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ONE YEAR LATER, OLYMPIC STARS SEARCH FOR MARKETING GOLD

          One year after the Atlanta Olympics, NEWSWEEK's Mark
     Starr examines the endorsement success of the Games' top
     U.S. medal winners.  Starr: "[T]he modern Olympics are so
     vast and overhyped that inevitably there is never enough
     money to go around."  Kerri Strug, the hero of the U.S.
     Women's Gymnastic team, was one of the most visible in the
     post-Atlanta marketplace.  Strug's agent, Leigh Steinberg:
     "Our goal was not to oversaturate, not for her to be a star
     who flamed out.  We could have booked her every hour of
     every single day."  But Olympic decathlon gold medalist Dan
     O'Brien is "disappointed" by his endorsement track record
     after Atlanta.  Starr: "The Olympics gave him only a 'bump
     up' to the high six figures without producing any lucrative
     new deals."  Gold Medal Management's Brad Hunt, the agent
     for O'Brien and Michael Johnson, says that "the year before
     the Games can be far more important commercially than the
     year after, there is far more excitement anticipating the
     Olympics ... than recalling them."  That is why "virtually
     all" of Johnson's current corporate ties were established
     during the 12 months before Atlanta (NEWSWEEK, 7/21).
          WOMEN'S DAY: At Atlanta, Nike "recognized that women's
     sports were finally coming of age" and had deals with
     Olympic stars Sheryl Swoopes and Mia Hamm.  Starr adds that
     "thanks to their Olympic prominence, [Nike] now promotes
     them more aggressively."  Starr: "In an era of overkill,
     there are Olympic stars, but not Olympic immortals.  New
     ones come along every two years.  Before Atlanta, there was
     Dan Jansen, and in just eight months, there will be Michelle
     Kwan or Tara Lipinski" (NEWSWEEK, 7/21 issue).

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