SportsBusiness Daily — Sports Business Resources — your sports business news and information source. Learn More
Advanced
Home About Us Advertise With Us Marketplace/Classifieds College & University Program Subscribe/Trial My Account

Tuesday
June 9, 2009
Print This Issue


 
MOST VIEWED STORIES
View the top 20 stories
 
Recent Issues
Facilities & Venues

TD Ameritrade Inks Naming-Rights Deal For CWS Ballpark In Omaha

New Omaha Ballpark Hopes To Attract As
Many As 70 Events A Year, Including CWS
TD Ameritrade has "signed a deal that will put its name on the new 24,000-seat stadium in Omaha, Neb., that will house" the College World Series (CWS), according to Terry Lefton in this week's SPORTSBUSINESS JOURNAL. Sources "put the 20-year deal at about $750,000 a year, with annual escalators." The venue "hopes to attract as many as 70 events a year, with roughly half of them being the NCAA Division I baseball championship." The CWS "will move from Rosenblatt Stadium to the new field in two years." The naming-rights deal "includes signs, suite and club seats, additional tickets and hospitality, and the use of the facility for corporate events." Lefton notes the deal is "significant since it represents a naming-rights deal at a time when the market has soured, and one being done by a financial services company, most of which are under pressure to shed any marketing expenditures, especially sports marketing." TD Ameritrade's HQs are located in Omaha, and the deal was "largely done to demonstrate hometown support." Phoenix-based Gemini Sports Group (GSR) "negotiated the deal and will plan activation with agency of record status for TD Ameritrade." GSR President Rob Yowell: "Ideally, the College World Series will turn into a larger and longer event, a celebration of baseball and America, and TD will be a big part of that." Lefton notes TD Ameritrade's ad campaign with actor Sam Waterston is a "fixture on NFL and college sports telecasts, but this is the company's first sizable sports sponsorship" (SPORTSBUSINESS JOURNAL, 6/8 issue). Metropolitan Entertainment & Convention Authority President Roger Dixon said that TD Ameritrade will "pay an average of about" $1M annually over 20 years, though payments in the first years "will start around $750,000 and go up from there." In Omaha, Maggie O'Brien notes the city is "counting on revenues from the naming rights to help pay for the stadium's construction," and as the new home of the CWS, the ballpark's naming rights are "viewed as more valuable than stadiums built for a minor league team" (Omaha WORLD-HERALD, 6/9).

TICKET MASTERS: In Omaha, Dane Stickney reports the CWS for the first time this year is "taking part in the secondary ticket market, allowing what could be seen as NCAA-supported scalping." CWS season-ticket holders who "can't use their reserved seats can now sell them with the NCAA's blessing" through TicketExchange, a service supported by Ticketmaster. If the tickets are sold, the seller "gets a check, minus a 10[%] posting fee that's shared between Ticketmaster and the NCAA." CWS Ticket Chair Herb Hames said that the service is a "win-win because the site enables those with extra tickets a legitimate, sanctioned way to sell them to those who need tickets without including nonsanctioned brokers." Stickney notes "fewer than 60 total tickets were listed on the site" yesterday, and tickets "weren't available for many games, including the first two contests Saturday." The NCAA "uses similar Web sites to sell tickets to other events," including the Division I men's basketball tournament (Omaha WORLD-HERALD, 6/9).


Get A Free Trial To SportsBusiness Daily

Reader Comments

To post comments on this article, log in or register for a free trial.

Related Stories By Company Related Stories By Sport
San Diego State AD Jeff Schemmel Resigns
November 20, 2009 : SportsBusiness Daily

Boras, Manfred Talk About Finances Escalate
November 20, 2009 : SportsBusiness Daily

Selig: Concerns Around Economy Still Exist
November 20, 2009 : SportsBusiness Daily

MasterCard Present At WS DVD Premiere
November 20, 2009 : SportsBusiness Daily

Report: Minorities Not Getting Coaching Jobs
November 19, 2009 : SportsBusiness Daily

ALSO IN THIS SECTION


A Publication of Street & Smith's Sports Group.
Use of and/or registration on any portion of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (REVISED 2009-06-23) and Privacy Policy (REVISED 2009-06-23).

© 2009 Street & Smith's Sports Group and its licensors. All rights reserved.
The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Street & Smith's Sports Group.