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SURVEY SAYS SYDNEY AMBUSH EFFORTS ARE PAYING OFF

          Much to the "annoyance" of official Sydney Olympics
     sponsors Nike and Ansett, "shrewd marketing" by adidas and
     Qantas has "resulted in the average Australian incorrectly
     naming the companies as official supporters of the Games,"
     according to a survey of 1,000 people conducted in June and
     July by Australia-based Sweeney Research cited by Andrew
     Hornery of the SYDNEY MORNING HERALD.  The survey found that
     adidas ranked seventh and Qantas eighth among the top ten
     most-recognized Olympic sponsors, while Nike and Ansett
     placed sixth and third, respectively.  Sydney-based
     sponsorship consultant Kim Skildum-Reid: "Both Ansett and
     Qantas are enjoying the benefits of being associated with
     the Olympics but only Ansett had to pay the huge sum to be a
     sponsor.  I think a lot of sponsors have missed an
     opportunity and wasted a lot of money becoming sponsors." 
     Qantas, which ended its 40-year association with the
     Olympics after the '96 Atlanta Games, has signed "high-
     profile" Australian Olympic athletes like swimmer Ian Thorpe
     and runner Cathy Freeman (SYDNEY MORNING HERALD, 8/15).  The
     AUSTRALIAN's Michael McGuire noted the Sweeney survey shows
     that adidas is the company "most often connected to the
     Olympics outside of the official sponsors."  Sweeney Sports
     Dir Martin Hirons said that the survey showed the company
     had a "strong link with swimming and 'through the use of Ian
     Thorpe, they have been quite prominent'" (AUSTRALIAN, 8/15).
          RACY AT THE RACES: ADWEEK's David Gianatasio reports
     that the "latest national TV push" for John Hancock
     Financial Services, via Hill, Holiday, Connors, Cosmopulos,
     "includes a potentially controversial" ad featuring two
     women who adopt a baby.  The spot has been "teased" in the
     past week on NBC's gymnastics programming and will run next
     month on the net's Sydney coverage (ADWEEK, 8/14 issue).  In
     Ottawa, Melanie Brooks wrote that a "suggestive" Carlsberg
     beer ad "set to hit TV during the Olympics will be certain
     to raise a few eyebrows."  The ad shows "three attractive
     women sitting in a bar and talking about a man one of them
     is dating.  The other two are pumping her for details about
     the man's sexual prowess, and she gives the straight goods -
     - including a suggestive swooping motion with her hand,
     meant to demonstrate a sex act" (OTTAWA CITIZEN, 8/15).
           

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