Austin American-Statesman

NFL protests hurt business, Papa John’s CEO says

- By Craig Giammona and Eben Novy-Williams Bloomberg News

Papa John’s Internatio­nal Inc. founder John Schnatter is going after NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell, saying weak handling of the league’s national anthem controvers­y has hammered sales of his pizza.

“The NFL has hurt us by not resolving the current debacle to the players’ and owners’ satisfacti­on,” Schnatter, who serves as the pizza chain’s chairman and chief executive officer, said on a conference call. “NFL leadership has hurt Papa John’s shareholde­rs.”

The remarks follow a controvers­y over NFL football players protesting during the national anthem, a movement that started last season. The demonstrat­ions have sparked calls for a boycott and raised concerns among league sponsors. But Schnatter’s comments mark the highest-profile example of an NFL partner publicly blaming the outcry for hurting business.

Goodell, whose contract is up for renewal, has taken flak for not resolving the controvers­y more quickly. The flap has even drawn tweets from President Donald Trump, who called for owners to fire or bench players who refuse to stand during “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

“Leadership starts at the top, and this is an example of poor leadership,” Schnatter said.

Papa John’s shares fell the most in eight months Wednesday after third-quarter same-store sales missed analysts’ estimates. The Louisville, Ky.-based company also trimmed its revenue and profit forecasts for the year.

Papa John’s has been the NFL’s official pizza sponsor since 2010. Schnatter, who founded the company in 1984, donated to Trump’s campaign and has railed against government regulation­s.

NFL players began kneeling during the national anthem more than a year ago — starting with a protest against racial inequality and police brutality by Colin Kaepernick, then the quarterbac­k for the San Francisco 49ers.

The action spread across the NFL and got new life in recent weeks after Trump began criticizin­g the players.

Against that backdrop, ratings for the NFL are down this year. With fewer Americans watching games, fewer people are presumably ordering pizza — and seeing Papa John’s ads.

“This should have been nipped in the bud a year and a half ago,” Schnatter said on the call. “Like many sponsors, we’re in touch with the NFL. Once the issue is resolved, we’re optimistic the NFL’s best years are ahead.”

 ?? JOSHUA TRUJILLO / STARBUCKS ?? Starbucks said it started working on the design in January and decided to go with a color-in version because, it said, many customers liked to draw on them.
JOSHUA TRUJILLO / STARBUCKS Starbucks said it started working on the design in January and decided to go with a color-in version because, it said, many customers liked to draw on them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States