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MIAMI EXHIBITION DEBUTS NIKE'S INTERNATIONAL SOCCER FEST

          The Brazilian national soccer team will play Mexico
     this evening at Miami's Orange Bowl, and the N.Y. TIMES'
     Richard Sandomir writes "this 'friendly' match with no
     consequences matters primarily to Nike, which is staging the
     game as a crucial element of its 10-year, $200 million
     sponsorship of the Brazilian team through 2006."  Nike will
     produce five exhibitions annually starring the Brazilian
     team called, "The Brasil World Tour presented by Nike Sports
     Entertainment."  Nike aims to make good on its $20M annual
     fee through gate receipts, TV rights and sponsorships. 
     Sandomir: "But the big payoff -- and there is one -- would
     come from spreading the well-spread Nike gospel into still
     more retail outlets internationally."   Nike Dir of PR Jim
     Small: "Soccer is the No. 1 priority in this company." 
     Sportstyle Editor Michael Jacobsen calls the approach "by
     far the most obvious example of Nike buying its way into a
     market.  It's the equivalent of the Nike sponsoring the
     [NFL]."  Asked by Sandomir if the arranged exhibitions could
     be seen as "contrived," Small says, "It would be contrived
     if the matches were not authentic, or the rules were changed
     in some way."  Tonight's game will be seen on ESPN2 in the
     U.S., and Nike made international deals with Brazilian and
     Mexican TV and other global carriers.
          HEADS UP? Sandomir reports that soccer currently
     accounts for 1% of Nike's footwear sales, and companies like
     adidas, Umbro, Puma, Lanzera, Reebok, Diadora and Mitre are
     "ahead of Nike in soccer merchandising and prestige."  But
     Brazil "was central to Nike's soccer-happy corporate
     strategy.  To Nike, the Brazilian team is, well, the Nike of
     soccer: the dominant brand" (N.Y. TIMES, 4/30).
          CORNER KICK: Nike has devoted its Web site at
     www.nike.com to the soccer match with the tagline, "What's
     it like to eat, drink and breathe ... Futebol" (THE DAILY).

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