10 Jun Adidas and Nike jostle for edge at the World Cup
The competition on the pitch has yet to start, but the fight over World Cup consumers is already intense – and no more so than between the athletic companies that are jockeying for their once-every-four-years shot at the ever-growing worldwide soccer market.
The players, their boots and kits will be on display for billions across the globe over a monthlong window starting next week. Nike wants to make sure fans notice the swoosh. Adidas? Those three stripes. For Puma it’s that leaping cat.
“It’s the World Cup. It’s do or die. Win or go home,” said adidas merchandise manager Peter Hong, alluding to more than the on-field competition in Brazil.
The result is going to be an all-out blitz of advertising, social media, personalities and product that goes far beyond simply selling jerseys and cleats.
Nike is betting on its stable of stars and a good showing by Brazil. Adidas has the tradition, and they are the official World Cup sponsor through 2030. Puma wants you to remember the boots themselves, putting players on the pitch with different colors on each foot.
Nike is the world’s top athletic footwear, apparel and equipment company, but second-ranked adidas has always held tightly to the overall soccer market.
In recent years Oregon-based Nike has unabashedly challenged its German rival in the sector and hit nearly $2 billion in soccer-related sales last year. Adidas’ sales last year were estimated at about $2.4 billion, but the company is already experiencing a World Cup bump that the company hopes will push it to a record $2.8 billion.
Soccer has always been adidas’ baby: Founder Adi Dassler made the company’s first pair of soccer boots in 1925.
As World Cup sponsors, adidas has designed the ball for each one of the tournaments since 1970. This year’s multicolored edition is called Brazuca – which, according to adidas, has already well surpassed sales of the Jabulani ball from the last World Cup by 30 percent.
“This is where we put our stake in the ground and prove our domination in the market,” said Ernesto Bruce, director of soccer for adidas America.
Nike only entered the soccer market in 1994. The company has become increasingly adept at getting its name out there without being an official sponsor. Its latest campaign focuses on stars – most notably Cristiano Ronaldo – without ever mentioning the words “World Cup.”
“Although we’re not a sponsor of the World Cup itself, we connect where it matters – by partnering with clubs, federations, and elite and everyday players,” said Nike’s Dermott Clearly, global vice president and general manager for soccer. “Ten teams at the tournament will wear Nike on the pitch in Brazil, including the hosts, along with hundreds of the players who will wear Nike boots. We’re confident we will stand out on and off pitch better than any other brand.”
Ronaldo is considered the most marketable soccer player in the world, according sports marketing research firm Repucom. Globally, he has an astounding 83.87 percent name recognition. Lionel Messi, who is sponsored by adidas, is No. 2. Overall, Nike has six of the top 10 most marketable players, adidas has three and Puma has one.
As for the jerseys, Nike has designed the kits of 10 of the 32 national teams playing in the World Cup, more than ever before – and one more team than adidas. Puma has eight teams.
Andrew Walsh, the London-based director of enterprise services for Repucom, said adidas has an advantage in that it has always been associated with soccer – a sport steeped in tradition. Nike has chipped away at that with its strength at social media and “personality marketing” around the sport’s stars.
“As far as the World Cup itself goes, adidas’ position in the fold, I would argue, probably presents a stronger proposition,” Walsh said. “But that doesn’t mean that over the longer term, and there’s more of a slow-burn strategy, that Nike isn’t going to continue to make inroads into the soccer market.”
Adidas has unleashed its appropriately named World Cup “Battle Pack”: Four different boots that serve different types of athletes, adorned in black-and-white-print with yellow-orange stripes. Messi’s F50 has special Argentina blue highlights.
Nike recently unveiled unusual new Mercurial and Magista boots using the company’s ultra-lightweight fly-knit technology that basically look like socks with cleats attached. Ronaldo is going to wear the Mercurial Superfly.
Puma has only about 8 percent of the global soccer market, but that hasn’t stopped the German company from trying to make its own splash at the World Cup. The German company has a number of its athletes – including Spain’s Cesc Fabregas and Italy’s Mario Balotelli – wearing Puma Tricks, one pink shoe and one blue shoe.
Adidas has the most to lose, but their push for soccer domination won’t end when the World Cup is over: The company is already looking ahead to the women’s World Cup next year in Canada.
“We are under attack from many competitors. We have stayed true and authentic to our mission – which is to make the world a better place through sports,” adidas’ Bruce said. “Amid all the attacks, we continue to innovate, we continue stay confident and we continue to honor the game the best way possible.”
©2012 The Associated Press