PDA

View Full Version : UFC sponsors



GeneChing
12-02-2014, 11:46 AM
This could definitely elevate the status of MMA alongside other pro sports.



UFC names Reebok official supplier (http://espn.go.com/mma/story/_/id/11967611/ufc-announces-reebok-exclusive-uniform-supplier-commercial-outfitter-6-year-partnership)
Updated: December 2, 2014, 1:19 PM ET
By Brett Okamoto | ESPN.com

The UFC announced a six-year partnership with Reebok on Tuesday, naming the sports apparel company its exclusive uniform supplier and commercial outfitter.

Financial terms of the deal, which goes into effect July 6, 2015, were not disclosed. UFC CEO Lorenzo Fertitta stated it is "the biggest non-broadcast partnership our company has ever signed."

The announcement is a landmark in mixed martial arts and the first of its scope in combat sports. The deal will eliminate independent sponsorships in the UFC's Octagon, which athletes have long relied upon to supplement fight purses.

http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2014/0708/mma_g_dwhite_cr_300x200.jpg
Isaac Brekken/Zuffa LLC/Zuffa LLC/Getty ImagesUFC president Dana White said that the organization is "investing in the fighters" through its six-year partnership with Reebok.

Fighters no longer will be permitted to wear independent sponsorships during a fight or the promotion leading up to it, but can maintain sponsorships outside of events.

UFC president Dana White told ESPN.com that all initial profits from the rights agreement will go directly to the approximately 500 rostered athletes.

"There are some costs associated with running this, but other than those costs, every dime of this deal goes to the fighters," White said. "This isn't a six-year money grab. This is a long-term relationship we've created with Reebok. We're investing in the fighters, they're investing in the sport. It makes all the sense in the world to get the fighters invested in this thing."

The pay structure will allocate funds per fight, based on a tiered ranking system. Champions will receive the largest payment, followed by fighters ranked Nos. 1-5, 6-10, 11-15 and unranked. UFC's official rankings are voted on by media outlets and are overseen by the company. ESPN.com does not vote in the UFC rankings.

"We've done a lot of research over the last two or three years, trying to understand where the open market place is for fighters in various positions," Fertitta said. "Where they're ranked, where they're fighting on the card -- how do sponsors determine [worth]? We feel like we've created a program that will pay them at least as much, and in some cases more than what they are currently making."

In addition to per-fight payouts, UFC fighters will receive 20 percent of any merchandise sold with their name or likeness. According to Fertitta, that will include currently retired fighters who inspire customized lines.

"They will receive royalties on apparel sold," Fertitta said. "Certainly that would include for the rest of their life, so it becomes a revenue stream for them. There are plans to bring back 'legends of the sport' -- guys that are already retired. We will create kits for them."

The deal will also mark the end of fighter banners in the UFC -- which are traditionally carried to the Octagon by an athlete's cornermen and hung behind them during introductions. Cornermen also will be required to wear Reebok.

The UFC may still negotiate event sponsors, which would receive key advertisement placement on fighter uniforms during a specific event. White stated the number of event sponsors in such capacity would never exceed one.

"The reason we're doing this is to continue to do things and implement things to elevate the level of the sport and really take it in a place where other major league sports are," Fertitta said.

"This is no different than any other major sport. You can't just run onto the field or basketball court with whatever sponsors you want. It just doesn't work that way and we're now at that level."

Uniforms will be mostly standardized but should allow for individualism, according to Fertitta.

Reebok is expected to unveil numerous designs for fighters to choose from in the spring.

The deal gives Reebok, a subsidiary of Adidas, a bigger stake in what it calls the tough fitness business. In recent years, it has associated itself with CrossFit and Spartan races.

Reebok president Matt O'Toole said Tuesday that the company believes there are 35 million people training like a fighter.

Aside from outfitting fighters, Reebok is creating a whole line of shoes and apparel for this sector.

ESPN.com's Darren Rovell contributed to this report.

Stickgrappler
12-03-2014, 08:27 AM
WOW! with official sponsorship, some of the less fortunate rostered athletes with little outside sponsorships will be able to concentrate on training now

GeneChing
07-21-2015, 10:42 AM
I'm going to split this into its own thread now. It doesn't really fit on the UFC gets Bigger !! (http://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?59993-UFC-gets-Bigger-!!) thread anymore.


10 July 2015 - 4:06pm Updated | posted by Tony Connelly
All eyes will be on Reebok this weekend following its $70m sponsorship with UFC (http://www.thedrum.com/news/2015/07/10/all-eyes-will-be-reebok-weekend-following-its-70m-sponsorship-ufc)

http://www.thedrum.com/uploads/news/tmp/111981/ufc-fight-kit-fighters.jpg
All eyes will be on Reebok this weekend following its $70m sponsorship

Reebok’s $70m exclusive sponsorship deal with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) will be on the world stage for the first time this weekend for what is expected to be the highest grossing pay per view (PPV) event in the sport's history, a move that marks a milestone in the rebirth of the once-troubled brand.

On Saturday, Reebok’s partnership with the UFC will be up and running at UFC 189 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The deal could not have come at a better time for the apparel brand with the event expected to break the previous UFC PPV record of 1.6 million views. After generating $7m in ticket sales it has already smashed all previous gate records and has led the sport’s president, Dana White, to state that the event will “set the all-time gate record for a mixed martial arts (MMA) event on American soil”.

The success of the upcoming event is down to the headlining fighter, Conor McGregor, himself a Reebok sponsored athlete who not only wears the brand while training and fighting but also has a line of exclusive merchandise in his name.

http://www.thedrum.com/uploads/styles/article_498/public/conor_0.jpg?itok=rlH6CsZO

Similar promotions could be on the way with the key part of Reebok’s UFC deal ensuring that every fighter wears a Reebok kit while fighting in the octagon.

The scope of such a deal marks a major milestone in the brand’s marketing strategy and one that it stands to “benefit hugely from” according to Joel Seymour-Hyde, vice president of strategy at sports marketing firm Octagon.

No sport’s popularity has exploded like the UFC’s has in recent years and so Reebok has entered at the perfect time; the sport is hugely popular and will continue grow given the global success which has resulted in sold-out events throughout the US and the UK as well as the rest of Europe and South America.

The $70m fee for the exclusive sponsorship also represents good business for the sport apparel firm. Seymour-Hyde points out that “on the grand scheme of things, $70m isn’t that much for a kit deal when you consider the sums of money the likes of Adidas pay for a similar agreement".

The match works well for both, aligning their similar propositions of challenging their industry’s norms and being somewhat controversial. The UFC isn’t universally lauded in the sporting world the same way football is. The company is still prohibited from operating in the state of New York and Joel says that “Reebok’s image is more provocative than that of Adidas and Nike. Past deals including one with 50 Cent show this kind of approach”.

Marketing its brand in tough sports based on extreme fitness means Reebok is avoiding going head-to-head with the likes of Nike, which replaced it as the NFL’s kit supplier, and can also cement its brand identity in a realm where it receives a lot of attention. It already has exclusive sponsorship deals with Spartan race and CrossFit so the UFC deal fits into its marketing.

Antony Marcou, CEO of Sports Revolution, said the deal is “closer to the Red Bull strategy of owning events and teams” and believes that “as a challenger brand Reebok needs to think differently". He added that “the reality is that the big apparel brands have most of the big sports sewn up, so challengers need find different ways to break through".

Independent Sports Consultant Nigel Currie also sees the partnership as a perfect match because the UFC “is a big sport and it’s not without a bit of controversy either so it wouldn’t really suit the other brands like Adidas which have a squeaky clean brand that aligns itself with more traditional sports.”

The success of the partnership could contribute to Adidas’ decision on whether or not to sell Reebok, which it bought for $3.8bn in 2005 in order to expand its market in the US. In May this year Business Insider reported that Daniela Bergdolt, vice president of Germany's largest association for private investors, Deutsche Schutzvereinigung fuer Wertpapierbesitz, called on Adidas to sell Reebok.

Adidas chief executive Herbert Hainer, who was the architect of the Reebok acquisition, said it would be wrong to sell the brand now it was growing again, especially given the booming popularity of fitness.