A New Dress Code
For years, Heather Berault proved her allegiance to the Lakers by wearing an oversized men’s basketball jersey. Then, out of frustration, she began to fashion her own apparel, using purple T-shirts cut to fit a woman’s body and gold glitter to spell out “Lakers.”
Fortunately, for Berault -- who acknowledges she’s not an artsy-craftsy person -- sports marketers have begun to realize that many women want a more feminine way to make a sports-fashion statement. So, during a recent Laker-Sun telecast at the Fox Sports Grill in Irvine, Berault was wearing a decidedly feminine Laker top with spaghetti straps and a delicate “Lakers” spelled across the front.
“It’s fun to be girlie and cute and still be telling people I’m a Lakers’ fan,” said the Laguna Beach resident. “So I bought three of the shirts the other night at Staples Center -- one purple and gold, one that’s gold with purple, and one that’s black and white.”
Male fans still can get jerseys and warmup jackets emblazoned with traditional team logos and official franchise colors. But, for female sports fans who want to make a sporting statement, Dodger Blue is fading to a gentler sky blue, the NFL is pitching pink Browns’ caps, and the NBA has introduced white and pink playoff jerseys dusted with glitter for some teams that have advanced in the playoffs.
Even in some parts of the fierce Raider Nation, pink is the new black.
Some of what’s being pitched, including this item from NASCAR, may make old-timers blush: “You will look cute and be comfortable wearing this Jeff Gordon Drill Team camo ladies’ tank top.”
“It’s not about what some 40-year-old guy wants but what [women] want,” acknowledged Steve Armus, vice president of licensing for Major League Baseball.
He’ll get no argument from Jenny Balin, who for years wore her Dodger Blue as oversized men’s baseball jerseys and ill-fitting T-shirts. The 43-year-old Long Beach resident is reveling in the growing selection of pretty-in-pink tops, workout gear and other “more girlie, feminine fashion” that the Dodgers are making available online and in Dodger Stadium souvenir shops.
“I love the new clothes because they’re designed with women in mind, the way we dress, as opposed to guys who have to have ‘I’m a Dodger fan’ emblazoned across their chest,” Balin said. “At first, it was a baby-doll T-shirt. But now it’s just about anything -- including yoga clothes and [team] jackets cut for women that really fit.”
Her only gripe is one that echoes among many female fans: What took them so long?
Women are increasingly important in the sports-marketing world. About 45 million tune in to NFL telecasts during the season, half of NASCAR’s viewers are women, and 42% of the fans spinning turnstiles at major league baseball games are women.
Sports marketers acknowledge that sports organizations long took female fans for granted.
“The woman fan was always there, but as leagues, we’d not given them proper product -- it was generally ‘Buy the men’s small T-shirt or jersey,’ ” said Lisa Piken, the NBA’s director of apparel and accessory licensing.
The licensed apparel, accessories and other merchandise is designed, as the NFL says of its pastel polo shirts, “to flatter a feminine shape.” But the figure that has caught the eye of sports marketers is the bottom line.
Female-oriented merchandise is the fastest growing category in the NBA’s licensed products line. The category drives a quarter of the NFL’s licensed apparel, and sales of NASCAR’s licensed apparel for females soared to $250 million last year -- equal to all of the licensed merchandise it sold in 1990.
Female-oriented licensed merchandise accounted for about 10% of the $13.2 billion in licensed sports apparel, accessories and other products sold last year in the U.S. and Canada, according to the Licensing Letter. It is a welcome turn for leagues scrambling to generate new revenue and retailers hoping to lure new shoppers.
“The female customer is just not interested anymore in getting a men’s or boy’s jersey and making do with it,” said Alan Cohen, chairman and chief executive of the Finish Line, a sporting-goods chain with more than 650 outlets. “There’s much more of a market than before, both in the size aspect, as well as in some of the fashions and colors.”
Nubia Correa has developed a few ideas about fashion and fit. Last Tuesday night, she squeezed into a Kobe Bryant jersey designed to fit a child. It was either that, the Anaheim resident said, or show up at the Fox Sports Grill in an oversized men’s jersey.
“I like the girlie stuff,” said Correa, who recently bought two authentic-style Angels’ jerseys that incorporate a comfortable V neck, along with sleeves and buttons tailored for women. She also owns a comfortable Laker sweatsuit made of black velour that she can wear “just about anywhere.... If you’re wearing a guy’s stuff, you have to tie knots in the back to help make it fit.”
The current fashion swing is in contrast with that of the late 1990s, when the big leagues asked licensees producing menswear to design apparel for the other side of the fashion aisle. The result was a ho-hum, unisex look that left many consumers cold, according to Susan Rothman, the NFL’s vice president of consumer products.
“When I came to the NFL in December 1995 from the apparel industry, I was an NFL fan,” Rothman said. “But I saw nothing that would engage me as a female fan.”
Armus, who recently outfitted his wife in a purple, acid-washed Yankee cap, with the trademark “NY” formed by shiny stones, was equally blunt about the big leagues’ initial offerings: “They really didn’t know how to do it, so it started out pretty rocky.”
Baseball subsequently turned to apparel manufacturers that had proved their mettle in the hotly competitive women’s market. The result was “explosive growth over the last five years,” Armus said. “This year, we’ve estimated that 18% of our [apparel licensing] will come from the women’s apparel.”
Franchises also are making more room for female merchandise in souvenir shops and online. During the off-season, the Dodgers expanded shelf space at Dodger Stadium and dramatically increased female-oriented goods.
“We take merchandising very seriously when it comes to the women’s apparel section,” said Marty Greenspun, Dodger chief operating officer. “A lot of time is focused on it, making sure there’s enough women’s apparel and good, quality fashion items to choose from.”
Caps, T-shirts and jerseys remain the top sellers among female fans. But sports logos also are appearing on sleepwear, workout gear, camisole tops and thongs. MLB, NASCAR and the NBA also are taking the plunge into swimwear by partnering with companies that make bikinis and one-piece swimsuits.
Color schemes represent the biggest break with tradition, with pink caps, pastel jerseys and accessories, including fashionable watches with pastel wristbands and pink team logos on their faces.
Jerseys are likely to be made from such form-fitting materials as Lycra, caps and shirts are being decorated with glitter and sequins and there’s plenty of bling -- from jewel-encrusted handbags to earrings and bracelets stamped with team logos.
College athletic departments also are updating their apparel. The category is one of the fastest-growing segments for Collegiate Licensing Co., an Atlanta company that handles licensing for hundreds of colleges. Colleges also are hooking up their familiar brands with some well-known names from the retail world. USC, for instance, has struck licensing deals with Hush Puppies, Tommy Bahama, Reyn Spooner, Ralph Lauren and Cutter & Buck.
NASCAR’s growing line of merchandise already includes upscale leather jackets and fashionable footwear. The organization now plans to publish 19 Harlequin romance novels, targeting female fans. The first title, “In the Groove,” has sold about 200,000 copies.
NASCAR’s marketing push also extends into the supermarket, where it has licensed its logo to companies that make sausage and barbecue sauce. It also has opened a branch office near Bentonville, Ark., to help its licensees get their products onto Wal-Mart shelves.
The leagues do have their own personalities when it comes to what they offer female fans. The NFL, for example, is the most conservative.
“We want to be relevant,” Rothman said. “But we also want to be true to the trademark and identity each franchise has developed, so we walk a tightrope every day.”
That said, the NFL gradually has added “more bells, whistles, sequins, rhinestones and glitter,” said Jenny Lyons Cohane, manager of women’s licensed apparel for Reebok, one of the NFL’s apparel manufacturers. The league first offered a pink jersey, then experimented with pastel shades. Next season, the league will add some brighter, bolder jerseys.
“It’s all about baby steps, because you don’t want to walk too far away from the classics,” Lyons Cohane said. “That’s the foundation.”
*
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)
Gearing up
Retail value of licensed merchandise sold during last two years by major sports licensing organizations (includes apparel and other products; in billions of dollars):
*--* SPORT 2004 2005 NFL $2.95 $3.15 MLB $2.90 $3.10 Collegiate $2.85 $2.90 NBA $2.25 $2.35 NASCAR $1.15 $1.25 NHL $0.45 $0.40
*--*
Source: The Licensing Letter, Sporting Goods Manufacturing Assn.
HIS AND HERS JERSEYS
Men and women have different heroes judging by the most popular NFL jerseys sold in 2005:
TOP 10 NFL JERSEYS, 2005 SEASON
1. Randy Moss...Oakland
2. Ben Roethlisberger...Pittsburgh
3. Peyton Manning...Indianapolis
4. Michael Vick...Atlanta
5. Troy Polamalu...Pittsburgh
6. Donovan McNabb...Philadelphia
7. Terrell Owens...Philadelphia
8. Tom Brady...New England
9. Hines Ward...Pittsburgh
10. Brett Favre...Green Bay
TOP 10 WOMEN’S NFL JERSEYS, 2005 SEASON
1. Donovan McNabb...Philadelphia
2. Ben Roethlisberger...Pittsburgh
3. Tom Brady...New England
4. Brett Favre...Green Bay
5. Peyton Manning...Indianapolis
6. Terrell Owens...Philadelphia
7. Hines Ward...Pittsburgh
8. Eli Manning... N.Y. Giants
9. Chad Pennington...N.Y. Jets
10. Brian Westbrook...Philadelphia
Source: NFL & Reebok
More to Read
All things Lakers, all the time.
Get all the Lakers news you need in Dan Woike's weekly newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.