LIVERPOOL FC IS 188BET'S LATEST COUP
6 November 2009
Internet sportsbetting site sponsors another
major UK team
Liverpool Football Club has become the latest English
Premier League club to sign a sponsorship deal with
online gambling operator 188bet. Ladbrokes previously
held the sponsorship.
The deal will run for an
initial three-year period and comes after EPL champion
Manchester United signed a similar partnership with
betting exchange brand Betfair.
Liverpool said
the deal, the terms of which were undisclosed, aimed to
step up the club’s profile in the lucrative Asian
markets. “Given 188Bet’s presence in Asia, we will
develop a number of initiatives that will mutually
benefit our respective organisations,” said Liverpool’s
commercial director, Ian Ayre.
The agreement with
Liverpool marks the fifth deal that the Isle of
Man-based 188bet has signed with an English team,
including shirt sponsorship deals with Wigan Athletic
and Bolton Wanderers, and Chelsea FC.
Andy Scott,
the chief executive of the Interet gambling company,
says online gaming has been subject to the economic
downturn, but it’s been more resilient than other
industries, and is therefore an industry that has cash
in its pocket and an opportunity to invest.
Landmark deals have also been seen in Spanish and
Italian territories, where Austrian operator Bwin has
signed shirt sponsorship deals with AC Milan and Real
Madrid – the latter thought to be worth up to GBP 18
million a year.
Football fans in Asia, who
follow European and UK football with enthusiasm, can
access the Internet while watching live Premier League
matches, and 188Bet will attempt to tap into that market
with billboard hoardings that feature both English and
Asian script.
Major clubs like Manchester United
and Chelsea have been cultivating the Asian fanbase with
promotional visits to the region, and analysts believe
that it’s inevitable that more and more online companies
will look at sponsoring Premier League clubs as Web and
online markets expand.
The Wall Street Journal
reports that Liverpool’s co-owners George Gillett and
Tom Hicks are looking for fresh investment after putting
plans to build a bigger stadium on hold due to the
global financial crisis. Despite record revenue of GBP
162 million in the year ended July 2008, the club’s
parent company, Kop Football Holdings Ltd., recorded a
GBP 42.6 million net loss because of interest payments
on a GBP 350 million loan used to fund the club’s
purchase in 2007. The loan was refinanced in July.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|