Manchester United has secured
the most lucrative kit deal in football, announcing that Adidas has
agreed to pay $1.3 billion over 10 years to take over the sponsorship
from Nike.
The eagerness of Adidas to make the United kits is evidence of the durability of United's brand value despite its worst-ever Premier League campaign.
Adidas
currently pays around $50 million a season to Chelsea and Real Madrid,
and United could make far more from the German sportswear firm than the
headline figure of 750 million pounds, which is described as a "minimum
guarantee."
Nike has one more
season as kit maker, recently unveiling jerseys featuring a gold
Chevrolet logo for the start of the American automaker's $559 million,
seven-year jersey sponsorship deal with the team.
Adidas
last held the United contract between 1980 and 1992 just before the
club ended its 26-year wait for an English title in 1993, ushering in a
period of dominance under Alex Ferguson.
But United is now in a
period of rebuilding again after going from winning a 20th English title
before Ferguson retired in 2013 to a sudden slump with David Moyes in
charge, finishing seventh in the league.
Moyes
was fired before the end of the season, and Louis van Gaal now has the
task of returning United to the Champions League in 2015, fresh from
leading the Netherlands at the World Cup. The Dutch secured a
third-place finish by beating host Brazil 3-0 on Saturday.
Despite
the grueling campaign in South America, Van Gaal is taking just two
days off before formally taking charge at United this week and beginning
the tour of the United States on Friday.
"I
don't need a holiday," the 62-year-old former Bayern Munich, Barcelona
and Ajax coach said on United's website. "It's great to have such an
exciting challenge. To work daily with young people is something that I
don't need time off to rest for."
Van
Gaal's first match in charge of United will be on July 23 in a friendly
against the Los Angeles Galaxy at the Rose Bowl. While the new manager
has been in Brazil, United has signed midfielder Ander Herrera and
defender Luke Shaw.
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