Cape Times

Nike set to pip their archrival Adidas

US brand on track with sales up by 3%, while German juggernaut slumps by 5% during World Cup.

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IN A WORLD Cup brimming with upsets, Nike looks on track to defeat soccer juggernaut and archrival Adidas in the closely watched jersey sponsorshi­p battle.

The Nike Swoosh decorates the outfits of Brazil, France and England, the sides in the quarter-finals most favoured by betting websites to win the World Cup, plus Croatia.

Top German sports brand Adidas has Belgium, Russia and Sweden in the quarter-finals, with the group of eight rounded out by Uruguay, sponsored by Puma.

The combined accomplish­ments of Nike-sponsored teams in Russia mark a major success for the US sports apparel maker, as it pushes to increase global soccer-related sales that reached more than $2 billion

(R27.5bn) in fiscal 2018.

“While Adidas dominates the European leagues and the US profession­al league, certainly any market share that Nike can pick up in a nontraditi­onal US sport can only bode well for the stock price and brand,” said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Sports brands typically sell the bulk of their fan merchandis­e ahead of the World Cup, but a team’s success on the field can generate extra demand for gear emblazoned with its emblems and colours.

Nike kitted out more teams than Adidas for the first time in Brazil in 2014. Adidas fought back this year, sponsoring 12 of the 32 participat­ing teams, including strong early contenders Germany and Spain, along with host Russia.

Nike supplied shirts for 10 countries this year. The tournament took a disastrous turn for Adidas last Wednesday, with the unexpected eliminatio­n of 2014 champion Germany. Shares of Adidas, Germany’s team sponsor, fell 2.7 percent in the following session.

In 2014, Germany accounted for a third of Adidas’s about 9 million team jersey sales, Wedbush analyst Christophe­r Svezia wrote in a recent note, with an incrementa­l 10 percent of those sales resulting from Germany’s tournament victory. Over the weekend, high-profile Adidas-sponsored teams Argentina and Spain were eliminated. Likewise, Mexico lost to Nike-sponsored Brazil. Heading into this year’s World Cup, Adidas downplayed the sporting event’s potential effect on sales, pointing to Russia’s tepid economy.

But the World Cup remains a major marketing opportunit­y for Adidas, which is one of seven Fifa partners and the supplier of the World Cup match ball since 1970.

As well as team jerseys, sponsorshi­p of top individual players is crucial for the promotion of soccer shoes. Since the start of the World Cup on June 14, Nike’s stock is up almost 3 percent, helped by a strong quarterly report and sales outlook. Adidas has lost about 5 percent.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Russian coach Stanislav Cherchesov during training of the Russian World Cup team wearing Adidas branding.
PHOTO: REUTERS Russian coach Stanislav Cherchesov during training of the Russian World Cup team wearing Adidas branding.

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