“The Economic Impact of Sports” Posted on Brent Coralli Blog
Richardson, TX (PRWEB) January 22, 2014 -- Even people who are not sports fans know that sports are big business. However, some sports have a bigger impact on the economy than others and not all make as much money as their sponsor committees had hoped. According to Brent Coralli, CEO of Sting Soccer, who just posted on his blog The Economic Impact of Sports, “You might be surprised at the types of sporting events which have the most positive economic impact.”
It seems logical that the huge sporting events such as The Super Bowl, The Olympics and the NCAA Basketball Tournament would generate billions of dollars in revenue, and they do. However, at what cost? Is there any profit left after expenses and do the businesses located in the proximity to these events really benefit?
Before answering that question, it’s interesting to look at a few recent or upcoming sporting events. As Coralli noted, it might be surprising.
The Big Games Generate Revenue
A couple of weeks ago, the Florida State Seminoles beat the Auburn Tigers to win the BCS College Football Championship and during the media hype leading up to the game, it was reported that visitors to Auburn’s home football games inject some $50 million of direct spending into the local economy over the course of a single season, which is among the biggest economic impacts in college football. Florida State may not come close to comparing, but even the not-so-compelling Seminoles home games generate between $1.5 and $3 million in visitor spending per game.
On February 2, 2014, the NFL will crown a new champion after Super Bowl XLVII is played in MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. The TV spots on this once-a-year media juggernaut are averaging $4 million each, but that is only part of the economics of this event. Just of few of the other activities in the New York City area include:
• Budweiser is turning a Norwegian cruise ship into “Bud Light Hotel” during the festivities;
• There are literally dozens of parties sponsored by the likes of Maxim and GQ;
• There’s Super Bowl Boulevard running 15 blocks in mid-town Manhattan wrapping in a concert stage, toboggan run, and Bryant Park, with a ton of NFL events cross-promoted with just about every brand you can think of;
• New York City's tourism organization, NYC & Co., notes that there will be a concert at Madison Square Garden by The NFL Players Choir with some Grammy Award-winning gospel artists participating;
• Brooklyn will host a "Taste of the NFL" program, wherein chefs from NFL cities descend on the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook; and
• Chase Bank and United Airlines will be at Chef Guy Fieri’s restaurant in Times Square to celebrate with Chase United MileagePlus card members. The company says the program includes “Touchdown Dinners” each night with a celebrity chef and “In The Huddle” events each night featuring former football stars like Dan Marino, Phil Simms and Boomer Esiason
All of these events are expensive to produce and each result in revenue being generated for local suppliers and workers. However, the cost to the local taxpayers to manage this infrastructure is huge.
Five days after the Super Bowl, the world turns its attention to the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia which run through February 23rd. Bloomberg Business reports, “At $51 billion, the Sochi Games are the costliest ever, surpassing the $40 billion spent by China on the 2008 Summer Olympics. The suicide bombings in the Russian city of Volgograd on Dec. 29 and 30 have heightened fears of terrorism and given a renewed focus to security concerns as well as questions of cost.
What Types of Sports Contests Generate Profitable Margins?
Coralli has committed capital and applied innovative business principles to a sports niche that many would consider unglamorous – girls soccer, men’s and women’s soccer apparel and active wear clothing. The Sting Soccer club has become one of the best known clubs in the world and the VOLA apparel brand, while new in the youth sports market, is beginning to be recognized as an up-and-comer in the multibillion dollar sports apparel industry. While these ventures have clearly been successful in this sports niche, do they have the same kind of economic impact as high profile events such as the Super Bowl or the Olympics?
“Actually, some research has suggested that the economic impact of youth sports is greater than the once-a-year championship game model that generates most of the headlines,” Coralli said. “Just think about all of the youth sports teams and players there are in every developed country in the world. This number is staggering,” he noted.
To learn more about the research study that shows the economic clout of Youth Sports, please visit “The Economic Impact of Sports” on the Brent Coralli blog.
Andy Shane, Brady Media Group, http://www.bradymediagroup.com, +1 (214) 498-4915, [email protected]
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