.”<br />

For all the valuable assistance<br />

provided by those who give their<br />

time for free, Wimbledon would<br />

not work without the specialists<br />

who are hired to create the ‘nuts<br />

and bolts’ of the event.<br />

“We have over a dozen<br />

suppliers. Our view is that<br />

longevity is not a bad thing but<br />

that they also move with the times.<br />

We are a commercially astute<br />

organisation and we have to keep<br />

them all up to the mark,” says<br />

Ritchie. “We look more at quality<br />

and values than cost - we will not<br />

go for the cheapest option.<br />

“The contractor must understand<br />

Henman Hill<br />

For the past 10 years Creative<br />

Technology has been responsible<br />

for the production of video content<br />

shown on big screens dotted<br />

around the Wimbledon complex.<br />

They do something similar at all the<br />

LTA and ATP tournaments held in<br />

the UK and the 45 PGA European<br />

Tour golf tournaments each year.<br />

Having tested the set-up in<br />

the spring, the team move in 10<br />

days before the Championships<br />

start to lay two-to-three kilometres<br />

of cables from a central area to<br />

each screen, situated on the show<br />

courts and at three other locations<br />

around the grounds. During the<br />

Championships 12 people are<br />

involved - eight arriving in the<br />

morning, with the remainder<br />

starting at lunchtime each day.<br />

Creative’s handy work has<br />

become a familiar sight during the<br />

fortnight, in particular in recent<br />

years the now iconic viewing area<br />

at ‘Henman Hill’ (or ‘Murray<br />

Mount’ as it has now been dubbed).<br />

“For Henman Hill we use a<br />

Panasonic 12mm LED, which is<br />

a new system coming on stream<br />

in preparation for London 2012.<br />

It’s about 8.5 metres long and<br />

5.5 metres high,” says managing<br />

director Dave Crump.<br />

“We base ourselves in the<br />

broadcast centre, recording up to 12<br />

matches at any one time and put up<br />

graphics saying everything from the<br />

score to advice on using sunscreen.<br />

Essentially our operation does not<br />

look any different from any of the<br />

overseas broadcasters as effectively<br />

we are providing a television<br />

programme for Henman Hill for up<br />

to 15 hours per day.”<br />

The evening after the men’s final,<br />

weather permitting Creative moves<br />

its equipment over 400 miles to the


ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

WIMBLEDON<br />

Centre Court’s roof, opened in 2009 - Getty Images Sport<br />

Loch Lomond golf tournament in<br />

Scotland. “Any rain delay can cause<br />

a problem but we work around<br />

that,” adds Crump. “We could fly<br />

up to Scotland if required and our<br />

engineers can get the equipment<br />

up and running in two hours if<br />

necessary. But if you give them two<br />

weeks, they will take two weeks.”<br />

A major challenge for both the<br />

All England Club and Creative<br />

occurred in 2006 when the<br />

scoreboards on the Centre and<br />

No.1 Courts had to be changed<br />

to be able to deal with Hawkeye<br />

technology and the now famous<br />

video review system for line calls.<br />

“I thought I was going to get<br />

sackload of letters about it but the<br />

general response to Hawkeye was<br />

unbelievably positive, and when we<br />

did the scoreboard changes they<br />

looked good and the quality was<br />

high, so no-one bothered about it,”<br />

says Ritchie.<br />

Planning never stops<br />

Within the range of suppliers there<br />

are also key relationships. Creative<br />

could not show the range of<br />

information on its screens without<br />

the input of IBM, a multi-national<br />

giant that has developed and<br />

managed IT systems and provided<br />

statistics for the All England Club<br />

and its showpiece since 1990.<br />

“IBM supports a number of<br />

properties and among those are<br />

all the four tennis Grand Slams,”<br />

says Alan Flack, IBM’s Wimbledon<br />

programme executive. “Planning<br />

never really stops, what we learn<br />

from Wimbledon is taken on to<br />

the US Open, but we really kick on<br />

with Wimbledon from the end of<br />

each calendar year.<br />

“Each year there seems to be<br />

subtle, or major, changes in lay-out.<br />

Hawkeye was an innovation that we<br />

had to adapt to and there are always<br />

new statistics coming on stream, but<br />

the great thing about Wimbledon<br />

is that they have long-term<br />

relationships. There is not much<br />

chopping and changing each year.<br />

“We bring the kit in straight<br />

from Roland Garros. The main<br />

infrastructure which drives the<br />

IBM systems is in the US but<br />

there are local servers and scoring<br />

servers which need to be installed.<br />

“We have 100-120 people on site<br />

during the Championships, largely<br />

made up of technicians, statistical<br />

experts and data collectors (who<br />

are all at least county-level tennis<br />

players or above).”<br />

Flack confirms Ritchie and his<br />

team are keen for innovation to be<br />

given its head: “The All England<br />

Club looks to IBM to be at the<br />

forefront of technology and I<br />

think we have proved that over<br />

the years. In the 1990s we<br />

created the first website<br />

shop and now we<br />

have the award-winning IBM Seer,<br />

the world’s first augmented reality<br />

app using live data feeds.”<br />

The Seer allows a smartphone<br />

with a compass to show the user<br />

what is happening around the<br />

complex. It offers information on<br />

queue lengths, where food and<br />

drink stands are located and can<br />

also be held 500 metres from<br />

Centre Court, asks if the user<br />

wants to be able to see what’s<br />

happening inside and can then<br />

stream live video.<br />

“It’s all about added value and it<br />

will now become a core part of our<br />

offering. It has really caught the<br />

imagination,” adds Flack. “People<br />

ask me if IBM would ever want to<br />

cut Wimbledon from its portfolio,<br />

and I always say no. It’s a great<br />

showcase and allows us to take a<br />

lot of clients behind the scenes to<br />

show them our ‘wow’ technology.”<br />

IBM and Creative work in<br />

partnership with the BBC, the UK<br />

public-service broadcaster that has<br />

been showing Wimbledon since<br />

1927. Their cameras have seen most<br />

things but no-one was prepared<br />

for this year’s world record match<br />

between John Isner and Nicolas<br />

Mahut: Ritchie allowed the BBC to<br />

interview the exhausted duo on court<br />

at the end of the 11-hour contest,<br />

breaking the normal practice for<br />

matches outside of the finals.<br />

“We always try to accommodate<br />

broadcasters. If, for instance, NHK<br />

Japan wanted to show a Japanese<br />

player at a time and on a court that<br />

will help their coverage we would<br />

try to do that,” Ritchie reveals.<br />

“There is a huge benefit to us of<br />

being broadcast on a station such<br />

as NHK, so we want to help them<br />

because it helps us.”<br />

Japan is one of the countries<br />

where the All England Club has<br />

licensees who sell tennis-related<br />

equipment and luxury products, so<br />

exposure on a national broadcaster<br />

is good business. Broadcasting<br />

rights are also the biggest<br />

constituent of the Club’s income.<br />

Ritchie’s numerous tasks<br />

during the year include upholding<br />

the great traditions of Wimbledon<br />

- white clothing for the players<br />

(he personally approves each<br />

new design sent in by the<br />

manufacturers) and ensuring the<br />

ground staff have what is<br />

66 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


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ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

WIMBLEDON<br />

required to get the grass courts in<br />

first-rate condition for the start of<br />

the Championships.<br />

“We are the only professional<br />

tennis tournament in the world<br />

to insist on white clothing - in<br />

business terms it’s a classic<br />

unique differentiator. You know<br />

automatically it is Wimbledon,”<br />

says Ritchie. “The ground staff’s<br />

absolute priority is the two weeks<br />

of The Championships. We also<br />

have turf consultants who look at<br />

the condition of the courts. When<br />

you have the eyes of the world<br />

upon you the most important thing<br />

is to get that (the courts) right.”<br />

A matter of safety<br />

Security has become one of<br />

Wimbledon’s biggest tasks and<br />

for the past 20 years its long-time<br />

partner has been G4S. The UK’s<br />

largest firm in the field. employs 750<br />

staff during the Championships.<br />

“Even before 9/11 there was a<br />

recognition that Wimbledon was<br />

an event that needed an increased<br />

level of security due to its global<br />

profile,” explains G4S managing<br />

director Mark Hamilton. “It’s a<br />

two-week period but we start the<br />

debriefing process during the<br />

Championships.<br />

“If I’m asked [by specators] for<br />

directions I use it to my advantage by<br />

asking them about their experience -<br />

how have they found getting around?<br />

How have they found access to<br />

the grounds? It’s a really valuable<br />

process. We have to think years<br />

ahead - will there be any changes<br />

required due to building works?<br />

What does the All England Club<br />

want to be implemented? At the<br />

end of The Championships we<br />

consolidate the relevant points and<br />

are part of the formal de-brief in<br />

August and September.”<br />

G4S and the All England<br />

Club liaise closely with London’s<br />

Metropolitan Police, meeting<br />

every couple of months to discuss<br />

accreditation of staff and searching<br />

procedures. This year had the added<br />

pressure of a visit from The Queen.<br />

“Over the course of the<br />

Championships I meet the Police<br />

twice per day,” says Ritchie.<br />

“You are relieved when nothing<br />

happens. You always worry, but<br />

with 400 people from the armed<br />

LONDON 2012 CHALLENGE<br />

The players have praised<br />

the decision to stage the<br />

2012 Olympic tournament at<br />

Wimbledon, but it does cause<br />

some logistical headaches.<br />

The event will officially be run<br />

by LOCOG, but Ritchie and his<br />

team face a number of hurdles<br />

to cross, not least getting<br />

the courts ready for topclass<br />

action again just three<br />

weeks after the close of the<br />

Championships.<br />

“As an event, the Olympics<br />

are about half the size of the<br />

Championships so we can<br />

rotate the courts a little bit<br />

more,” explains Ritchie. “We<br />

did some tests this year and<br />

we are confident we can get<br />

the courts back in that length<br />

of time. We will do some more<br />

tests next year.”<br />

The Olympics present the<br />

conundrum for Ritchie of<br />

wanting not to interfere<br />

in another organisation’s<br />

event but to also make sure<br />

it is staged perfectly: “Our<br />

management team spend a<br />

lot of time with LOCOG - there<br />

is extra work, and pressure.<br />

However, I will have no<br />

responsibility for the running of<br />

the Olympic tennis apart from<br />

providing the facilities and<br />

personnel, if required.<br />

“That said, because it’s here at<br />

Wimbledon, we have a vested<br />

interest in making the event an<br />

enormous success.”<br />

forces here in addition to the police<br />

and G4S you know that you have a<br />

group of people who know how to<br />

deal with particular situations.”<br />

“At Wimbledon we believe that<br />

the key is evolution not revolution,”<br />

adds Grahame Muir, Managing<br />

Director of Arena Structures.<br />

Arena provides temporary seating,<br />

scaffolding and furniture for the<br />

Championships and in 2010<br />

installed peaked roof retail outlets<br />

and the hospitality village. It also<br />

supplies the trademark green<br />

seating around the outside courts.<br />

“Arena has become much more<br />

involved in the design element<br />

of the clients interiors giving<br />

an opportunity for a company<br />

to stamp their own mark on the<br />

Championships.”<br />

Muir adds that Wimbledon’s<br />

infrastructure has changed<br />

almost every year since Arena<br />

became associated with the<br />

Championships, athough a variety<br />

of factors determine how far<br />

infrastructure changes can go:<br />

“The AELTC is a club and therefore<br />

we must work around the needs<br />

of the members, be cognisant of<br />

the residents in terms of noise<br />

and hours of work and also the<br />

requirements of the building<br />

contractors who work year-onyear<br />

providing new permanent<br />

infrastructure and who generally<br />

start immediately after the end of<br />

the Championships.”<br />

For all the diverse ingredients<br />

of the Wimbledon recipe, the<br />

Championships are about the<br />

players and Ritchie is unequivocal<br />

Back-to-back winner Serena Williams - Getty Images Sport<br />

that the happiness of the racketwielders<br />

is one of his most crucial<br />

tasks. He employs a team of<br />

liaison officers who care for their<br />

every need, from theatre tickets to<br />

clothing and accommodation, with<br />

many of the top performers having<br />

houses or flats close to the complex<br />

organised for them.<br />

“You want this to be the event<br />

they want to win, but you also<br />

want them to feel they have been<br />

well treated,” states Ritchie. “We<br />

want to improve their facilities yet<br />

further - create more space and<br />

develop quieter areas for them to<br />

have a break. They are the stars, it’s<br />

hugely important that the players<br />

feel it’s special.<br />

“Roger [Federer] has apparently<br />

been spotted coming out of Tesco<br />

with a carrier bag. For someone<br />

who spends much of his life in a<br />

hotel suite, to be able to pop out and<br />

come back to have cornflakes sitting<br />

in a kitchen is just nice.”<br />

Five years into the role, Ritchie<br />

shows no signs of tiring from<br />

his objective of upholding the<br />

standards set at the All England<br />

Club: “The beauty of what happens<br />

here is that there is a focus and<br />

it’s that focus that makes it works<br />

well. Our aim is to have a great<br />

Championships, and we work yearround<br />

to achieve that.<br />

“It’s a serious business but it’s<br />

good fun...The volunteers come<br />

back here year after year because<br />

they enjoy it as well and I think<br />

that’s crucial; if you have a lot of<br />

grumpy people that’s not going to<br />

translate into a successful event.”<br />

68 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

BRITISH GRAND PRIX<br />

Webber and Vettel at the 2010 British grand prix - Getty Images Sport<br />

RACING REVOLUTION<br />

While many see Silverstone as the rightful home of<br />

British motor racing, the Northamptonshire circuit<br />

nearly lost its place on the Formula One calendar<br />

after once being described by supremo Bernie<br />

Ecclestone as more suited to a village fete than a<br />

major international sports event. But times have<br />

changed and the future looks bright: Silverstone<br />

has a 17-year contract to stage the British Grand<br />

Prix and has undergone significant investment in<br />

upgrading the track and surrounding facilities.<br />

Matt Cutler looks behind the scenes at the<br />

redevelopment of Silverstone for the British Grand<br />

Prix and talks to the executives, contractors and<br />

suppliers who make it one of the biggest and most<br />

remarkable events on the motor racing calendar.<br />

THE YEAR LEADING UP TO the<br />

2010 British Formula One Grand<br />

Prix, held this July for the 24th<br />

year in a row at Silverstone, was<br />

arguably the most important in its<br />

history. The circuit - built on the<br />

site of a World War II Royal Air<br />

Force bomber station - boasts a<br />

new £5 million track layout, with<br />

additional construction nearing<br />

completion including new elevated<br />

viewing banks, improvements to<br />

existing grandstands, and notably a<br />

new pit and paddock complex.<br />

But the significance of the 2010<br />

Grand Prix, which experienced<br />

a near-capacity crowd of 115,000<br />

on raceday this year, needs some<br />

background. Bernie Ecclestone,<br />

a long-time critic in the lack of<br />

investment in the facilities of<br />

Silverstone, ran out of patience<br />

with the Northamptonshire venue<br />

in July 2008 when he announced<br />

the British Grand Prix would move<br />

to Donington Park from 2010.<br />

However Donington, a track<br />

synonymous with MotoGP, failed<br />

to raise the £135 million it needed<br />

to fund redevelopments to stage the<br />

Grand Prix, leading Ecclestone into<br />

a dramatic about-turn a year-and-ahalf<br />

later that resulted in a 17-year<br />

contract for Silverstone to host the<br />

British Grand Prix until 2017.<br />

“Silverstone is equally as<br />

good, or better, than most of the<br />

European circuits,” Silverstone<br />

managing director Richard Phillips,<br />

told SportBusiness <strong>International</strong><br />

when asked whether Ecclestone’s<br />

criticisms of the circuit in recent<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10 69


ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

BRITISH GRAND PRIX<br />

The new track layout - Silverstone Circuits Ltd<br />

years had been fair. Silverstone is<br />

understood to be paying Bernie<br />

a fee of £12 million each year for<br />

the right to stage the race in the<br />

new contract, a figure subject to an<br />

annual escalator of 5 per cent. “The<br />

issues Silverstone has faced in the<br />

past were down to the fact Formula<br />

One contracts have only been for<br />

five years, and this wasn’t sufficient<br />

to assure us it was worth investing<br />

in better facilities.<br />

“We have spent millions<br />

and millions on infrastructure,<br />

including roads and carparks, but I<br />

think the criticisms in recent years<br />

were about the fact we didn’t have<br />

a new pit and paddock building.<br />

We’ve now moved on lightyears<br />

from that - our new pit building is<br />

nearly half finished and we’ve also<br />

made a lot of investment on the<br />

track in the last 12 months.”<br />

The new pit and paddock<br />

complex, scheduled for completion<br />

by summer 2011, is understood<br />

to have been a guarantee made by<br />

Silverstone to Ecclestone in the<br />

new contract. The building will<br />

feature new garages, a race control<br />

building, media centre, hospitality<br />

and VIP spectator zones.<br />

Plans for the complex - the old<br />

version of which was criticised for<br />

its 1970s design - were first put<br />

together around three years ago.<br />

The complex, says Phillips, will give<br />

teams, sponsors and guests a worldclass<br />

experience and reaffirm the<br />

circuit’s position as a premier racing<br />

destination. The new building is<br />

also a conference and exhibition<br />

centre which Phillips says will<br />

be “iconic” but perhaps more<br />

importantly, will bring in additional<br />

revenues from non-motor racing<br />

avenues (see box page 72).<br />

Ongoing track development<br />

has been a central feature of<br />

Silverstone’s - and its rivals’ -<br />

evolution to remain one of the<br />

best venues on the European<br />

motor racing circuit. On one hand<br />

redevelopments have been done for<br />

a matter of safety - following the<br />

deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland<br />

Ratzenberger for instance (at San<br />

Marino and Imola respectively<br />

in 1994), many tracks were<br />

modified in order to reduce speed<br />

and increase driver safety. For<br />

Silverstone this meant modifying<br />

the entry from Hangar Straight<br />

into Stowe Corner in 1995 to make<br />

it less dangerous. The flat-out<br />

Abbey kink was also modified to<br />

a chicane just 19 days before the<br />

1994 Grand Prix.<br />

“Safety is always at the top of the<br />

list, in accordance with guidelines<br />

set down by the various motorsport<br />

authorities,” says John Barrow,<br />

Senior Principal of Populous, the<br />

architectural firm chosen to do the<br />

design and planning for the circuit<br />

and pit building in late 2008. “We go<br />

through an obligation process where<br />

all of the run-outs on the track are<br />

designed to a certain formula.”<br />

Get the pitch right<br />

Phillips ranks the circuit<br />

redesign as the most<br />

important development<br />

of Silverstone for the<br />

new British Grand Prix<br />

contact: “The thing<br />

people always forget<br />

to do is get the pitch<br />

right: venues spend<br />

money building the<br />

grandstand but then<br />

find out the grass doesn’t<br />

grow on the pitch.<br />

“This is what we<br />

concentrated on last winter<br />

- if we were going to redevelop<br />

the circuit, we needed to get it as<br />

right as we possibly could so that’s<br />

what we did. We spent quite a lot<br />

of money just making sure that the<br />

circuit is the best one it can be. The<br />

riders and drivers like it and there<br />

has been plenty of overtaking in<br />

the new section.”<br />

For the new-look circuit,<br />

Silverstone and Populous knocked<br />

down the grandstands and<br />

repositioned them further away<br />

from the track, and extended<br />

the lap distance by half a mile to<br />

3.66. Instead of the iconic Bridge<br />

and Priory corners, the new<br />

circuit redirects cars right at<br />

Abbey and through an S-bend<br />

into the new Arena complex<br />

heading up towards Becketts.<br />

The circuit design was produced,<br />

says Phillips, using Populous’<br />

architectural experience and<br />

the motor racing knowledge<br />

of the British Racing<br />

Drivers’ Club (BRDC) -<br />

the owner and operator<br />

of Silverstone.<br />

“We decided we<br />

wanted to have some<br />

control because,”<br />

70 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

BRITISH GRAND PRIX<br />

says Phillips, “with my boss being<br />

the BRDC - a club made of very<br />

notable racing people - we wanted<br />

to put together a design with the<br />

help of some ex-Grand Prix racers<br />

and MotoGP riders, in addition to<br />

what the fans want and of course<br />

crowd logistics.<br />

“We thought working with<br />

Populous - who were quite new to<br />

[motor racing], they’d done a bit of<br />

track design but not much - was the<br />

best thing to do because it gave us<br />

a bit more control over the creation<br />

of a really good racing circuit rather<br />

than an architectural circuit. It<br />

worked - and in addition to that<br />

we worked with our contractor<br />

Buckingham and during the<br />

construction we changed bits to<br />

make sure the racing line would<br />

be improved from the provisional<br />

plan. It’s a huge track and the plan<br />

and the actual circuit are two very<br />

different things.”<br />

It is also worth noting that the<br />

new Silverstone track layout was<br />

not initially designed with Formula<br />

One in mind but MotoGP, since<br />

the British Grand Prix was formally<br />

moved to Donington Park after<br />

the 2009 race. This played into<br />

Populous’ hands as Silverstone’s<br />

design partner, says Barrow:<br />

“Instantly we had a problem to<br />

solve, that being the motorbikes<br />

were really uncomfortable using<br />

the run through to the Bridge<br />

corner, which was the most<br />

dangerous part of the track for<br />

high-speed bike racing. A new<br />

arrangement we suggested fitted<br />

the bill so we progressed on that<br />

basis - we increased the length of<br />

the track, increased the average<br />

racing speed and created more<br />

opportunities for overtaking.”<br />

Formerly known as HOK Sport,<br />

Populous grabbed the attention<br />

of Silverstone through its costeffective<br />

plan and construction of<br />

the Dubai Autodrome race track<br />

in 2004. Barrow says the Dubai<br />

circuit was built for around half<br />

the price of others at the time and<br />

when some tracks were costing<br />

north of $300 million to construct.<br />

The whole development - which<br />

included the track, 7,000-seat<br />

grandstand and pit complex, plus<br />

a marketing and management<br />

building - cost $95 million.<br />

An important 2011<br />

“Next year is going to be a real<br />

testing point,” says Barrow,<br />

“because the Formula One start<br />

will be at Abbey, and all the new<br />

facilities will be finished by then<br />

including the four hundred metrelong<br />

pits complex and hospitality<br />

area we’ve already started building.”<br />

Redevelopments have also<br />

focused on Ecclestone’s criticism of<br />

the quality of its spectator facilities,<br />

with new elevated viewing banks<br />

under construction and existing<br />

grandstands set to be moved to<br />

bring fans closer to the action.<br />

Phillips adds that although<br />

the new track was designed<br />

with safety in mind, so too was<br />

spectator engagement a serious<br />

consideration: “We needed to<br />

engage with the public by making<br />

sure we got the grandstand heights<br />

right and the sightlines correct -<br />

getting people as close to the action<br />

as possible whilst also making sure<br />

the infrastructure behind it was<br />

right. We’ve being doing that and<br />

will be doing more in the next 12<br />

months or so and probably in the<br />

years following. This isn’t the end<br />

of the story for us at all.”<br />

However even with great<br />

investment in permanent<br />

grandstands, temporary structures<br />

at the British Grand Prix are still<br />

used in force. Silverstone’s 25-year<br />

As major events increase in scale and commercial sponsorship<br />

is restrained by lower economic growth, the public sector is fast<br />

becoming a very important funder in sport. On the government side<br />

too, there is a realisation of what sport can deliver and a willingness<br />

to invest in partnerships.<br />

The new Sport and the Role of Government report provides<br />

a roadmap for these new relationships from both sides of<br />

the table. This unique resource will help you to:<br />

l Evaluate winning partnership models based on over 40<br />

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ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY BY VISITING: WWW.SPORTBUSINESS.COM/SPORTANDGOVERNMENT OR CALL: +44 (0) 207 954 3514


ANATOMY OF AN EVENT:<br />

BRITISH GRAND PRIX<br />

The new pit and paddock complex - Silverstone Circuits Ltd<br />

temporary structure partner GL<br />

events Owen Brown provides<br />

temporary high-end hospitality<br />

suites, general admission and<br />

catering areas, in addition to<br />

administrative facilities, including<br />

changing areas, helipad terminals<br />

and media centres on a year-byyear<br />

basis. Additionally Owen<br />

Brown provides private hospitality<br />

facilities at all BRDC events they<br />

have a presence at, including the<br />

annual ball held during the Grand<br />

Prix weekend.<br />

“We work hand-in-hand with the<br />

Silverstone Operations team and<br />

their designers to provide support<br />

months in advance of our arrival<br />

on site,” Alex Robertson, Managing<br />

Director of GL events Owen Brown,<br />

told SportBusiness <strong>International</strong>.<br />

“We are fortunate to have a long<br />

build period which allows us to be<br />

flexible on site and to be able to<br />

tweak plans and specifications to<br />

suit a changing brief.”<br />

Attention to detail<br />

In 2009 Owen Brown supplied<br />

12,000 square metres of<br />

structures, and in 2010 their<br />

operation included 270 linear<br />

metres of their new ‘Absolute<br />

Pavilion and Ultimate Pagoda’ - a<br />

range launched off the back of<br />

a £4.5million investment into<br />

modern high-end structures.<br />

“The 25-year relationship we<br />

believe is down to us acting as more<br />

than just a supplier to the circuit,<br />

STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION<br />

Silverstone boasted a turnover of £38.2 million and an operating profit<br />

of £662,000 in 2008 and turnover, says Phillips, currently stands at<br />

around £45 million, compared with £23 million five years ago.<br />

By diversifying Silverstone into a successful multi-purpose venue,<br />

within which the new developments play a significant role (the new<br />

conference centre should bring in an extra £3 to £4 million in turnover<br />

by 2013), and the turnover target is £50 million for the year 2012.<br />

Barrow says that Populous’ masterplan “envisages a university, a<br />

medical and high-technology research centre - as well as the obvious<br />

things like corporate hospitality and spectator areas. It’s a complicated<br />

equation but very satisfying when you get it right. We often have clients<br />

who look back at buildings built 20 years ago and say they are still<br />

working beautifully - why is that? It’s just because they were made to<br />

be flexible.”<br />

The ultimate target is £100 million in turnover, Phillips bullishly states:<br />

“We are the only profitable Grand Prix circuit in the world that stands<br />

on its own two feet. You’ve just got to make a realistic investment and<br />

be commercial about it. The 17-year contract [signed with Bernie<br />

Ecclestone in December 2009] was certainly a huge move forward. Add<br />

to that MotoGP [five-year deal from 2010] and World Superbikes [oneyear<br />

deal for 2010] - which make up most of the major international<br />

motorsport events - we’ve got a great calendar.”<br />

we share Silverstone’s enthusiasm<br />

for this important sporting event,”<br />

adds Robertson.<br />

“We have a dedicated project<br />

management and build team, some<br />

of which have worked on the site for<br />

the 25 years. It is fair to say that they<br />

know the site extremely well and<br />

deliver the attention to detail that is<br />

required on a project of this scale.”<br />

Given a three-day attendance<br />

in the region of 300,000 and<br />

considering the huge scale of<br />

developments still ongoing,<br />

preparing Silverstone to host<br />

the British Grand Prix is a<br />

massive logistical and operational<br />

challenge, says Phillips.<br />

“When you break it all down<br />

it’s all relatively straightforward,”<br />

he coolly states.<br />

“The first thing we do is make<br />

sure more people aren’t put into<br />

the venue than it can cope with.<br />

We do this by putting a cap on the<br />

number of spectators and looking<br />

at the logistics of how people<br />

move about - where the toilets and<br />

catering areas are.<br />

“Then it’s really access and<br />

egress in the venue: traffic<br />

management and car-parking, the<br />

park-and-ride situation, heliports,<br />

camping - all the other parts of the<br />

infrastructure across Silverstone<br />

- because we need to get people<br />

both in and out quickly and make<br />

sure they are happy they do so. It<br />

sounds easy but there’s a lot of work<br />

involved in it.”<br />

“Traffic management issues are<br />

something Silverstone has dealt<br />

with very well over the past five or<br />

six years,” adds Populous’ Barrow.<br />

Spectator traffic management<br />

was a traditional issue to the track<br />

on the raceday weekend, a problem<br />

largely eliminated with the<br />

completion of the A43 Silverstone<br />

bypass, a dual-carriageway road<br />

just to the north of the circuit.<br />

“I can honestly say that getting<br />

to Silverstone is no longer a<br />

problem. I usually drive up from<br />

Surrey [around 100 kilometres]<br />

and can get there in a two-hour<br />

period every time with absolutely<br />

no problems.”<br />

72 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


F1 BRITISH<br />

GRAND PRIX<br />

DESIGNED<br />

WITH FANS<br />

IN MIND<br />

New Pit Lane and Paddock facility<br />

Silverstone, UK<br />

Populous is the official designer of the new Silverstone<br />

track for the 2010 British Grand Prix. We designed it to<br />

bring the fans closer to the action.<br />

Populous have been appointed to design the new<br />

iconic pit lane and paddock complex with the flexibility<br />

to accommodate conferencing and exhibitions along<br />

with academic facilities, that maximise the usage<br />

outside major event days, optimising the commercial<br />

opportunities available.<br />

The new pit lane and paddock is due to be completed in<br />

time for Silverstone hosting the 2011 British Grand Prix.<br />

For further information contact:<br />

14 Blades Court Deodar Road London SW15 2NU UK<br />

T: +44 (0)20 8874 7666 F: +44 (0)20 8874 7470<br />

E: sophie.therouanne@populous.com www.populous.com


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

EUROPE’S NORTHERN STARS<br />

Scandinavia, the collective term<br />

for Sweden, Denmark, Norway and<br />

Finland, is one of the most complex<br />

and fascinating regions in the sports<br />

marketing business. Andy Fry looks<br />

at the region’s complex television<br />

market and the region’s bold attempts<br />

to attract major sporting events in a<br />

competitive bidding environment.<br />

ALTHOUGH RELATIVELY small compared<br />

to other European markets (a population of<br />

24 million), Scandinavia is home to many<br />

innovative and entrepreneurial brands and<br />

media companies. This means it is an important<br />

contributor to the global sports marketing<br />

scene. At the same time, it boasts good sports<br />

facilities, interesting topography and excellent<br />

urban infrastructure. The result is that the<br />

region is high on the consideration list for sports<br />

federations when it comes to choosing venues.<br />

Understanding why the market works<br />

the way it does requires some historical and<br />

commercial context, however. It’s worth noting,<br />

for example, that Scandinavian (or Nordic)<br />

governments were very late in permitting the<br />

launch of free-to-air commercial television.<br />

The upshot of this is that public broadcasters<br />

like SVT Sweden, NRK Norway, YLE Finland,<br />

Danmarks Radio and TV2 (both Denmark)<br />

continue to be prominent players - both on their<br />

own terms and via rights-buying collectives such<br />

as the European Broadcasting Union.<br />

YLE, for example, invested a record-breaking<br />

€20 million on sports rights this year -<br />

underlining its commitment to events such as<br />

the Winter Olympics (always a crowd-pleaser)<br />

and the <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup.<br />

This pro-public service broadcaster<br />

environment has not, however, deterred<br />

74 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

Swedish tennis star Robin Soderling - Getty Images Sport<br />

companies launching commercial TV services<br />

into the Scandinavian space. So starting in the<br />

late 1980s, the result was a wave of free-to-air<br />

and subscription launches via satellite, many of<br />

which were based beyond the borders of local<br />

governments (thus evading regulatory controls).<br />

Critical to understanding today’s rights market<br />

is the fact that those which survived now operate<br />

across the entire Nordic space - offering a mosaic<br />

of pan-regional and territory-specific services.<br />

The classic case is Modern Times Group,<br />

which offers both wholly-owned and third party<br />

channels via its Viasat direct-to-home satellite<br />

platform. MTG constantly finesses its channel<br />

portfolio to maximise performance. But in its<br />

current incarnation it has a pan-regional golf<br />

channel (Viasat Golf), two Swedish sports<br />

channels (Viasat Sport Sweden, Viasat Fotball),<br />

two Norwegian sports channels (Viasat Sport<br />

Norge, Viasat Fotball) and two Danish sports<br />

channels that it runs in partnership with publicservice<br />

broadcaster TV2 (having previously<br />

operated its own sports channel).<br />

To complicate matters further, MTG has two<br />

channels airing across Norway and Sweden<br />

(Viasat Motor & Viasat Sport HD). The upshot is<br />

that MTG - which also has free-to-air networks<br />

(more of which later) - can be a buyer of both panregional<br />

and territory-specific rights - depending<br />

on a) its own needs and b) the competition.<br />

The situation is broadly the same with MTG’s<br />

major rival C More Entertainment, which runs<br />

Canal Plus-branded pay-TV services across<br />

Scandinavia (though Canal Plus itself is no longer<br />

part of the platform’s ownership structure).<br />

New player on the scene<br />

The ownership history at C More is complex,<br />

but the business today belongs to Swedish<br />

media giant TV4 in partnership with Norway’s<br />

Telenor, which acquired 35 per cent of the<br />

business in May. This joining of forces is<br />

expected to make C More a stronger player in<br />

the Nordic sports TV market.<br />

Aside from the fact that it brings various<br />

Telenor rights into the Canal Plus line-up, C More<br />

also used the merger to announce an expanded<br />

sports content offering. In particular, it outlined<br />

plans to add football from La Liga, Serie A and<br />

Major League Soccer in the US; basketball from<br />

the NBA; and Swedish ice hockey.<br />

As with MTG, the fact that TV4 also has<br />

a powerful Swedish-based free-to-air network<br />

(as well as a free-to-air sister service in<br />

Finland) means it is looking for both territoryspecific<br />

and pan-regional sports rights.<br />

Furthermore, Telenor is a major crossplatform<br />

operator which means there is also a<br />

compelling need for rights which cover digital<br />

platforms such as mobile.<br />

All major football rights holders (<strong>FIFA</strong>,<br />

UEFA, national leagues) are faced with this<br />

kind of market complexity (see box) when<br />

dealing with the Nordic region. So it’s perhaps<br />

not a surprise to see that rights agencies have a<br />

prominent role. For UEFA, rights are managed<br />

by long-term partner TEAM - while emerging<br />

Swiss outfit Kentaro made a big splash in the<br />

market when it snapped up Norwegian Football<br />

Association and Swedish Football Association<br />

rights in 2006 (previously broadcasters dealt<br />

directly). Also worth noting is that Lagardere is<br />

active via its 2007 acquisition of Sweden-based<br />

agency IEC in Sports.<br />

Perhaps most significant has been the<br />

arrival on the scene of Medge Consulting, a<br />

start-up agency which secured all Nordic rights<br />

to the English Premier League in December<br />

COMPLEX TV SCENARIOS<br />

The Nordic TV market results in some<br />

complicated rights scenarios - particularly<br />

in football, which, as in the majority<br />

of European TV markets, is the most<br />

in-demand sport. This is evident in the<br />

case of UEFA - which has a variety of<br />

deals for the Euros, the Champions<br />

League and the Europa League. The most<br />

straightforward is UEFA’s partnership<br />

with MTG for the Champions League -<br />

which the broadcaster controls exclusively<br />

in Denmark, Norway and Sweden across<br />

both free-to-air and pay-television.<br />

However it’s worth noting that in Finland<br />

MTG shares rights with YLE. The situation<br />

with UEFA’s Europa League (2009-2012)<br />

is more complex - since MTG has rights<br />

in Denmark and Norway while TV4 has<br />

Sweden. In both cases, the deals allow<br />

the broadcasters to air games on free and<br />

pay-TV channels.<br />

This can lead to unusual scenarios. In<br />

Denmark, for example, the first-choice<br />

live match airs on MTG’s TV3+ - a rival to<br />

TV2. However other live matches air on<br />

TV2 Sport - the joint-venture between the<br />

two [Note - you get a similar situation<br />

with Danish Superliga football which airs<br />

on TV3+, TV2 Sport and Canal 9, a pay-TV<br />

channel which belongs to TV4]. Further<br />

evidence of the Nordic market’s complexity<br />

comes in the case of UEFA’s Euro 2012<br />

rights - which were recently licensed to<br />

TV4 for Denmark and Norway as well as<br />

its home market Sweden. In Sweden, TV4<br />

is sharing the rights with SVT while in the<br />

other markets it is effectively acting as a<br />

sub-agent - dividing up fixtures between<br />

its own channels and third parties in order<br />

to give UEFA the optimal mix of free and<br />

pay-TV coverage.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 75


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

2009 (live, repeat, highlights, news, mobile<br />

and internet rights across 380 fixtures).<br />

The emergence of Medge is an interesting<br />

development - since it represents an attempt<br />

to extract greater revenues from the region by<br />

selling rights country by country.<br />

Previously (from 2007-08 to 2009-10),<br />

pan-regional Premier League rights belonged<br />

to C More/Canal Plus, but under the new<br />

arrangement Medge is paying upwards of<br />

$120 million for the period 2010-11 to 2012-13,<br />

according to TV Sports Markets, around double<br />

the value of the previous contract period.<br />

Carve up the territory<br />

Medge has set about recouping its investment<br />

by doing individual deals with MTV Finland,<br />

TV2 Norway, SBS Denmark and MTG for<br />

Sweden. In the case of the TV2 deal, pay-TV<br />

rights were then passed on to Canal Plus<br />

(creating an EPL-Medge-TV2-Canal Plus chain).<br />

As for Sweden, MTG plans to air games on its<br />

Viasat Fotboll, Viasat Sport & Viasat Sport HD<br />

pay-TV channels and a new Viasat Premier<br />

League HD channel.<br />

Medge co-founder Peter Liljestrand is<br />

reported to be looking at whether Medge can<br />

negotiate a similar role with regard to Serie A<br />

and La Liga rights. But the jury is out on whether<br />

this would be possible.<br />

Amanda Evans, general manager at Eurosport<br />

Nordic, says the arrival of Medge has certainly<br />

shaken up the market “but the EPL is possibly<br />

the only property outside domestic sport which<br />

could generate the necessary commercial<br />

interest. It has a history here which goes back<br />

many, many years.”<br />

According to Evans, rights holders looking to<br />

maximise their financial return by replicating<br />

the Medge model have to weigh up two<br />

opposing factors: “There are definitely different<br />

tastes between the four countries - which<br />

makes grouping them together a risk. But that<br />

has to be balanced against economies of scale.<br />

After all, these are not big countries when<br />

viewed separately.” (Sweden, the biggest, has a<br />

population of around nine million).<br />

Pan-regional sports broadcaster Eurosport<br />

currently operates a Nordic version of its main<br />

channel and a Nordic/Eastern European feed of<br />

its Eurosport 2 channel (as well as an HD feed in<br />

Sweden and Denmark).<br />

Like its rivals, it views football as a critical<br />

part of the mix - and recently acquired exclusive<br />

Bundesliga rights for use across the Nordic and<br />

Eastern European regions. “We took over those<br />

from Viasat,” says Evans.<br />

“That move showed that we were serious<br />

about acquiring top quality football rights. It<br />

also changed the dynamics of the Nordic market<br />

because it means Bundesliga is the only one of<br />

the top international leagues that can be viewed<br />

on basic pay not premium.”<br />

While soccer is the biggest sport in the<br />

broadcasting space, it’s not the only one which<br />

draws crowds, adds Evans. “Winter sports are<br />

very popular and we are very strongly associated<br />

with biathlon. We also do well with tennis,<br />

a sport where we have three Grand Slams<br />

and coverage of the WTA Tour. With Robin<br />

Soderling (Sweden) and Caroline Wozniacki<br />

(Denmark) doing well, tennis has been a big<br />

audience puller for Eurosport.”<br />

The Soderling factor has not been lost on<br />

free-to-air either. This year saw SVT Sweden<br />

sign a four-year deal with IEC in Sports for<br />

rights to the Stockholm Open ATP Tennis<br />

tournament, held in October.<br />

Against the backdrop of Soderling’s progress,<br />

SVT will air 10 live matches on nationwide<br />

terrestrial SVT1 or SVT2 with complementary<br />

coverage, on SVT24 or SVT Play. “With Robin<br />

Söderling entering the top echelons of the world’s<br />

elite we are delighted to extend the contract and<br />

to continue to develop our coverage,” confirmed<br />

SVT head of sport Per Yng.<br />

Handball is another sport which has<br />

developed a strong fanbase in the Nordic region.<br />

In recent times, rights agency Infront has<br />

managed to extend exclusive rights agreements<br />

for the EHF European Championships with TV2<br />

Denmark, TV2 Norway and TV4 Sweden.<br />

With all three now committed until 2015, TV2<br />

Norway head of sports Björn Taalesen sums up<br />

the mood when he says: “The European Handball<br />

Championships, with their high-intensity drama<br />

and strong Scandinavian participation, are some<br />

of the most gripping and captivating sporting<br />

events watched by TV viewers and internet users<br />

in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.”<br />

Other sports in heavy demand by the main<br />

players include motorsport and golf. As outlined<br />

above, MTG/Viasat has a Nordic golf channel -<br />

so it was no real surprise to see it extend rights<br />

Sweden at the 2009 Handball European Championship - Getty Images Sport<br />

to the American PGA Tour until the end of 2015.<br />

Similarly, Viasat has held the Scandinavian<br />

rights to Formula One since 2005 and exploits<br />

them in various ways across the territories.<br />

In Sweden and Norway, live coverage is on<br />

dedicated motor sports channel Viasat Motor<br />

and in Denmark it is on TV3 Puls - a general<br />

entertainment channel launched in 2009.<br />

Free-to-air sports channel<br />

MTG has also just announced plans for a<br />

new free-TV sports channel in Sweden, TV10,<br />

launching on September 7.<br />

Available to 50 per cent of Swedish homes via<br />

cable and satellite, the channel will target men<br />

aged between 25 and 59 and will offer content<br />

including the UEFA Euro 2010 qualification<br />

game between Sweden and San Marino, coverage<br />

of NHL, HockeyAllsvenskan ice hockey games,<br />

UEFA Champions League matches and Formula<br />

One qualifying sessions and race highlights.<br />

TV10 will also broadcast Swedish and<br />

Euroleague basketball, NFL American football<br />

and ATP tennis, all of which is currently on<br />

Viasat Sport’s generic pay-TV sports channel.<br />

MTG president and CEO Hans-Holger<br />

Albrecht says TV10 is designed to complement<br />

Viasat’s PayTV sports channels and will “enable<br />

us to optimise the use of our extensive portfolio<br />

of local and international sports rights. Swedish<br />

viewers will now be able to watch even more high<br />

quality sports entertainment than ever before.”<br />

On the face of it, a free sports channel looks<br />

like a threat to Eurosport’s basic tier proposition<br />

- but Evans is not unduly worried: “I think TV10<br />

is a promotional channel for Viasat’s pay-TV<br />

bouquet - with the best of their content kept for<br />

the premium tier.<br />

“The fact is that the real trend in the Nordic<br />

region is for sport to move into premium tiers<br />

and pay-per-view. So our basic-tier proposition<br />

is actually of interest to platform operators,<br />

particularly now we can reinforce it with a<br />

strong HD offering.”<br />

76 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

THE NORDIC MARKET’S low<br />

population density means it is a<br />

relatively modest player in the<br />

sponsorship market. One of the<br />

most dynamic segments of the<br />

market is naming rights - a sector<br />

gaining in importance over the last<br />

three-to-four years.<br />

Top player in this area is<br />

Swedbank - which acquired<br />

naming rights to Malmo’s<br />

football stadium in 2007 before<br />

securing a 17.5 million, 16-year<br />

naming rights deal for the new<br />

national stadium near Stockholm.<br />

Swedbank also used to control<br />

rights to the Ornskoldsvik ice<br />

hockey arena.<br />

Elsewhere in the Nordic region,<br />

a notable trend in naming rights<br />

is the rise of telecoms companies<br />

- seemingly at the expense<br />

of airlines. Already we have<br />

mentioned the Ericsson Globe<br />

in Stockholm - named in 2009 -<br />

and in Norway Telenor has just<br />

secured the rights to the state-ofthe-art<br />

Fornebu Arena. However<br />

airline SAS has just ended its<br />

partnership with the Denmark’s<br />

Messecenter Herning and in<br />

Finland Helsinki’s Finnair Stadium<br />

has just been renamed the Sonera<br />

Stadium in a deal until December<br />

2013. Echoing naming rights<br />

deals in other parts of Europe,<br />

TeliaSonera Finland president<br />

Juha-Pekka Weckström said the<br />

deal “provides us with an excellent<br />

framework for marketing of our<br />

services, client events and also<br />

internal events.”<br />

One area of strength for<br />

Scandinavian sport sponsorship<br />

is sailing. While the ultimate<br />

expression of this is the<br />

Volvo Ocean Race (won by an<br />

Ericsson-sponsored boat last<br />

time out), there are a number<br />

of other commercial activities<br />

around the sport.<br />

One of the most interesting,<br />

signed in May, sees car-maker<br />

Audi backing the ISAF-backed<br />

Stena Match Cup which takes<br />

place in Sweden - just 12 miles<br />

north of Volvo’s global HQ.<br />

Regarded as one of the best<br />

sailing events anywhere in the<br />

world, it fits well with Audi’s<br />

strategy of cherry-picking highimpact<br />

sailing sponsorships<br />

around the world.<br />

And it’s not just sailing which<br />

has proved it can attract sponsors.<br />

In Sweden insurance group IF<br />

is the title sponsor of the ATP<br />

Stockholm Open while Denmark’s<br />

Nordea backs Danish handball.<br />

Because of their size and<br />

location Sweden and Denmark<br />

dominate developments in the<br />

Scandinavian sponsorship market.<br />

But there are opportunities<br />

in Norway and Finland for<br />

companies which go looking.<br />

Nutrition company Herbalife<br />

is best known right now for<br />

deals with Barcelona and Lionel<br />

Messi, but prior to that it signed<br />

sponsorship deals with Team<br />

Hoydahl, Norway’s premier<br />

professional mountain bike<br />

team, and the Finnish Ice Hockey<br />

Association - thus associating<br />

with the single biggest sporting<br />

property in this country.<br />

Opportunities in Norway are<br />

limited by law; the country bans<br />

alcohol sponsorship and until May<br />

2009, it also had a ban on energy<br />

drinks (Under the Dangerous<br />

Beverages Act 2004).<br />

Norway’s biggest sponsorship<br />

property right now is downhill<br />

skiing star Aksel Lund Svindal who<br />

has deals with Head and Red Bull<br />

among others.<br />

The latter deal is not<br />

universally welcomed in Norway,<br />

where there is still some<br />

resistance to energy drinks<br />

despite the lifting of the ban.<br />

Critics fear that the deal sends<br />

out a negative message to Lund<br />

Svindal’s extensive young fanbase.<br />

Even before the<br />

dust has settled<br />

on the last great<br />

sporting spectacle,<br />

preparations are<br />

well underway to<br />

ensure that London<br />

will surpass all its<br />

predecessors.<br />

Road to London – a sport magazine show<br />

with 130 episodes, 26 minutes each.<br />

Contact:<br />

www.iec.se Tel +46 8 666 04 02<br />

SportBusiness_199,3 x 127_100818.indd 1 2010-08-18 15.55


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

The 2009 NHL Premiere Stockholm match between St. Louis Blues<br />

and Detroit Red Wings at the Ericsson Globe - Getty Images Sport<br />

PUTTING NORDICS ON THE MAP<br />

Scandinavia’s size means it is rarely<br />

on the consideration list for hosting<br />

mega-events like the <strong>FIFA</strong> World<br />

Cup and the Summer Olympics -<br />

though the Winter Olympics did<br />

come to Lillehammer, Norway, in<br />

1994 and Sweden staged Euro 1992,<br />

a tournament won by neighbours<br />

Denmark.<br />

BIDDING AS CO-HOSTS is an option that<br />

Scandinavian nations have recently employed<br />

to boost their bidding prospects although recent<br />

attempts have not come to fruition.<br />

First, a four-nation Euro 2008 bid was<br />

rejected - then a Sweden-Norway bid to host<br />

Euro 2016 collapsed due to lack of government<br />

support. This isn’t the only example of a Swedenbacked<br />

initiative coming unstuck. The Swedish<br />

Golf Federation was also forced to withdraw its<br />

bid to host the 2018 Ryder Cup due to a weak<br />

economy and trouble getting government funds.<br />

However such setbacks have not dampened local<br />

enthusiasm for hosting events.<br />

Currently, Stockholm is in the midst of a<br />

massive stadium construction programme which<br />

will see two new venues ready for action by 2012.<br />

Sweden lining up sport<br />

In terms of recent and upcoming sporting<br />

events hosted by Sweden, the World Figure<br />

Skating Championship in 2008, this year’s<br />

FINA Masters World Championship, the<br />

2011 Men’s Handball World Championship<br />

and the 2013 European Indoor Athletics<br />

Championships are all firmly written, or will be<br />

soon, into the country’s CV.<br />

Stockholm’s Ericsson Globe has also hosted<br />

sports events including NHL season openers<br />

for the last two seasons. While Stockholm<br />

looks set to enter a dynamic new phase of event<br />

hosting, it’s interesting to note that the four<br />

major events mentioned above have strong<br />

southern Sweden connections - with the cities<br />

of Gothenburg and Malmo both playing pivotal<br />

roles as hosts.<br />

Gothenburg has an illustrious track record<br />

hosting events while Malmo has one of Europe’s<br />

most modern sporting and entertainment<br />

arenas (and will be the venue for the final of the<br />

2011 Men’s Handball World Championships).<br />

The success of Malmo and Gothenburg is<br />

partly down to the fact that they are relatively<br />

close to the continental European mainland - a<br />

factor which has also played well for Sweden’s<br />

southern neighbour, Denmark. While Sweden<br />

has struggled to get government support for<br />

some ‘A-list’ events, the Danish authorities<br />

have made it clear that they sees sport as a<br />

political priority.<br />

Last year, for example, was Denmark’s ‘Year<br />

Of Sport’ - a publicly-backed initiative designed,<br />

in part, to attract major events to the country.<br />

“It is crucial for Denmark’s potential to host<br />

international sport events,” said Minister for<br />

Sport and Culture Carina Christensen. “Our<br />

goal is to raise awareness of Denmark through<br />

the sport events we host. In the long-term it will<br />

78 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


INTERNATIONAL FOCUS<br />

NORDIC REGIONS<br />

lead Denmark to a position among the top 25<br />

ultimate sport countries.”<br />

The overall strategy is co-ordinated by public<br />

body Sport Event Denmark - though SED is the<br />

first to admit that winning the right to host an<br />

event requires buy-in from every tier of society.<br />

SED CEO Lars Lundov made this point clear<br />

when he told delegates at SportAccord that:<br />

“We believe in close co-operation between three<br />

parties - Sport Event Denmark, the host city and<br />

the national federation organising the event.”<br />

Fortunately for SED, everyone from central<br />

government to the general population has been<br />

willing to pull together to deliver events. The<br />

upshot of this is that 54 sports events took place<br />

in Denmark during 2009 - an impressive figure<br />

for a nation of just 5.5 million.<br />

Highlights from 2009 included the<br />

<strong>International</strong> Olympic Commitee Congress,<br />

UEFA Congress, Archery World Cup Finals<br />

and WTF Taekwondo World Championship.<br />

Looking ahead, Denmark has lined up World<br />

Cup trampoline in 2011, the European Table<br />

Tennis Championships 2012/2013, the<br />

World Badminton Championships 2013, the<br />

European Volleyball Championships 2013, FEI<br />

jumping and dressage 2013, the ISAF World<br />

Championships 2014 and the Men’s European<br />

Handball Championships (EHC) in 2014.<br />

Denmark has also put its name forward as<br />

host for the World Ice Hockey Championships<br />

2016 - and SED’s Lundov is optimistic that his<br />

country has the right mix of experience and<br />

expertise to succeed: “Sport Event Denmark is<br />

used to working with long-term strategies, and<br />

we know the importance of being well-prepared<br />

for both bidding and eventually also the hosting<br />

of international sports events.<br />

“Our commitment to deliver a world-class ice<br />

hockey event to benefit both the event owner,<br />

players, media and fans is immense. Next year we<br />

are hosting the UCI Road World Championships<br />

and UEFA European Under-21 Championship<br />

in Denmark, and staging these major events will<br />

give us an invaluable experience to the benefit of<br />

future events in Denmark.”<br />

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DAN ATKINS<br />

GENERAL MANAGER,<br />

IGNITE MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT<br />

THE SPORTBUSINESS DEBATE<br />

“The possibility to integrate<br />

graphics and statistics adds a new<br />

dimension. Add the drama of<br />

the lighting and audio effects to<br />

the live event mix and given the<br />

choice, there is no way you would<br />

want to watch at home.”<br />

WITH THE INCREASE of sports events being held<br />

at modern stadiums and in entertainment venues,<br />

such as the O2 Arena in London, long gone are<br />

the days where it is acceptable for the in-stadium<br />

‘screens’ mix to be an afterthought, with lower<br />

production values than one would expect to see<br />

on television.<br />

New technologies have developed alongside<br />

high-definition (HD) television such as super<br />

slow-motion replays and tiny HD mini-cameras<br />

that provide ‘point-of-view’ coverage. These shots<br />

can be used to enhance the audience experience<br />

during breaks in play.<br />

The possibility to integrate graphics and<br />

statistics such as Hawk-Eye and win/loss/<br />

accuracy information also adds a new dimension<br />

for the live event viewer that was previously only<br />

available to the broadcaster. Add the drama of the<br />

lighting and audio effects to the live event mix and<br />

given the choice, there is no way you would want<br />

to watch at home.<br />

At ignite we believe the in-stadium audiovisual<br />

presentation is of paramount importance<br />

to the live audience. At the Barclays ATP World<br />

Tour Finals event (see page 27), we use multicamera<br />

television directors to ‘call’ the screens,<br />

lighting, presenter and music cues, as if it were<br />

a live television show. In order to do this, we<br />

work closely with the Association of Tennis<br />

Professionals and their live broadcast television<br />

director in the lead up to the event.<br />

Having complete integration with the live<br />

broadcast team, sharing control of cameras and<br />

replays, and not working in isolation, it is now<br />

very possible to bring television production values<br />

to the live event audience and allow spectators<br />

to share in aspects of sports coverage that were<br />

previously only seen at home.<br />

“How will HD TV, 3D TV and other<br />

technologies which enhance the<br />

quality of the television sports<br />

experience impact on the live<br />

events sector, and what needs to<br />

be done to ensure that the<br />

in-stadium experience matches<br />

that offered by broadcasters?”<br />

The 2010 <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup marked a significant development in the<br />

evolution of live 3D sports coverage.<br />

And while the broadcast sector learned many lessons about what works<br />

and what doesn’t from a technical perspective, the wider implications of<br />

yet another enhancement to the armchair/couch sports experience are<br />

worthy of discussion.<br />

The media-delivered sports experience has never been richer. That’s not<br />

simply the result of the quality of the pictures but the way broadcasters are<br />

able to tell the story of an event. In just about every respect, the armchair<br />

becomes the best seat in the house. What’s the incentive to pay big money<br />

for tickets, travel and catering when you can relax at home or with friends at<br />

a bar for the fraction of the cost and potential inconvenience?<br />

It is an issue that should be taxing not only for the people who sell tickets<br />

to live events, but also to broadcasters themselves. It can be argued that sport<br />

is a four-dimensional experience and that the fourth dimension is the crowd.<br />

The crowd provides the vibrant colourful background and spontaneous<br />

ever-changing soundtrack to live broadcasts. Try watching with the sound<br />

turned down or, as in the case of the World Cup, the natural sound drowned<br />

out by the buzz of vuvuzelas - and the product becomes poorer.<br />

So if sport needs a crowd, what can be done to ensure that fans will<br />

still pack stadiums when there are other less expensive and more<br />

comfortable options? Is ensuring that stadia remain full an issue of<br />

pricing - once again the <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup indicates this is an important<br />

factor - or is there more to it than that?<br />

Are we simply burying our heads in the sand if we continue to believe<br />

that the status of the live sport event will remain unchanged during a time<br />

when household budgets are under strain and when there is no shortage of<br />

entertainment opportunities?<br />

That’s the question we put to our panel of experts this month.<br />

80 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10


NIGEL CURRIE<br />

DIRECTOR,<br />

BRANDRAPPORT<br />

KEVIN ROBERTS<br />

EDITORIAL DIRECTOR,<br />

SPORTBUSINESS GROUP<br />

NIGEL RUSHMAN<br />

FOUNDER,<br />

RUSHMANS<br />

“There is much more that needs<br />

to be done. Younger generations<br />

of fans have grown up with the<br />

developing technology in sports<br />

coverage and see it as an integral<br />

part of sport and entertainment.”<br />

“While the sports events sector<br />

clearly has work to do to enhance<br />

the live experience, they have one<br />

thing very much in their favour.<br />

It’s the passion, bordering on<br />

madness, of fans.”<br />

“In the past the received wisdom<br />

was that you couldn’t beat being<br />

at a major event because of the<br />

atmosphere. But that alone is not<br />

really enough any more.”<br />

IT IS HUMAN NATURE to want the biggest and<br />

best available - and it is that which is turning the<br />

committed sports fan into a very demanding one.<br />

Armchair sports fans now get a very good<br />

service while fans attending a sporting event have<br />

a lot to contend with. Of course television can’t<br />

match or replicate the atmosphere (yet) of actually<br />

being at a major sporting event but certainly<br />

questions are being asked of events organisers<br />

and whether they are offering enough to the fans<br />

coming through the turnstiles.<br />

Ticket prices need to be looked at closely but<br />

in particular there needs to be a major effort to<br />

provide a much broader experience. If you go to<br />

a major live event now, the minute a significant<br />

incident occurs the whole crowd look to the<br />

“Big Screen” for clarification and are invariably<br />

disappointed that the particular incident can’t be<br />

replayed in case it compromises the officials or<br />

upsets players, official or fans. However there<br />

must be alternatives.<br />

Modern stadiums have improved out of all<br />

recognition and facilities much better than a few<br />

years ago. But there is much more that needs<br />

to be done. Younger generations of fans have<br />

grown up with the developing technology in sports<br />

coverage and see it as an integral part of the<br />

sport and the entertainment. They expect it to be<br />

incorporated at the live event.<br />

Options such as referee links and live TV/radio<br />

commentaries are available but it is yet another<br />

cost for the long suffering fans. Venues need to<br />

be looking at ways of cutting prices and providing<br />

better value. Match programmes could be scaled<br />

back in terms of production and provided free<br />

with the seat.<br />

But most importantly venues need to find a way<br />

of giving the paying spectator some of the benefits<br />

on offer to the ‘stay at home’ fan. There must be<br />

ways of incorporating pictures and sound consuls<br />

into the backs of seats at matches. By doing this<br />

fans at matches would get all the information,<br />

sound and pictures that they would get at home<br />

while being able to experience the genuine<br />

atmosphere and excitement of the live event.<br />

IT’S TUESDAY NIGHT and it’s cold…and raining.<br />

The food you’ve bought is also cold but the beer is<br />

strangely warm. The massive guy next to you more<br />

or less envelops your own seat and the stadium PA<br />

system is so distorted don’t know whether they’re<br />

announcing team changes or the outbreak of war.<br />

Oh…and on the field your team is getting<br />

slaughtered. Just what’s needed before a sodden<br />

trudge towards a 40 minute wait to get out of the<br />

car park before an hour-long drive home.<br />

Welcome to the wonderful world of live sports<br />

events. You get all this and the chance to pay<br />

upwards of $60 each for the privilege. Why wouldn’t<br />

you stay at home and watch in high-definition on a<br />

big screen with the help of expert commentators<br />

and pundits, action replays and all the other<br />

gizmos that make sport such compelling<br />

television? Who wouldn’t choose the couch, the<br />

remote and the fridge full of beer and snacks<br />

against this self-inflicted misery? What’s not to like.<br />

But let’s fast forward.<br />

Another Tuesday night and it’s cold and raining.<br />

The fat bloke next to you is still invading your space<br />

and the food is still rubbish. The PA’s not been fixed<br />

and there’s that tedious journey home to look<br />

forward to. But your team is winning…creaming it.<br />

Now the cold doesn’t matter and the food hasn’t<br />

actually killed you. You hug the fat guy and anybody<br />

else you can get hold of. You wouldn’t have missed<br />

this for the world!<br />

You were there and that’s what it’s all about.<br />

While it would be mad to suggest that the<br />

continuing attraction of sports events can be taken<br />

for granted, there is something very special about<br />

being part of the experience, of sharing moments<br />

of triumph or despair with other fans. It’s about<br />

being there when history is made, and when<br />

records are broken.<br />

And while the sports events sector clearly has<br />

work to do to enhance the live experience, they<br />

have one thing very much in their favour. It’s the<br />

passion, bordering on madness, of fans.<br />

THERE IS NO DOUBT that advances in technology<br />

are changing the way that live sport is viewed, but I<br />

believe the issue goes way beyond the introduction<br />

of 3D television and other breakthroughs.<br />

We live amid a whirlpool of change which<br />

is being felt across every aspect of our lives.<br />

Critically, we now have an ‘experience economy’ in<br />

which we don’t simply buy a car or a cup of coffee,<br />

we buy an experience.<br />

This means sports of all kinds have to establish<br />

themselves as a valuable and meaningful<br />

experience in the broader scheme of things,<br />

whether it is consumed on television, on a<br />

handheld device or at a stadium.<br />

And because consuming sport via various<br />

media has become so rich and immersive, those<br />

of us who operate in the live events business have<br />

to ensure that the experience we offer is distinct<br />

and memorable.<br />

In the past the received wisdom was that you<br />

couldn’t beat being at a major event because of<br />

the atmosphere. But that alone is not really<br />

enough any more.<br />

We have to offer a live experience that is built on<br />

a series of additional benefits for the stadium<br />

audience. That means bringing the crowd closer to<br />

the action by making sure that the technical quality<br />

and level of service delivered by stadium big<br />

screens is exceptional, by ensuring that the talent<br />

(competitors and management) make themselves<br />

more available before and after competition to<br />

engage with the crowd, and making sure that<br />

press conferences are shared with ticket holders.<br />

These are just a few of the things which could<br />

be done simply to give live events the intimacy<br />

that is achieved through the media and there are<br />

many other practical steps around seating,<br />

queuing, catering and transport which must also<br />

be addressed as the live events sector evolves.<br />

It is important that we get it right because I feel<br />

we are entering an era in which live events will<br />

become particularly important. With so much<br />

communication and conversation taking place via<br />

social networking sites, there is a growing<br />

appetite for opportunities for where these<br />

communities can meet face-to-face. Sports events<br />

have an opportunity to be an important part of this<br />

trend, but only if we ensure that the experience we<br />

deliver not only matches but exceeds expectations.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 81


THE WORLD’S 20 MOST INFLUENTIAL<br />

Promoters<br />

While promoters have long played a major role in sports, the dynamic of the job has changed<br />

notably from the earliest days when American fight promoter Tex Rickard was arranging bouts at<br />

Madison Square Garden for heavyweight Jack Dempsey. Today, promoters must move globally,<br />

think digitally and generate fans in the arena as well as eyeballs for TVs, movie screens, laptops<br />

and phones. Not surprisingly, these entrepreneurial ringmasters - some well known, some<br />

emerging - are masterful in their command of the corporate and spectator domain.<br />

SportBusiness<br />

<strong>International</strong>’s<br />

monthly take<br />

on the 20 most<br />

influential<br />

people or<br />

companies<br />

within specific<br />

sectors of<br />

sport...<br />

Bernie Ecclestone (Formula One)<br />

Not always loved nor fully<br />

understood, he has withstood<br />

all comers and challenges to<br />

his racing empire while keeping<br />

constructors and cities with skin in<br />

the game. His ability to attract cities<br />

like Singapore, Kuala Lumpur,<br />

Istanbul, Sakhir (Bahrain) and<br />

Shanghai showed he was one of the<br />

first promoters to fully grasp Asia’s<br />

enormous capacity and financial<br />

wherewithal. The fact teams now<br />

spend more than £105 million<br />

annually, sponsors queue up to<br />

underwrite teams and international<br />

drivers and cities virtually beg for<br />

the right to stage races is proof<br />

enough that a weekend with Bernie<br />

is still enormously relevant.<br />

Lalit Modi (Indian Premier League)<br />

Educated at Duke <strong>University</strong><br />

in North Carolina, Modi took<br />

cricket to record-shattering<br />

heights throughout Europe, Asia<br />

and Oceania before the Board<br />

of Control for Cricket in India<br />

(BCCI) suspended him in June<br />

over allegations of improper<br />

actions including corruption. Modi<br />

constructed lengthy management<br />

and broadcasting deals with<br />

companies such as IMG and<br />

World Sport Group then made<br />

sure world cricket’s superstars<br />

were paid handsomely to attach<br />

themselves to three editions of the<br />

IPL. That India is emerging as one<br />

of the true centres of the sporting<br />

universe is no longer a surprise<br />

to global practitioners. Modi’s<br />

suspension shouldn’t suggest he is<br />

finished as a promoter.<br />

The Singapore Sports Council<br />

Many cities have longed to emerge<br />

as sporting hubs but few have ever<br />

done more in a shorter length of<br />

time … particularly in a country<br />

that had long eschewed sport in<br />

favour of education and the arts.<br />

Singapore’s decision to re-invent<br />

itself through sporting events<br />

such as the annual Formula One<br />

race, FINA Swimming World Cup<br />

and the just-completed inaugural<br />

Youth Olympic Games is testament<br />

to the concept of city branding.<br />

Singaporean development of<br />

valuable real estate for sports<br />

venues and a willingness to test<br />

foreign concepts (such as joining<br />

the Australian National Basketball<br />

League) shows this council and<br />

its CEO, Oon Jin Teik, to be far<br />

ahead of the curve.<br />

David Stern and<br />

Heidi Ueberroth (NBA)<br />

How Stern and Ueberroth were<br />

not included on this list in 2009<br />

is a notable mystery and serious<br />

omission. The NBA commissioner<br />

has long understood the advantages<br />

of staging events in new markets<br />

and then distributing that product<br />

aggressively. From games in China<br />

to a burgeoning presence in India<br />

and the United Kingdom, Stern has<br />

demanded his organisation attract<br />

players (if not owners such as<br />

Russian tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov)<br />

from around the world, and then<br />

take the NBA’s product back to<br />

those breeding grounds. The NBA’s<br />

international acumen has been led<br />

by executives such as Ueberroth<br />

(president of NBA <strong>International</strong>)<br />

and Tim Chen (CEO of NBA China)<br />

and Ueberroth is already one of the<br />

most powerful women in sports.<br />

Her role will only grow in the<br />

coming years.<br />

Jeffrey Pollack and Grupo RBS<br />

(Professional Bull Riding)<br />

To some observers, this sport<br />

wouldn’t logically warrant a<br />

listing among the world’s top<br />

20 promoters. But to present<br />

a global list and not include a<br />

Brazilian promoter would be a<br />

travesty … particularly at a time<br />

when Brazilian sport is exploding<br />

through the acquisition of both<br />

the 2014 <strong>FIFA</strong> World Cup and 2016<br />

Summer Olympic Games. Pollack,<br />

the PBR’s chairman and former<br />

commissioner for the World Series<br />

of Poker and Grupo RBS, the sport’s<br />

Brazilian partner, have seen to it<br />

that hundreds of events are staged<br />

annually and they are doing so with<br />

the flare often associated with rock<br />

concerts and major fight cards.<br />

Rick Dudley (Octagon)<br />

Dudley’s name may not be on<br />

everyone’s lips but his stewardship<br />

of Octagon Worldwide, and<br />

promoters such as Phil de Picciotto<br />

(president of Octagon’s Athletes<br />

and Personalities), mean this<br />

Connecticut-headquartered outfit<br />

can suggest they are the world’s<br />

largest sports and entertainment<br />

sponsorship consultancy. And<br />

with the ultimate responsibility<br />

for representation of hundreds of<br />

athletes and celebrities, Dudley’s<br />

time at the NFL, MLB and NHL has<br />

served him well since taking over<br />

as CEO in 2003.<br />

ESPN (X-Games)<br />

To efficiently run a TV network is<br />

one thing. To invent sporting events<br />

that compete with the Olympics<br />

and nudge the <strong>International</strong><br />

Olympic Committee into bringing<br />

‘new’ sports like snowboarding<br />

into the fold is another. But ESPN<br />

hasn’t just developed content<br />

in the area of extreme sports.<br />

This American sports cable giant<br />

(the self-proclaimed “Worldwide<br />

Leader in Sports”) is constantly<br />

designing new channels such as<br />

ESPN 360 (or programming like the<br />

acclaimed 30 for 30 documentary<br />

series) and layering its offerings of<br />

print and internet journalism with<br />

international expansion and sportproduct<br />

creation.<br />

Paul Dainty (Dainty Consolidated<br />

Entertainment)<br />

His name won’t ring a lot of bells,<br />

but Australia’s Paul Dainty is<br />

rapidly building a diverse portfolio<br />

of sports (like WWE), concerts,<br />

exhibitions and special events. He is<br />

already one of the most influential<br />

players in Oceania’s booming live<br />

entertainment industry and has<br />

presented some of the biggest<br />

brands in the world including the<br />

82 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


Rolling Stones and Bon Jovi. He<br />

is also the co-owner and global<br />

promoter of the leading freestyle<br />

motocross brand, Crusty Demons,<br />

and is a co-founder and director<br />

in the rising Australian sports<br />

marketing agency Twenty3.<br />

Mike Helton (NASCAR)<br />

While the France family has<br />

rightfully been acknowledged in the<br />

past (for building America’s largest<br />

auto-racing circuit), it is now<br />

Helton who oversees a vast empire<br />

of race tracks, teams, drivers and<br />

media outlets that keep Americans<br />

connected to their cars. NASCAR<br />

boasts that more than 75 million<br />

attend roughly 1,500 NASCARsanctioned<br />

stock car races in<br />

the US, or watch the nearly 40<br />

televised ‘big’ races that comprise<br />

the Sprint Cup Series. Helton’s very<br />

firm hand on the NASCAR throttle<br />

means the France Family dynasty<br />

continues to expand (in more than<br />

140 countries) without missing a<br />

shifted gear.<br />

AEG (Various Sports)<br />

It was said in 2009 that AEG needed<br />

little introduction and that remains<br />

the case in 2010. This giant of the<br />

sports and entertainment world<br />

operates largely out of Los Angeles<br />

under the guidance of CEO/president<br />

Tim Leiweke who supervises the<br />

management (and promotion of)<br />

stadiums, arenas, theatres and<br />

events around the world. It is<br />

not enough to reference AEG’s<br />

operation of the Staples Center in<br />

LA and O2 in London since AEG, by<br />

its own admission, now owns more<br />

teams and events than any other<br />

company in the world.<br />

Simon Fuller (19 Management)<br />

Long associated with footballer<br />

David Beckham and tennis star<br />

Andy Murray, Fuller is never idle<br />

and has combined musician/athlete<br />

representation with event and real<br />

estate promotion to frequently take<br />

centre stage. His engagement of<br />

Major League Soccer commissioner<br />

Don Garber to deliver Beckham to<br />

LA Galaxy should warrant serious<br />

Promoter Hall of Fame votes.<br />

George Pyne (IMG)<br />

No list of legendary promoters<br />

is probably complete without a<br />

reference to IMG (with a tip of the<br />

hat to deceased founder Mark<br />

McCormack) and its current CEO<br />

George Pyne. Overseeing sports<br />

projects and offices in more than<br />

30 countries, IMG remains, despite<br />

past predictions of its demise when<br />

McCormack died, a vital and intuitive<br />

agency in 2010. If anything, IMG<br />

is again growing and undoubtedly<br />

taking market share from other<br />

agencies and promoters. If that is<br />

the case, give NASCAR-influenced<br />

Pyne (he was formerly chief<br />

operating officer) the credit.<br />

Barry Hearn<br />

Hearn made this list in 2009 and<br />

returns again as he keeps various<br />

niche sports like darts and snooker<br />

on the world sport radar. He<br />

long-ago made his mark in boxing<br />

but can also count football team<br />

ownership (Leyton Orient) and poker<br />

tournaments in his promotional<br />

portfolio. Having recently agreed<br />

to chair the World Professional<br />

Billiards and Snooker Association,<br />

he immediately promised to shake<br />

snooker to its well-entrenched<br />

roots. Have no doubt this wily<br />

veteran will capitalise on China’s<br />

potential while growing his<br />

respective sports in Eastern Europe,<br />

Scandinavia and South Asia.<br />

Peter Gilmour (Yachting)<br />

It seems unfair to list a man who<br />

not only can promote a sport (the<br />

ISAF’s World Match Racing Tour)<br />

but also win his own events or<br />

reflect on crewing in six America’s<br />

Cups (winning as coach in 2007<br />

with Alinghi). But that’s what WMRT<br />

acting president Peter Gilmour<br />

brings to the wheelhouse as he sets<br />

his sights on sailing to Philadelphia<br />

and the rest of the USA. The WMRT<br />

may not yet be the Volvo Ocean<br />

Race but give this Australian<br />

captain time to fully hoist his sails.<br />

Bob Arum (Top Rank)<br />

The long-time chairman of Las<br />

Vegas-based Top Rank controls<br />

the action on seven-division world<br />

champion Manny Pacquiao’s next<br />

fight (likely his second at the new<br />

Cowboys Stadium) against Antonio<br />

Margarito (assuming Margarito gets<br />

a license to fight in Texas). Arum<br />

has not always been everyone’s<br />

cup of tea and promoters like<br />

Don King, Dana White (UFC) and<br />

even HBO have all found reasons<br />

to bristle when Arum’s name is<br />

mentioned. Still, it can be argued<br />

that no fighter at the moment<br />

matters as much as Pacquiao.<br />

The NFL<br />

Given this league’s willingness<br />

to create shoulder programming<br />

events such as their Draft, player<br />

scouting Combine and Pro Bowl,<br />

let alone their own TV network, the<br />

NFL certainly warrants a mention.<br />

The only problem with listing this<br />

formidable league as a promoter is<br />

that it virtually requires the same<br />

treatment for the IOC, <strong>FIFA</strong>, UEFA<br />

and every major football league in<br />

Europe. Still, it is difficult to deny<br />

this titan of gridiron is pretty good<br />

at getting the word out into the<br />

sporting industry and beyond.<br />

Patrick Magyar (Athletics)<br />

Another repeat from 2009, the<br />

“Hardest Working Man in the<br />

Athletics Business” keeps the track<br />

and field world humming. The<br />

director of the Weltklasse Diamond<br />

League has kept Olympic stars<br />

hungry but also well compensated<br />

for years. And by keeping the<br />

best of the best on the track, he<br />

has helped keep athletics from<br />

being a ‘once every four years’<br />

consideration.<br />

Carmelo Ezpeleta (Dorna Sports)<br />

A recipient of Spain’s gold medal<br />

of Sporting Merit in May, Ezpeleta<br />

is the CEO of Dorna Sports, the<br />

rights holder to the MotoGP World<br />

Championships. It is a sport<br />

Ezpeleta is well familiar with having<br />

previously staged 10 MotoGP<br />

events at Jarama in Madrid. He has<br />

more than 30 years of motorsports<br />

experience and it’s long been<br />

suggested he holds a long-standing<br />

gentleman’s agreement with Bernie<br />

Ecclestone to ensure schedules for<br />

Formula One and MotoGP do not<br />

conflict. Dorna also holds the rights<br />

to Supercross GP and the British<br />

Superbike Championship.<br />

Vince McMahon (WWE)<br />

Chairman and CEO of World<br />

Wrestling Entertainment, McMahon<br />

is the man who has made things<br />

rumble in the pro-wrestling ring<br />

for just under 40 years. He is a<br />

true business descendant of the<br />

American legend Tex Rickard<br />

since Vince’s grandfather, Jess<br />

McMahon, served as a business<br />

partner in the 20s to Rickard.<br />

Since 1971, McMahon has done<br />

it all including serving as ring<br />

announcer and on-site promoter<br />

extraordinaire. He has built the<br />

wrestling game into a billion dollar<br />

business with broadcast deals in<br />

more than 100 countries.<br />

Kenny Huang<br />

Many have wondered about China’s<br />

emergence as a sporting power<br />

following the completion of the<br />

Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics. One<br />

of the questions was whether the<br />

Chinese government would allow an<br />

entrepreneurial promoter to thrive.<br />

Into that void stepped a number of<br />

players, the most notable of which<br />

may be Hong Kong billionaire<br />

Huang who, with his company QSL<br />

Sports, was until late August in the<br />

mix to purchase English Premier<br />

League’s Liverpool FC. It may be<br />

too early to suggest Huang will<br />

someday run with promoters like<br />

Ecclestone, Fuller and Hearn - but<br />

casual observers should not make<br />

the mistake of believing China<br />

and Huang are not rapidly moving<br />

forward in sports promotion.<br />

SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10 83


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84 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 09.10


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perforMance pr<br />

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Evaluating<br />

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86 sportBusiness international • No.160 • 09.10


classified www.sportbusiness.com/marketplace/organisations<br />

four coMMunications<br />

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iluka<br />

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DELIVERING<br />

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nottinGHaM trent university<br />

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sport driven ltd<br />

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sportfive<br />

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event ManaGeMent & corporate<br />

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dorna sports<br />

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event 360<br />

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HOSPITALITY PACKAGES<br />

from £125 per person<br />

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Sport Event Denmark<br />

The Danish national<br />

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established by the Danish<br />

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Danish Sports Organisations<br />

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Idraettens Hus<br />

Broendby Stadion 20<br />

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arcHitects, construction &<br />

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event scotland<br />

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Golazo<br />

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fast track<br />

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nussli Group<br />

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fei<br />

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iMG<br />

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populous<br />

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sportBusiness international • No. 160 • 09.10 87


www.sportbusiness.com/marketplace/organisations classified<br />

innovision<br />

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stats<br />

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kentaro<br />

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lord’s cricket Ground<br />

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playMaker<br />

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proske Group<br />

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sHeffield city council<br />

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sine qua non<br />

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sls Group<br />

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sport event denMark<br />

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sport event solutions<br />

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sportsMark europe<br />

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sportsWorld<br />

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clarke WillMott<br />

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davies arnold cooper<br />

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dorna sports<br />

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enGland & Wales cricket Board<br />

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sports apparel<br />

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production coMpanies<br />

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88 sportBusiness international • No.160 • 09.10


classified www.sportbusiness.com/marketplace/organisations<br />

Host Broadcast Services (HBS)<br />

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IMG<br />

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Mitsubishi Electric Europe<br />

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Sports Statistics & Information<br />

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• The only comprehensive single source of<br />

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SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No. 160 • 09.10 89


PEOPLE<br />

Who do you admire most in the industry?<br />

Lord Coe has to be right up there for what he<br />

has achieved as an athlete and for bringing the<br />

Olympics to London. Mark McCormack always<br />

impressed me when he built IMG.<br />

What have been the best moments in your career<br />

in the sport industry?<br />

As a player it was winning my singles match in<br />

Christchurch in the quarter-finals of the David<br />

Cup in 1981. I won from two sets to love down<br />

and we went on to beat New Zealand. Having<br />

two very successful outcomes from the TV<br />

negotiations for the RFL and Super League rates<br />

very highly for me as they were critical for the<br />

future of the sport at the time.<br />

LIFELONG ALL-ROUNDER<br />

Rugby Football League and Sport England chairman Richard Lewis<br />

reveals his expectations for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup and<br />

gives his view on the merger of Sport England and UK Sport.<br />

A former Davis Cup player and international<br />

tennis coach, Richard Lewis worked at the<br />

Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) from 1988 to<br />

2000 and was team manager when Great Britain<br />

won men’s doubles silver at the 1996 Atlanta<br />

Olympics. He joined the Rugby Football League<br />

(RFL) in 2002 as executive chairman<br />

and became chairman seven years later<br />

following his appointment as chairman of<br />

Sport England. Under Lewis, the RFL saw a<br />

174-per-cent rise in television revenue to<br />

£27.2 million in 2009 and a substantial increase<br />

in the number of people playing the sport -<br />

which now stands at around 60,000.<br />

How did you get involved in working within<br />

the business of sport?<br />

I first started importing tennis accessories when<br />

I was a player and felt I had some spare time on<br />

the tour. I loved working out profit margins and<br />

cold-calling sports shops in the area where the<br />

tournament was being held. After a successful<br />

playing and coaching career I joined the LTA as a<br />

director of junior tennis and the rest is history.<br />

What attracted you to sport?<br />

I have played sport all my life, captaining<br />

(football’s) London Schoolboys on a three-week<br />

football tour of America when I was 11 years old,<br />

before training with Tottenham Hotspur and<br />

then quitting football to concentrate on tennis.<br />

At school I was an all-rounder, half-mile county<br />

champion and district champion of high-jump as<br />

well as doing okay at cricket and rugby union. I<br />

just love sport, the competing, the social side, the<br />

opportunity it gives people to excel and improve<br />

their self worth - I could go on. I just think sport<br />

is as good as anything society has to offer.<br />

Who have been the biggest influences on your<br />

career so far?<br />

So many people I could name. The great<br />

Australian tennis coach Harry Hopman - I<br />

spent three weeks at his New York tennis camp<br />

and he helped me get back from one of my<br />

long-term injuries. I always appreciated his<br />

help at a time when I was down.<br />

Paul Hutchins at the LTA was another big<br />

influence, as my Davis Cup captain and as<br />

a successful businessman who had great<br />

organisational skills and high personal values.<br />

Above all though it has to be my parents, they<br />

let me make the choice between tennis and<br />

football and most crucially supported me when<br />

I left grammar school at 15 just to play tennis.<br />

It was a big risk.<br />

And the worst?<br />

Some people might expect me to say it was<br />

when I left the LTA but it never was remotely<br />

that - I had been wanting to leave for two years.<br />

Probably the worst as a player were my serious<br />

injuries that on two occasions sidelined me for<br />

a year. Most recently though it was England<br />

underperforming at the 2008 Rugby League<br />

World Cup, it would be good to put the record<br />

straight in 2013.<br />

What is on the horizon for you next at the RFL and<br />

Sport England?<br />

The 2013 Rugby League World Cup is a huge<br />

opportunity for the sport. I just hope the<br />

government get behind our World Cup and<br />

the other major events of the golden decade. It<br />

is one thing having the events - it is another<br />

thing altogether making them a success and the<br />

current economic climate could make for some<br />

very bad short term decisions if we aren’t careful.<br />

At Sport England we have just been given<br />

full responsibility for the community sport<br />

legacy for the 2012 Olympics. This is great<br />

news and allows for some very focused plans<br />

and activity. We are going to be announcing<br />

these at the end of the year and I am looking<br />

forward to us playing a really positive role<br />

around the 2012 Games.<br />

How do you view the proposed merger of Sport<br />

England and UK Sport?<br />

Undoubtedly merging two organisations<br />

with different cultures is a challenge. One is<br />

focused on a few (sports) and making sure<br />

they develop and deliver to their maximum in<br />

major competitions. The other is responsible<br />

for increasing participation, increasing<br />

opportunities for the masses to play sport and<br />

improving general coaching standards. And<br />

ironically both organisations are perceived to be<br />

really well run nowadays. Only last month the<br />

sports minister said the current management<br />

at Sport England had achieved a remarkable<br />

turnaround in only two years.<br />

90 SportBusiness <strong>International</strong> • No.160 • 09.10


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Jaime Alguersuari of Spain and Scuderia Toro Rosso retires from the race with an engine problem during the Hungarian Formula One Grand Prix at the Hungaroring on<br />

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103157494, Stu Forster/Getty Images<br />

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