CNBC reporter Darren Rovell has posted an interesting blog (CLICK HERE) on
Brock Lesnar's antics after his mangling of Frank Mir at UFC
100.
Rovell reports:
After Brock Lesnar retained his heavyweight title at
UFC 100 on Saturday night, he caused a stir by saying he’d be going home to
drink a Coors Light “because Bud Light won’t pay me
nuthin.”
In terms of official sponsors
getting blindsided, this one takes the all time cake. When Anheuser-Busch took
the risk of associating with the UFC, who ever thought that risk included having
its competitor get the nod after one of the biggest fights in the organization’s
history?
Although Lesnar got lectured by UFC
prez Dana White, he came out to the press conference -– seen by a small fraction
of those who actually watched the Pay-Per-View fight –- with a Bud Light in
front of him and the Bud Light sign behind him. Although Lesnar apologized, he
didn’t exactly do Bud Light right when he said he would be drinking that brand
tonight but that he really “drinks any beer.”
The idea of pumping up Coors Light
when they presumably didn’t pay him wasn’t a good idea. But the question as to
what Lesnar owes UFC’s official sponsors is a good one. Lesnar did what he did
because he felt that, as the biggest star in UFC, he deserved his cut of what
the UFC was making. This comes at a time when the UFC is now asking those who
sponsor fighters to give the organization a cut so it’s harder to ambush
official sponsors who don’t chose to sponsor the fighters. From the UFC's
standpoint, the brands that sponsor the fighters are getting a cheap deal
aligning with the brand without having to pay up. From the fighter's standpoint,
any cut the UFC gets could take away from their pay and could restrict the
amount of companies willing to still pay the fighters.
For some reason, I’m not as
sympathetic to Lesnar’s disguised plea as I am to the plight of Olympians, who,
to be honest, seem to be getting slighted more and more with each
Olympiad.
According to a memorandum recently
sent by the International Olympic Committee, Olympians who are sponsored by
non-Olympic sponsors cannot advertise for those companies within approximately
three weeks prior to the games and one week after the games.
Now that’s hard to swallow because
these Olympians are basically paid in sponsor money. First, it was a moratorium
during the games and now it’s expanding out to surround the games. One day it
will reach a point where non-Olympic sponsors will have absolutely no interest
in sponsoring Olympians at all. This comes at a time when many of the Olympic
sponsors rely on their official sponsorship to get the message out and don’t
spend a whole lot of money on individual athletes.
Lesnar’s move was outrageous, but it
wasn’t an “in the heat of the moment” reaction as he might have you believe.
There’s a reason he did what he did. And it brings to a head the question of
when companies buy rights to be an official sponsor, what do they get? And what
do the athletes deserve? No matter what the answer is to that question, I know
this. Bud Light didn’t deserve Lesnar’s “Silver Bullet”
surprise.
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CHAMPION BROCK LESNAR!
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