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Philadelphia Inquirer: Yao Ming a marketer's dream

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by lancet, Apr 4, 2003.

  1. lancet

    lancet Contributing Member

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    <b>Yao Ming a marketer's dream</b>
    By MARC NARDUCCI
    Philadelphia Inquirer

    PHILADELPHIA - Yao Ming has an all-star appearance on his resume, but the 7-foot-5 Houston Rockets rookie has already made bigger strides on Madison Avenue than he has in, say, Madison Square Garden or any other basketball mecca.

    While Yao brings an average of 13.7 points, 8.2 rebounds, 1.79 blocks and 29.2 minutes into Friday night's matchup at the First Union Center against the 76ers, his biggest impact has been in the marketing game. His size, his humble attitude and his ethnicity have made him a marketing machine.

    He has increased his world-wide visibility and marketability by starring in advertisements for Visa and Apple computers. During the all-star break, he shot a commercial for Gatorade.

    Yao, his name already a catch phrase in the States thanks to his popular "Yao? ... "Y"o!" TV ads for Visa, also has two endorsement deals in his homeland of China. One is with Sorrent, a company that develops video games for mobile phones and other wireless devices. The other is with a wireless provider, China Unicom. He is in the last year of a contract with Nike that predated his arrival in the United States but will expire in May.

    Yao signed a four-year, $17.8 million contract with the Rockets, a total that experts say will be slam-dunked by his endorsement income. Estimates of his income from marketing ventures this year alone fall in the $4 million-to-$10 million range.

    "It's hard to say how much he is earning, but the $10 million may be a little high and the $4 million sounds low," said Jon Mandel, co-CEO of New York-based MediaCom, one of the nation's leading media-services agencies, which is owned by the Grey Global Group. "If he is managed right - and so far it seems that he has been - then he can be huge (in the endorsement field)."

    Yao's marketing team, headed by Bill Sanders of BDA Sports in Walnut Creek, Calif., won't divulge any endorsement figures. A company official said that BDA is no longer giving interviews about Yao's marketing career and prefers to discuss only his playing career.

    Others say that BDA has Yao headed in the right marketing direction.

    "If you do too many brands, you become diluted," said Greg Sullivan, president of Sullivan Marketing, a sports marketing firm in Ormond Beach, Fla., that specializes in auto racing. "If you do ads for Bob's Car Wash, it's not impressive, and that's why it's important that he is lining up with quality brands."

    The NBA has benefited from Yao as well. While not the first NBA player from China, he is certainly the most prominent.

    Andrew Messick, the senior international vice president for the NBA, said that the league is close to announcing a new apparel deal in China. That means plenty of Yao Ming shirts to sell.

    As it is, the NBA is doing pretty good business in China in other areas. For instance, there are 14 different NBA television deals in China, up from five a year ago. The biggest carrier is CCTV, the government-run China Central Television, which airs an NBA game of the week.

    The NBA, which has been televised globally since 1987, is carried in 212 countries, in 42 different languages.

    "We're running out of countries," Messick said.

    While Messick is hesitant to give Yao the lion's share of credit, he acknowledges his world-wide impact.

    "Yao is emerging as a cultural icon for a number of reasons," Messick said. "The fact that he is from China ... and is very skillful and has a great personality (have) all contributed to his popularity," Messick said.

    The NBA truly has become a global league. As of March, there were 65 international players from 34 countries.

    Leading the way, at least in worldwide popularity, is Yao, who one day could approach the Michael Jordan stratosphere in the endorsement game.

    "The initial worldwide interest in Yao is as high as any player I've seen," said Terry Lyons, vice president for international public relations for the NBA.

    The key will be whether Yao is able to sustain the interest. Jordan wasn't an immediate marketing machine in the NBA, but he gradually built himself into the king of commercials. Sports marketers estimate that at his peak, Jordan was pulling in $40 million a year in endorsement income.

    "Michael Jordan didn't do everything (at once) for the longest time," Mandel said. "If you do a lot, you can lose your impact."

    Now Yao, who turns 23 in September, could be following the same trail. Jordan's popularity grew as his winning increased. Claiming six NBA titles didn't hurt his marketing appeal. Right now Yao and Houston are in a fight to earn the eighth playoff spot in the West.

    "Yao can have a successful marketing career even if he has a mediocre basketball career," Mandel said. "If he and the team continue to progress, then the sky's the limit."
     
  2. lancet

    lancet Contributing Member

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    <b>Sixers Gear Up For Yao and Rockets</b>
    April 3

    John Turner
    ComcastSportsNet.com

    Here's the scenario: The Sixers, after defeating the Chicago Bulls on Wednesday night, are just two games behind the Eastern Conference leading Pistons with eight games left to play. The top seed and home-court advantage throughout the playoffs are still well within their reach.
    "I think [winning the Eastern Conference] is important because we want home-court advantage," Eric Snow said. "Our fans are great. They'll be behind us. We are tougher to beat if we have home-court advantage."

    Unfortunately for the Sixers, their remaining schedule will not make their task an easy one. Their next four games will be extremely challenging as they play games against the Houston Rockets, Sacramento Kings, Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics. The Sixers have posted a combined 2-6 record against these teams this season.

    "Every game now is meaningful because we lost games early in the year," coach Larry Brown said. "We are fighting for playoff position. Even though we have only eight left, every game is huge. I think we have to understand that."

    Well aware of what is at stake, the Sixers are doing their best to focus on one game at a time. So for now, they're concentrating on Friday night's match up with the Rockets (36-35), who enter the game having lost four of five.

    In addition to its inconsistent play on the court, Houston has had to deal with off-the-court turmoil. Coach Rudy Tomjanovich was diagnosed with cancer on his bladder on March 18 causing him to miss the team's five-game road trip. On March 26, Tomjanovich announced that he would miss the rest of the season to receive treatment. In his absence, the Rockets are 3-7. They trail the Phoenix Suns by a 1½ games for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.

    "[The Rockets] are going through a tough time with Rudy not being there." Brown said. "I know how well liked he is with that club and how much he's meant to that franchise. It has to be a real difficult thing for them to be fighting for a playoff spot and be worrying about his health.

    "Everybody in the league cares about him and respects him and cares about him. I got to coach with him and the guy is a genius. I learned a lot being around him. He's such a nice guy. I can just imagine how players that play for him feel about him."

    Throughout the season, the Rockets have been led by Steve Francis, who leads them in scoring (21.5 ppg) and assists (6.2 apg) and is second in rebounding (6.2 rpg). In the Rockets' first meeting against the Sixers on Dec. 7, Francis was deadly from long range, connecting on 4-of-5 from behind the arc to lead all scorers with 20 points. He also chipped in a game-high seven assists as Houston pummeled the Sixers, 97-72.

    While Francis may bear the brunt of the offensive load for the Rockets, rookie center Yao Ming has dealt with the most media scrutiny.

    The hype, however, is well warranted.

    Yao's 8.2 rebounds per game are a team best and good enough for 17th in the NBA. He also ranks 15th among shot blockers with 1.79 per game.

    "Shaq is the most dominating center right now, but in a couple of years, Yao is going to be right there," said Kenny Thomas, who was a teammate of Yao's until he was traded to the Sixers in December.

    "Yao is proportioned like a guy who is 6-2," Brown said. "He's fast, he's got great skills and he's a really good kid."

    The Sixers may have some trouble containing Yao because of an injury to Derrick Coleman. The Sixers' center sat out of practice on Thursday with a right thigh contusion. He has missed two of the last three games including Wednesday night's victory over the Bulls. The Sixers plan to monitor Coleman over the next two weeks. He is questionable for Friday's game.

    Allen Iverson also sat out of practice on Thursday with left knee bursitis and Tyrone Hill was absent with a left rib cage bruise.

    The Sixers and Rockets will tip off at 7 p.m. on Friday.
     
  3. Texas Stoke

    Texas Stoke Member

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    "Shaq is the most dominating center right now, but in a couple of years, Yao is going to be right there," said Kenny Thomas, who was a teammate of Yao's until he was traded to the Sixers in December.

    darn, why didn't we keep this guy. We had our hard-nosed bruiser type forward all along and we gave him away. I admit, I didnt like the way Thomas was playing offense with Yao for awhile there, but now that I look at it, thats just the way the rest of the guys tend to play with a guy like Francis, Mobley, and Moochie running the show. I dont know what it is, but it seems that Francis and the rest of the guards have this divisive style of play about them and it tends to spread to their teammates. anyways we should of kept the guy.
     
  4. dttd888

    dttd888 Member

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    I hope you're not saying that just because he complimented Yao. From other threads, it seems the guy hates us, but that's beside the point. I think KT was just giving Yao his well deserved props, and speaking the truth about Steve's and Mobley's tendency to ball-hog. Trading KT was a great decision as far as I'm concerned. He constantly broke the offense down, worse than Moochie.
     
  5. Texas Stoke

    Texas Stoke Member

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    Is he breaking down Phillys offense. I mean I dont know, I havent really watched any of their games, but he seems to be really flourishing over there. Earlier this year when he was a Rocket maybe that wasnt really his style but maybe thats just the way our offense was designed with Francis as the initiator. Imnot sure, but Iverson and that system over their seems to be creating better or easier opportunities for him to score.
     
  6. dttd888

    dttd888 Member

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    Agreed, to be honest, i haven't seen too much of him over there, and what he is doing for that offense. But you have to admit, he did stop the movement of our offense often. He scored a bit, because he shot a lot. With the double teams that I'm sure AI attracts, KT better have some good looks to do some scoring in Philly. Overall, I liked KT's hussle, defense, and board work, but his offense just didn't gel with our supposed "team concept."
     
  7. mulletman

    mulletman Member

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    Sixers Gear Up For Yao and Rockets
    April 3

    John Turner
    ComcastSportsNet.com


    is this, by any chance, the same John Turner the rockets wasted a 1st round pick on?
     

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