Adidas and Puma eye chances in soccer’s fashion moment
Reuters API
Sportswear brands like AdidasPumaWorld Cup
With celebrities like Kim Kardashian
“The love-in between football and fashion is only just beginning,” said Richard Busby, CEO at sponsorship consultancy BDS Sponsorship.
The Women’s World Cup showed there is huge unmet demand for soccer-related merchandise for women: Nike
But the trend extends to fashion-conscious fans of both sexes, Busby said. “Premiership clubs have a lot of wealthy supporters but very few of the items they sell appeal to them, whether men or women.”
Second-division Greek football club Athens
The ranges are designed to appeal beyond a club’s traditional fan base.
Kardashian has been spotted wearing vintage Roma and Paris Saint-Germain shirts, while 20-year-old model Mia Regan paired an Arsenal shirt with a long denim skirt and boots at a Paris Fashion Week
In August, Crystal Palace hired Kenny Annan-Jonathan as creative director focused on apparel. He is expected to expand the range of clothing offered by the Premier League club.
Hype
Adidas and Puma have long been associated with streetwear and pop culture.
But with the German companies each spending two-thirds of their annual sponsorship outlay on soccer, according to a GlobalData report published this month, football’s fashionable turn could prove lucrative.
For Nike, which also invests significantly in basketball and college sports, soccer accounts for 48% of its annual sponsorship spend, GlobalData found.
“We are experiencing hype around football jerseys and general designs influenced by football culture across streetwear and fashion,” said Puma’s global creative director Heiko Desens.
Puma is seeking to further fuel that hype. Its newest footwear collaboration with popstar Rihanna
The launch campaign featured Rihanna inside a giant de-constructed soccer ball. The shoes, priced at $170 for a silver colourway and $160 for a black and white model, sold out on Puma’s website on the day they were released.
“Puma has a higher sales exposure to women than Adidas or Nike, and the original Rihanna partnership in 2015 was really effective in helping it build strong demand and a lot of credibility with the female consumer,” said Graham Renwick, analyst at Berenberg.
“So with the relaunch of this partnership Puma will be hoping for a similar response.”
Adidas’s apparel range for Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Juventus, Manchester United and Real Madrid, launched in September, included crop tops and dresses made in a jersey knit and featuring more subtle club branding.
“We want to cater to the needs of both the consumer who plays football actively and the consumer who is attracted by football culture,” Adidas said.
High fashion is also getting involved: in May, Italian label Prada
Liverpool
Athens Kallithea and Italy’s Venezia FC have used slick social media campaigns to sell apparel globally despite a smaller fanbase.
“There’s a risk of tension with existing fans whenever you start moving beyond the core culture,” said Athens Kallithea’s president and creative director, Ted Philipakos. He said teams from the Premier League and Bundesliga had contacted him to learn from his strategy.
“It’s a delicate balancing act that requires more nuance and sensibility than many big clubs tend to have,” Philipakos said.