Did you try Bing?Would be incredible, I’ll be honest I’m absolutely relieved it’s google because as far as I’m aware they don’t have an atrocious human rights records.
Least that’s what my search engine results keep telling me
If the nfl stadium rights were sold alone, what impact/restrictions would that have on the football stadium rights?I swear the naming rights rumours always seem to surface at the same time as the NFL games
If the nfl stadium rights were sold alone, what impact/restrictions would that have on the football stadium rights?
In theory these are different products.
Maybe Alphabet Arena.
The Chrome Dome
Spurs in talks with Google about naming rights for Tottenham Hotspur stadium
Tottenham Hotspur have had talks with Google about a potential sponsorship of their £1 billion stadium.The north London club have been looking for a long-term dwww.thetimes.co.uk
Spurs in talks with Google about naming rights for Tottenham Hotspur stadium
The north London club have been looking for a long-term deal worth more than £25 million a year
Tottenham Hotspur have had talks with Google about a potential sponsorship of their £1 billion stadium.
The north London club have been looking for a long-term deal worth more than £25 million a year and have spoken to a number of big companies including Uber, FedEx and Amazon during the three years since they moved into their new home.
Although no agreement with Google is close, it would be an interesting step for the technology company to align themselves with one club as opposed to a league. They have agreements with the NBA and the MLB in the United States although in March they announced a multi-year partnership with McLaren Racing as a new partner of the Formula 1 Team and the MX Extreme E Team for this season.
When Tottenham opened their 62,850-capacity stadium in 2019, the club’s chairman Daniel Levy said: “We are only going to do a naming rights deal if we get the right brand, in the right sector, on the right money.”
Many expected a naming rights deal to quickly follow to help the finances but various factors including the pandemic made that hard. There has also been a suggestion that Tottenham wanted to keep the stadium clean as it might be more attractive for a potential buyer.
Levy hired Todd Kline, formerly of the Miami Dolphins, in 2021 to oversee the commercial deals including finding a partner for the stadium who would be compatible with their shirt sponsor AIA, an insurance company, whose deal expires in 2027.
Another stumbling block has been the club’s financial demands which would make their deal among the biggest in the world. The highest naming rights deal was made by Scotiabank for Toronto’s Maple Leafs and Raptors Arena in 2018, worth Canadian $800 million (about £527 million), or £26 million a year. Social Finance agreed to a 20-year deal worth a total of $400 million (£361 million in total or 18 million a year) to place their name on the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers’ new home in 2019.
A further factor is that Uefa have sponsorship regulations that forbid the stadium being referred to by its sponsor but for certain circumstances. Therefore, for example, Emirates Stadium is known as Arsenal Stadium in Uefa competitions.
Tottenham could also want a partner like Google for the technological help it would bring. The company’s deal with McLaren means that it has provided products, services and software to help the Formula One team. McLaren use Android-powered devices and Chrome browser for all race operations this season.
Hopefully this means the stadium will now accept cache.
I would have thought that there was a danger that as the older the stadium gets the less ‘shines, new and modern’ it becomes which could lead to a devaluing of any deal?
I would have thought that there was a danger that as the older the stadium gets the less ‘shines, new and modern’ it becomes which could lead to a devaluing of any deal?
Once the naming rights is done and dusted, we can all look forward to creating history.But they'll only sell cookies