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bye bye Adidas

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DBP

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Andrew Heaton on twitter is linking to a Times article that says we've agreed a 25m kit deal with "Warrior" a subisdiary of New Balance to take effect in 2013

He says its worth 25m a season compared to the 12m that adidas pay.

Also note that New Balance are headquartered in Boston.

The linkedin company profile says Warrior started out in Lacrosse?

Putting aside the obvious financial benefit, I hope the kits don't look naff
 
So that's £50M coming in every year from sponsorship and kit manufacturing? That's sweet.

Adidas have made some good and some terrible shirts for us. I'll certainly be happy to lose the white stripes. Too much white on the kit, which makes us resemble 'boro.
 
[quote author=Squiggles link=topic=45052.msg1319741#msg1319741 date=1303428739]
So that's £50M coming in every year from sponsorship and kit manufacturing? That's sweet.

Adidas have made some good and some terrible shirts for us. I'll certainly be happy to lose the white stripes. Too much white on the kit, which makes us resemble 'boro.
[/quote]

To be fair I think Adidas did a lot better than Reebook.
Warrior however do these kind of kits...

images


I bet we'll have Starbucks as our main sponsor on the kit.
 
Liverpool have secured the biggest kit deal in English football history, the £25 million-a-year contract with Boston-based Warrior Sports more than doubling the Anfield club’s present agreement with adidas.
The Times understands that Warrior, a subsidiary of New Balance, will take over production of Liverpool kits in time for the 2012-13 season. Adidas, which launched a new away kit last week as part of its £12 million-a-year contract with the club, had the chance to match the offer but was not prepared to meet the American company’s price.
The link between Liverpool and Warrior is believed to be a long-term relationship and outstrips the £23.3 million per year that Nike pays Manchester United, the previous British record.
John W. Henry, the Liverpool owner, has insisted since taking over at Anfield in October that the club would only spend money that it generates. With Liverpool unlikely to qualify for the Champions League this season, some had questioned their ability to compete in the transfer market.
However, the agreement with a brand better known in the lacrosse world would appear to have solved the short-term cashflow problems caused by failure to qualify for Europe’s premier club tournament.
Sources inside Anfield have been increasingly bullish about their summer spending power and Kenny Dalglish is likely to have a considerable war chest when the transfer window opens.
Although the Liverpool caretaker manager believes that the crop of youngsters emerging from the academy has the potential to continue making a positive impression on his squad, he maintains that investment is necessary during the close season if the club are to become competitive again.
“It’s important that there is room for development for players, but it’s also important you don’t use it as an excuse not to spend money and not improve what you’ve already got,†Dalglish said.
“Age does not determine their ability to play. So if we’re convinced we have young players who are maybe better than what’s available, then we’ll keep our younger players.
“But that does not say we don’t want to improve as a football club. We do need to leave some path open if we do think there are players who can come in. If they develop then fine, if they don’t, we’ve got a problem. But if you buy a player in and he doesn’t produce, you’ve got a bigger problem.â€
According to PR Marketing, a German market research company, Liverpool are the fourth-biggest replica kit seller in football, behind United, Real Madrid and Barcelona. About 900,000 shirts are sold annually and, in the adidas stable, only Real sell more jerseys. Liverpool’s defection has come as a huge blow to the manufacturer.
Fenway Sports Group (FSG), Liverpool’s owner, has in recent months become increasingly close to Jim Davis, the chairman of New Balance. This month New Balance, previously best known for its running shoes, announced a multiyear partnership with the Boston Red Sox, who share the same owner as Liverpool. Along with a kit deal, New Balance is thought to have paid in the region of $1 million (about £600,000) for a 70-foot illuminated logo inside Fenway Park, the home of the Red Sox.
United’s groundbreaking 13-year deal with Nike expires in 2015 and the Old Trafford club will expect an even bigger cheque when the time comes to negotiate with kit manufacturers.
 
was just about to post this. got to be good news i suppose, although i've always liked adidas kits personally. i never buy them anymore, though, so the money's the only thing that really matters i guess.

just hope they're better than the reebok ones we used to get, i hated pretty much all of them. not too hopeful, though, as i always think americans are about the least stylish people on earth.
 
Whatever the design it still have a crap bank's name all over the front of it.

I bet Moores is coughing up his dinner right now.
 
So long as they get rid of that crap shiny finish I'll be happy.
 
[quote author=Krump link=topic=45052.msg1319751#msg1319751 date=1303429856]
Whatever the design it still have a crap bank's name all over the front of it.

I bet Moores is coughing up his dinner right now.
[/quote]

another bib ruined.
 
[quote author=SaintGeorge67 link=topic=45052.msg1319745#msg1319745 date=1303429660]
The Liverpool Warriors.
[/quote]

HAHAHAHAAAAA!!!

Yeah that comes with the territory.
Imagine marketing suddenly coming up with the brilliant idea of giving us an animal nickname or something like that.
The Liverpool Tigers
The Liverpool Bears
The Liverpool Foxes
The Liverpool Salmons
The Liverpool Liverbirds?

Next up cheerleaders and Gatorade.
 
[quote author=SaintGeorge67 link=topic=45052.msg1319758#msg1319758 date=1303430134]
Suarez looks like he'd be good at ice hockey. Dunno why.
[/quote]

I'm sure I don't know why. You can't play ice hockey with a shattered pelvis.
 
To paraphrase Jimmy Greaves, I could care less if they call us the Liverpool Tigers Durex Warriors.

We've just negotiated the biggest kit deal in English football history.

Why the moaning?
 
Ben Smith
Updated 28 minutes ago
Spot the odd one out: Nike, adidas, Umbro, Warrior, Reebok. Warrior?
Who are they? The chances are you have never heard of Liverpool’s new shirt manufacturer and unless you are a fan of lacrosse or know the NHL inside out, you will not be not alone.
In the United States, Warrior is a manufacturer to be reckoned with, providing equipment and clothing in ice hockey and lacrosse, America’s oldest sport. In 2004 the company was bought by New Balance, which retained the founder, Dave Morrow, as president and chief executive officer.
Morrow, a lacrosse player, founded Warrior in his Princeton dormitory where he developed the first titanium stick, which the university used en route to their National Championship that year. Warrior was taken from Morrow’s High School American football team in his home town of Michigan, the Brother Rice Warriors.
The buyout took Warrior to new heights and in April this year, New Balance signed a multi-year sponsorship deal with the Boston Red Sox baseball team. As part of the deal, the Red Sox have unveiled a video sign at Fenway Park, measuring 70 feet in length and 7ft 9in in height, featuring the New Balance logo. and the company now provides footwear and clothing to all “fan-facing Red Sox employeesâ€.
New Balance had been happy to sponsor athletes while refraining from using them for advertising. The high-profile acquisitions of a handful of the Red Sox players now sponsored by New Balance is a sign that things are changing. After worldwide sales of $1.78 billion (about £1 billion), the company has changed tack and will take a more proactive approach to its marketing. Liverpool are a logical step.
Warrior remains a company in its own right, but until now has shown no signs of spreading its interest outside traditional sports. Mike Modana of the Detroit Red Wings is among the biggest names on Warrior’s roster. Liverpool will hope this particular deal allows their title dreams to take flight.
Getting shirty
PR Marketing, a German market research company, produces a list of top-selling shirts and the companies that make them each year. The most recent figures were released last August, taking into account average sales between 2005 and 2009

Manchester United Nike, up to 1.5 million
Real Madrid adidas, up to 1.5 million
Barcelona Nike, up to 1.2 million
Liverpool adidas, up to 900,000
Arsenal Nike, up to 900,000
Chelsea adidas, up to 900,000
Bayern Munich adidas, up to 900,000
AC Milan adidas, up to 600,000
Juventus Nike, up to 600,000
Inter Milan Nike, up to 600,00
 
[quote author=Avvy link=topic=45052.msg1319775#msg1319775 date=1303432351]
To paraphrase Jimmy Greaves, I could care less if they call us the Liverpool Tigers Durex Warriors.

We've just negotiated the biggest kit deal in English football history.

Why the moaning?
[/quote]


errr, no-one's moaning mate.
 
I guess this is quite a clever route for FSG to go down , using their obvious US links they are signing a big deal with a company that is most likely trying to get into a market and sport they previously had no footing in. Warrior are now getting into a global market/sport , not just a U.S based one and are also jumping up the ladder quickly by signing with a massive club , instantly they are a big player .
And the bottom line is the money , if they pay the most we'd be mad not to go with them , but i don't hold much confidence that their kits will be that nice , most of these "unknown" or smaller brands tend to design cheap looking kits. But we'll see.
 
[quote author=Avvy link=topic=45052.msg1319775#msg1319775 date=1303432351]
To paraphrase Jimmy Greaves, I could care less if they call us the Liverpool Tigers Durex Warriors.

We've just negotiated the biggest kit deal in English football history.

Why the moaning?
[/quote]

not moaning making fun of...
 
The combined shirt deals are worth more than the gate receipts. Just the fucking shirt. More than every penny the fans pay to watch. Never mind tv and merchandise and competition revenue and other sponsorship, just the fact of the shirt is worth more than the entrance fee for everyone
 
I'd never heard of Warrior before today but good news if true. Hopefully the kits look good. Certainly a great opportunity for Warrior to break into the global game in a very big way.
 
Good deal in terms of money and it will sure increase fan based in the USA but have they ever made a football kit before? Have they?

I'm afraid that our kit will look like fucking hockey team kit fucking hell.
 
Fantastic deal. And if you consider the financial fair play rules coming into play it becomes even better.
Great work from FSG.
 
I know it's all about the money, but, the kits are going to be fucking shite.

Gonna get this and next season's away.

DAMN YOU ADIDAS !

Cheap asses.
 
The Warrior website is painfully annoying and also does not look like a company that is able to sponsor 25mil a year to a football club!
 
[quote author=reuque link=topic=45052.msg1319802#msg1319802 date=1303438078]
The Warrior website is painfully annoying and also does not look like a company that is able to sponsor 25mil a year to a football club!
[/quote]

Hehe! Exactly! What kind of fucking website is that with all those shit flashes? Fucking hockey kit are shit as well.
 
Lads, if it was loin cloths instead of Shirts, I'd still wear then. 12M = a 2009/10 CL European Run. Nice work.
 
They are not shit, they are based on need, you wear a ton of pads so they are huge but still need airflow or you'd overheat, hence the holes. Plus players move so fast and the fouls happen so quickly numbers have to be on both sides for both the officiating and the fans.
 
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