I’m wondering if Americans will ever be as exuberant about a sport that originated offshore opening its season stateside as the Japanese are about MLB and Ohtani opening this season in Japan.Words of wisdom: “You will see that the aim of the game is to develop the man and not to make money or even […]
I’m wondering if Americans will ever be as exuberant about a sport that originated offshore opening its season stateside as the Japanese are about MLB and Ohtani opening this season in Japan.Words of wisdom: “You will see that the aim of the game is to develop the man and not to make money or even to draw a crowd.” — James Naismith, the inventor of basketballSubway spent on big player endorsements like Patrick Mahomes to support its NFL league deal Subway Football fans better get that footlong to go. Sources tell me that Subway, an NFL corporate sponsor since 2020, will not be renewing those pricey rights when they expire at the end of this month.
I’m also told that attempts are in process to sell NFL QSR rights to another brand — most likely sandwich shop Jimmy John’s (a longtime motorsports sponsor), with more than 2,700 stores across the U.S. (Subway has over 20,000). Jimmy John’s is part of the Inspire Brands family (that company, like Subway itself, is controlled by private equity firm Roark Capital). Other Inspire QSRs include Arby’s, Buffalo Wild Wings, Sonic Drive-In, Dunkin’ and Baskin-Robbins.Of note: the NFL also has restaurant-related deals with Applebee’s (casual dining) and Little Caesars (pizza).At Licensing International’s recent summit in NYC, SFIA Senior Director of Business Operations and Research Alex Kerman offered a number of predictions as an addendum to the organization’s industry-standard participation data.But Subway is a very different company now, even aside from the .5 billion acquisition by Roark in 2023. John Chidsey, CEO since 2020 (the first “outside” exec to head the chain) exited last year. Subway’s sales and the number of locations have been in a downward spiral — facts made even more evident by growth posted by similar chains like Jersey Mike’s. MLB’s bottled water sponsor, which changed its name to Primo Brands after a merger and going public last November, is adding a quartet of MLB players to its marketing mix this season.