The Borneo Post

Woods’ victory in Masters a win for golf business

-

AUGUSTA, United States: Tiger Woods’ victory at the Masters golf tournament on Sunday, his first major victory since 2008, is expected to lift sales for sponsors, broadcaste­rs and golf courses lucky enough to host a tournament with Woods playing.

The competitio­n put the 43-yearold back on top of a sport he helped transform 25 years ago.

“Tiger sells golf,” says Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, Inc., a Michigan analytics firm. Apex found that Nike earned US$ 22.5 million worth of brand exposure just from Woods’ final round, with Nike’s “Swoosh” logo splashed on his hat, shirt, pants and shoes. Nike stock was up about one per cent on Monday.

Tournament broadcaste­r CBS Corp saw a ratings bump.

Based on preliminar­y data, the final round of Sunday’s tournament was the highest-rated morning golf broadcast since 1986, when CBS started collecting that data.

The tournament, which is usually broadcast in the afternoon, was reschedule­d to the morning because of weather.

CBS has the rights to the PGA Championsh­ip in May and expects prices for advertisin­g time that is still available to rise as a result of Woods’ Masters victory, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The gol f demographi­c is wealthier and better- educated than other sports fans, so TV ratings are valued more highly because they’re more apt to turn into sales, even of big-ticket items, said Neal Pilson, president of Pi lson Communicat­ions and former president of CBS Sports.

“Historical­ly, events where Tiger Woods is on leaderboar­ds on Sunday generated 30 to 40 percent higher ratings in the United States for those tournament­s,” Pilson said.

Woods was a 20-year-old prodigy when he turned pro in 1996. Less than a year later he was ranked No. 1 in the world.

He struck lucrative endorsemen­t deals - including a five- year, US$ 40 million deal with Nike - and golf experience­d a surge in popularity.

Then Woods’ personal life collapsed and with it, his brand. In 2009, after the news of multiple infideliti­es, he lost endorsemen­t deals with companies like AT&T Inc and Accenture Plc.

Other sponsors, such as Procter & Gamble Co’s Gillette and Berkshire Hathaway Inc’s Net-Jets, kept their contracts with Woods but stopped using him in marketing.

Four back surgeries later, Woods continued to suffer profession­ally and in the public eye.

In 2017 police arrested him for driving under the influence; he pleaded guilty to reckless driving and entered a program for firsttime offenders.

In 2018 Woods began a profession­al comeback that culminated at Sunday’s Masters. After his victory, Nike, which stood behind Woods throughout his darker years, posted an ad on its website titled “Tiger Woods: Same Dream.”

“In sports you have heroes, villains and underdogs,” said Benjamin Hordell, founder of digital marketing and advertisin­g firm DX-agency.

“Tiger has lived all of it. That’s amazing from a story telling perspectiv­e. People will root against him, but they’re watching.” — Reuters

Tiger (Woods) sells golf. Eric Smallwood, president of Apex Marketing Group, Inc.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Woods is awarded the Green Jacket by Masters champion Patrick Reed during the Green Jacket Ceremony after winning the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. — AFP photo
Woods is awarded the Green Jacket by Masters champion Patrick Reed during the Green Jacket Ceremony after winning the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia