The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Baseball looks to young stars to connect with fans

Nationals’ Harper, Angels’ Trout, Yankees’ Judge among those in the spotlight

- By Ronald Blum

Bryce Harper, Mike Trout and Aaron Judge have become the face of baseball as a gleaming, modernist ballpark and a city known for its Latino culture host the All-Star Game for the first time. After decades of falling behind, the sport finally has stepped up its national promotion.

There’s huge room for improvemen­t: Not one player from baseball is among the 100 most famous athletes in the world.

LeBron James, Tom Brady and Tiger Woods dominate water-cooler talk far more than Max Scherzer and Chris Sale, the starting pitchers in the July 11 game at Marlins Park.

“I feel he’s won 15 rings,” Harper said of Brady on July 10. “If you win, you’re going to get noticed.”

Major League Baseball hopes to break into a wider public consciousn­ess with this new generation — for the first time since at least 1961 there are no All-Stars with at least double-digit selections.

After Rob Manfred succeeded Bud Selig as commission­er two years ago, MLB required sponsors to market top talent. But the traditionb­ound sport is still trying to rebound from a quarter-century of labor wars that ended in the late 1990s.

“There is little doubt that top baseball players are less recognized than the top athletes in many other sports,” said Marc Ganis, president of the marketing company Sportscorp. “Basketball players and the NBA set many trends and are relevant in pop culture. NFL dominates in the U.S. and the secondmost popular sport is also football — college football.

“Baseball has the potential to be the cultural star in places like Latin America and Japan, where so many great players come from these days. But in the U.S. and in the Eurocentri­c, English-primary world, basketball, NFL, soccer, tennis and at certain times golf stars connect more with fans, especially younger fans, and sponsors who covet those fans,” he said.

Judge and hometown slugger Giancarlo Stanton headlined the Home Run Derby at 5-year-old Marlins Park, a sleek retractabl­e-roof ballpark with splashes of Joan Miro colors, a Red Grooms home run sculpture and a Clevelande­r

night club with a swimming pool just beyond the leftfield wall. MLB hopes to continue momentum from the Chicago Cubs’ first title since 1908, which drew the highest television rating for the World Series in a dozen years.

“We know that fans connect locally every day with the teams that they root for and love, and our job is to try to highlight the performanc­es to make it a national story as much as possible when we have that,” said Tony Petitti, MLB’s chief operating officer. “We were really fortunate last fall. We had an incredible national story in the Cubs.”

The league and many of its national sponsors are featuring players in marketing campaigns. Still, baseball players say athletes in other sports are seen far

more often in commercial­s.

Partly because of the busy schedule — 162 games in 183 days — baseball players don’t have much time for marketing during the season. And when it comes to viewers, clicks and retweets, MLB often lags in recent decades, when the NFL and NBA have connected far better with younger audiences.

ESPN’s 2017 ranking of the 100 most famous athletes, based on endorsemen­ts, social media following and internet search popularity, has Cristiano Ronaldo first, followed by James, Barcelona’s Lionel Messi, tennis star Roger Federer and golfer Phil Mickelson. Brady is the top NFL player at 21 after leading New England to five Super Bowl titles.

Equipment companies have a larger audience to sell basketball sneakers, tennis

equipment and golf gear than baseball spikes. Trout became the first baseball player since Ken Griffey Jr. to have his own signature cleat. In the same period, Nike has had 21 signature NBA players, and Bryant is Under Armour’s sole signature MLBer.

Jeff Berry, co-head of CAA Baseball, said the best marketing strategy would be for MLB and the union to work with businesses to fund an increase in scholarshi­p limits for NCAA Division I baseball (currently 11.7 per team) and softball (12). That would create a bigger audience from youth.

“The doomsday atmosphere has been around since I was a kid,” the 46-year-old Berry said. “Baseball doesn’t need to be cooler. It doesn’t need to be hipper. It doesn’t have to be more fast-paced.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge is one of the young stars MLB is promoting this season.
LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge is one of the young stars MLB is promoting this season.

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