Restore the Green World
By Kim Shanley
To The TennisONE Community
One moment of magic at Wimbledon this week. In sheer exuberant
and wildly competitive desperation, Paradorn Srichaphan and Olivier
Mutis dive full-length on the grass to hit the ball one last
time across the net. Srichaphan, I believe, wins the point,
but both players rise smiling and laughing. The crowd shrieks
in delight and delivers a thunderous ovation for these two athletes
who have flung their bodies and spirit into the match with such
joyous abandon.
Sometimes the essence of something shows itself in a moment,
and then disappears for months. I believe the powers that
be in the tennis industry should pay attention to this magical
Wimbledon moment and begin to make some changes in the way the
game is presented and marketed. At least in the United States,
the drive to "build the game" has failed. A comprehensive
survey conducted in the fall of 2002 by the USTA and Tennis Industry
showed that tennis participation in the U.S. has flatlined at
around 23 million. The good news was that five million took
up tennis. The bad news was that 5 million left the game, and
most of those between the ages of 35-50.
Many remedies have been suggested for tennis' sluggish growth,
including changing some rules. While I think it's obvious that
some rule changes have improved the game (the tie-breaker for
one), I think the game is fundamentally sound. It's the marketing
of the game that stinks. Just one example highlights the hollowness
and shallow commercialism of tennis' marketing. Tennis TV coverage
regularly skips points, games, and even entire sets of the biggest
matches in the game! Can you imagine the NBA allowing the networks
to cover just the first and fourth quarter of an NBA game or
Major League Baseball allowing the networks to cover the first
three innings and then skip to the ninth inning? There are too
many issues here to discuss in one newsletter, including the
possibility of installing an all-powerful tennis commissioner
(I happen to agree with that one). I'll focus on just one remedy:
tennis needs to build a powerful brand.
What's a brand? A brand is the essence of a product or service
beyond its functional attributes. For example, with 50,000 coffee-houses
and $4 billion in revenue, Starbucks stands for much more than
a cup of coffee. Starbucks stands for a certain idealized lifestyle,
where hip people hang out in a cool urban setting and listen
to cool jazz music and sip authentically brewed coffee. In his
inspiring book, Pour Your Heart Into It, Starbucks CEO
and visionary Howard Schultz says, "In this ever-changing
society, the most powerful and enduring brands are built from
the heart. They are real and sustainable. Their foundations
are stronger because they are built with the strength of the
human spirit, not an ad campaign. The companies that are lasting
are those that are authentic."
Tennis isn't the only sport that has had trouble with its
brand. The brand of baseball, the national pastime in the U.S.,
has been in trouble several times over the past twenty years.
Baseball once built cavernous mega-stadiums with artificial turf,
and the sport seemed dominated by self-serving superstars. In
their pursuit of a mega-sport, baseball lost contact with the
average fan as well as the purity and authenticity of its brand.
Now all the stadiums are small, the grass is real, and the marketing
emphasizes the authenticity and history of the game. Bingo, the
brand has been restored and the fans have come back.
How can tennis build its brand and recapture the magic that
seems to have deserted it? I say bring back the grass. During
its golden age, three of the four grand slams were played on
grass. Wimbledon is wonderful, but it only lasts two weeks a
year! Yes, as impractical and quixotic as it sounds, I believe
tennis should bring back grass as the primary surface to showcase
the game.
People loved to see Srichaphan/Mutis diving on the Wimbledon
grass this week. Grass is real. Grass is authentic. Grass
elicits deep emotional and mythic associations to the green world,
a natural world of fun and competition, where kids and adults
play baseball and soccer on beautiful summer days. Just as football
and baseball had to abandon their infatuation with synthetic,
artificial surfaces to regain their brand essence, tennis needs
to lose its infatuation with hard, cement surfaces. Rather than
absorbing heat and cushioning the shock of athletic movement,
cement radiates heat and breaks down the body. Cement surfaces
aren't the only reason why all those 35-50 year olds are giving
up the game, but these bone-jarring surfaces sure aren't helping.
And how fun does this game look to kids when they see two pros
are grinding away on the 120 degree surfaces at the Australian
and US Open?
Wouldn't it be expensive to showcase the sport on grass?
Yes, it would be more expensive. But football and baseball squarely
faced up to the problem and most teams have now ripped out their
artificial surfaces and replaced them with grass. The golf industry
keeps investing in new courses requiring hundreds of acres of
beautiful grass, including 18 perfectly manicured grass putting
surfaces. And golf has grown enormously in popularity over the
past twenty years.
I say spend the money to restore tennis to the green world.
Is that the only thing needed to "grow the game?"
Of course not. But showcase Agassi and Ferrero diving on the
grass like the NBA showcases Kobe and Shaq dunking the ball,
cut to tennis fans screaming with exultation at the legendary
feats of their superstars, and tennis will be on its way to restoring
its lost magic and having fans and celebrities genuinely shouting,
"I love this game!"
My thanks to all those who wrote to me about my last newsletter
("The
Joy of Hitting"). I would love to hear what you think
of this one. Please click
here to send your email directly to me.
Kim Shanley
President, TennisONE
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