by One87One » 18 Jul 2019 11:17
by Hendo » 18 Jul 2019 11:39
One87One Away kit is black and red, red badge.
by paultheroyal » 18 Jul 2019 12:36
One87OneHendo Its different, I'll give them that
Although if you look at it, without the massive logo, it would probably be a very nice looking kit.
It’s a wind-up. It breaks all sponsor logo rules. It’s just PaddyPower doing what they do best.
by One87One » 18 Jul 2019 12:46
by Hendo » 18 Jul 2019 12:48
One87One It's a typical Paddy Power publicity stunt. It's a friendly. You can wear what you want.
FA regulations clearly state a playing kit is only permitted to have "one single area not exceeding 250 square centimetres on the front of the shirt".
Huddersfield have said it will be their home kit for the upcoming season and confirmed it will go on sale on Saturday.
by Green » 18 Jul 2019 12:49
Winston Biscuitdizzynewheights well yes but getting a better rate =/= paying a premium which was the point previously being made
Anyway, I've done some research through some unashamedly ITK pals and as I now understand it there's no such late/early premium anyway. These contracts work as so:
[*]Kit manufacturer (KM) provides £X in value in kind of kit/training gear to club. The value of the kit is detailed within the contract but is usually 50% of the retail value
[*]KM will pay the club a % of revenue of kit sold outside of the clubs own means (i.e. the megastore) - usually about 30%
[*]The club will typically have a purchasing obligation over and above the value in kind for which the % bonus also applies
[*]A critical path will be detailed with the contract stipulating deadlines for design work, samples, delivery d8s and so on - as I understand it, the KMs understandably prefer getting the orders confirmed early - and certainly wouldn't look to provide any kind of financial incentive to leave it l8.
Obvs this isn't how your Man Utds and your Real Madrids do things but for a club like Reading this would be pretty standard
KM's typically take around 90% of shirt sale revenue generated. The cubs make their money on the kit deal and sponsorship of the shirt rather than the actual shirt sales.
by muirinho » 18 Jul 2019 15:34
Winston Biscuitdizzynewheights well yes but getting a better rate =/= paying a premium which was the point previously being made
Anyway, I've done some research through some unashamedly ITK pals and as I now understand it there's no such late/early premium anyway. These contracts work as so:
[*]Kit manufacturer (KM) provides £X in value in kind of kit/training gear to club. The value of the kit is detailed within the contract but is usually 50% of the retail value
[*]KM will pay the club a % of revenue of kit sold outside of the clubs own means (i.e. the megastore) - usually about 30%
[*]The club will typically have a purchasing obligation over and above the value in kind for which the % bonus also applies
[*]A critical path will be detailed with the contract stipulating deadlines for design work, samples, delivery d8s and so on - as I understand it, the KMs understandably prefer getting the orders confirmed early - and certainly wouldn't look to provide any kind of financial incentive to leave it l8.
Obvs this isn't how your Man Utds and your Real Madrids do things but for a club like Reading this would be pretty standard
KM's typically take around 90% of shirt sale revenue generated. The cubs make their money on the kit deal and sponsorship of the shirt rather than the actual shirt sales.
by Winston Biscuit » 18 Jul 2019 15:40
by NewCorkSeth » 19 Jul 2019 09:25
HendoOne87One It's a typical Paddy Power publicity stunt. It's a friendly. You can wear what you want.FA regulations clearly state a playing kit is only permitted to have "one single area not exceeding 250 square centimetres on the front of the shirt".
Huddersfield have said it will be their home kit for the upcoming season and confirmed it will go on sale on Saturday.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/49026053
by One87One » 19 Jul 2019 09:41
by Hound » 19 Jul 2019 10:12
by NewCorkSeth » 19 Jul 2019 10:39
Hound yeah its great. How bloody weird the whole thing is, but its certainly done its job
by Hound » 19 Jul 2019 10:55
NewCorkSethHound yeah its great. How bloody weird the whole thing is, but its certainly done its job
Clever marketing. They were well aware about fans attitudes towards both large sponsorships and betting sponsorships. The mislead itself would have somewhat mitigated the overall sponsorship if they did put a logo on the shirt. The decision to not put a logo on the shirt is a hugely popular decision and everyone will know Paddy Power is the sponsor despite the invisibility. Clever.
by One87One » 19 Jul 2019 11:06
NewCorkSethHound yeah its great. How bloody weird the whole thing is, but its certainly done its job
Clever marketing. They were well aware about fans attitudes towards both large sponsorships and betting sponsorships. The mislead itself would have somewhat mitigated the overall sponsorship if they did put a logo on the shirt. The decision to not put a logo on the shirt is a hugely popular decision and everyone will know Paddy Power is the sponsor despite the invisibility. Clever.
by NewCorkSeth » 19 Jul 2019 11:18
One87OneNewCorkSethHound yeah its great. How bloody weird the whole thing is, but its certainly done its job
Clever marketing. They were well aware about fans attitudes towards both large sponsorships and betting sponsorships. The mislead itself would have somewhat mitigated the overall sponsorship if they did put a logo on the shirt. The decision to not put a logo on the shirt is a hugely popular decision and everyone will know Paddy Power is the sponsor despite the invisibility. Clever.
Very clever indeed, and it may influence other better firms to not have their logo across the shirts in future - we hope.
by From Despair To Where? » 19 Jul 2019 11:55
One87OneNewCorkSethHound yeah its great. How bloody weird the whole thing is, but its certainly done its job
Clever marketing. They were well aware about fans attitudes towards both large sponsorships and betting sponsorships. The mislead itself would have somewhat mitigated the overall sponsorship if they did put a logo on the shirt. The decision to not put a logo on the shirt is a hugely popular decision and everyone will know Paddy Power is the sponsor despite the invisibility. Clever.
Very clever indeed, and it may influence other better firms to not have their logo across the shirts in future - we hope.
by CrowthorneRoyal » 19 Jul 2019 14:09
NewCorkSethOne87OneNewCorkSeth Clever marketing. They were well aware about fans attitudes towards both large sponsorships and betting sponsorships. The mislead itself would have somewhat mitigated the overall sponsorship if they did put a logo on the shirt. The decision to not put a logo on the shirt is a hugely popular decision and everyone will know Paddy Power is the sponsor despite the invisibility. Clever.
Very clever indeed, and it may influence other better firms to not have their logo across the shirts in future - we hope.
One can only wish. I still kinda hope our Casumo marshmallow man makes an appearance somewhere. Either one of those inflatable sumo suits as a new mascot or they make some football gifs for use during games.
by Snowflake Royal » 19 Jul 2019 17:14
Hendoroyalp-we We are just not very organised behind the scenes. I was at the stadium yesterday and a contractor was pulling down the huge Puma logo from the ED stand. We announced the Macron deal in April; and we play Posh in 7 days time
.
Maybe that was the earliest opportunity the club had to do it, taking in:
- availability of contractor/stadium staff
- when the new logo had been made
- council were happy with H&S paperwork
What’s the point of putting a massive sponsorship logo on a stadium 2 months before anyone’s going to see it?
by Yellowcoat2 » 19 Jul 2019 17:49
by Nameless » 19 Jul 2019 19:27
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