The Selling the End Zone Dance Debate – The Ickey Shuffle… Brought To You By Dr. Pepper

November 17, 2009

Read the debate intro and the argument from Loyal Homer that the NFL is right to clamp down on fun players who allow companies to influence their end zone dances.



Hypocrisy, an American tradition. The NFL merchandises EVERYTHING. There is the usual fare like hats, shirts, jackets, and jerseys. It is possible to purchase key chains, imprint a team’s logo on a credit card, and even buy a topper for the car antenna. But, when players attempt to monetize something the NFL simply has not thought of and harnessed yet – like the end zone dance – the NFL squashes it. How dare a player come up with or participate in a great idea they financially benefit from – and the league does not. A travesty! Quick, shut it down, NFL. The No Fun League strikes again.

By now many of us are familiar with the story of Philadelphia Eagles tight end Brent Celek and his complicit participation in an end zone dance featuring the Captain Morgan signature pose. This is an incredibly smart marketing tactic from Captain Morgan and the brand’s advertising agency… guerilla marketing at its finest. The company correctly identified an entertaining pop culture commercial, targeted the right player to pull off the stunt (one that scores touchdowns and is on board with the idea), and developed a program that was so fun and interesting it was difficult to identify as an actual advertising campaign. Leave it to Buzz Killington, a.k.a. the NFL, to put the kibosh on fun.

The only way to improve this end zone celebration for Captain Morgan is if the team captain was the player striking the pose.

This type of end zone celebration is good for the league, too. Subtlety makes good advertising great. Audiences appreciate ads that demand interpretation. No, not every viewer of an NFL football game will understand the meaning behind the celebration, just like not every consumer grasps the various idiosyncrasies of Apple ads. Viewers appreciate a brand more when they are forced to uncover meaning and feel as though they are in on the inside joke. It is an example of basic targeted marketing, and NFL should embrace it.

As a person with some experience in marketing communications, it pains me to see the NFL treat this idea and execution with such disdain. Talk about a victimless crime! The player and the brand had some fun and gained a few headlines. It is not as if the NFL does not believe in alcoholic beverages being associated with the league (see the 400+ Bud Light and Miller Light ads during each game). Put simply, there is no reason for the NFL to squash this idea – other than the fact that it did not think of it first. Perhaps the NFL will re-launch the idea officially sanctioned by the league, with no money offered for players.

The end zone celebration should be for sale as a fun way for players to earn some notoriety and money in the league. The league can put some rules around what is permissible and what is not. However, the idea behind banning excessive end zone celebrations is because they are disrespectful to the opposing team. The thinking behind the end zone celebrations should change from unsportsmanlike to an occasional advertising model they becomes a must watch part, clever part of the NFL experience.

I encourage players (I am talking to you, Chad Ochocinco) to try and develop campaigns and continue this trend, regardless of what the muckity-mucks in high rises in downtown Manhattan think. Provided campaigns stay guerilla in nature, remain good ideas, and are not over used (e.g. the same overtly paid for dance each time a player scores… during a game where they just so happen to score five touchdowns) players should continue to make a few bucks on the side promoting their favorite products. Or maybe a loosely governed NFL ban may make these end zone dances even better. The breaking of the rules makes the celebrations even more enticing and daring… and legendary.

The Captain Morgan’s end zone dance example is not an example of a slippery slope, either. The celebration had enough of the cool factor to be warmly received by fans. If players start whipping out flags or wearing sandwich boards over their jerseys, then fine away. But, the same league that permits paid advertising patches on training camp jerseys cannot ban branded end zone dances.

If the NFL takes a hard-line stance against this and levies massive fines for each player caught “touchdownvertising,” I have just one thing to say to them: Child, please.

My Zimbio Blog Directory Sport Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
Add us to your technorati favorites Digg!
Bookmark and Share


The NFL Head Coach Hot Seat, Training Camp Edition – Who Dey… Think is Going COACH the Bengals?!

July 24, 2009

Read Sports Geek’s argument that Brad Childress has the most pressure to perform early, and Loyal Homer’s argument that Wade Phillips is the man in the crosshairs.



I feel like a kid trying to go to sleep on Christmas Eve! We are just a few short days away from the opening of NFL Training Camps, and while the old adage that ‘every team is undefeated’ may hold true for now, there are several coaches in the league who already find themselves on the “hot-seat.”

Loyal Homer will argue that Wade Phillips of the Dallas Cowboys is the man with the target on his back, and Sports Geek will argue that it is Brad Childress whose head is first on the chopping block.

As for Bleacher Fan, I believe it is Marvin Lewis of the Cincinnati Bengals whose number has finally come up!

The fact that he’s been able to avoid speculation this long is astonishing to me. Let’s be honest, it’s not like the Bengals were a well regarded team when he took over the reigns from Dick LeBeau in 2003, but to say that the team has actually REGRESSED under Lewis’ tenure is a dubious honor that I’m sure he won’t be writing home about any time soon!

Sure, his first three seasons with Cincinnati showed promise. He took the team from a 2-14 record in 2002 and turned in records of 8-8, 8-8, and then 11-5 respectively. The 2005 season also marked the first division championship AND playoff appearance for the Bengals in 15 years. Things were looking promising for Lewis.

Something changed, though, following the knee injury to Carson Palmer in the 2005 Wild-Card game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Bengals came into the 2006 season full of promise, but that promise never materialized into success.

Their records for the following three years plummeted, dropping from 8-8 in 2006 to 7-9 in 2007, before finally bottoming out at 4-11-1 last year. All told, in six seasons as the Bengals head coach, Marvin Lewis has only turned in one season with a winning record, and his career record in Cincinnati is 46-49-1 (.486).

Accompanying that severe decline in performance came a string of legal charges against players within the Bengals organization that made Lewis look like the NFL’s real life version of Nate Scarborough. Then came the icing on the cake – Chad Johnson (I refuse to call him by his “new” name). I will give the man his due, he is a top-tier receiver, but he has turned his existence in the NFL into a media circus that has created far more controversy than it has touchdowns. Between the off-field drama around Johnson’s “happiness” with the organization, and his antics on the field, he has become more of a distraction than anything else.

So where does that leave Marvin Lewis? When you consider the personnel issues, compounded by the lack of success on the field DESPITE having players like Carson Palmer, Chad Johnson, and T.J. Houshmandzadeh (who isn’t even a Bengal anymore), it gives off the appearance that Lewis has zero control over the players within his organization. He comes off as a hapless victim, rather than the leader of a professional football team.

Fast forward to the 2009 season, and this year’s training camp… what is Lewis’ solution to these problems? He welcomes even greater public scrutiny by allowing his Bengals to be the focal point of the HBO mini-series Hard Knocks. That means that every decision he makes in the preseason, and every incident that occurs during training camp, will not only be scrutinized by Bengals fans, beat-reporters, and the Bengals organization, but will actually be scrutinized by a national television audience!

How has that worked out in the past? During the return of the series in 2007, the show watched Herm Edwards as he led the Kansas City Chiefs to a record of 4-12 (Edwards was subsequently fired in early 2009). In 2008, the series travelled to Dallas, where they witnessed the preseason hype around the Dallas Cowboys, preseason favorites to be NFC Champions, and who subsequently melted down mid-season and missed the playoffs altogether. Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips barely escaped the season with his job, and his job-security is still very tenuous, as Loyal Homer points out in his argument today.

Between the increased public scrutiny over his every move in this pre-season, the inability to maintain control over the players within his organization, and the abysmal performances turned in on the field over the past three seasons, Marvin Lewis will need to come out of the gates with guns blazing if he wishes to stay employed in the Queen City much longer.

My Zimbio Blog Directory Sport Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
Add us to your technorati favorites Digg!


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.