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Game, Set and Match 

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Congrats to Roger Federer on winning the Wimbledon men’s singles crown on Sunday. That this is his 15th Grand Slam title is a remarkable achievement. I swear the man is a tennis machine. And he’s only 27! Quite astounding.

Of course conspicuously absent from Federer’s epic final against the über cool Andy Roddick was that other Andy – as in Murray. Just prior to Andy M’s semi-final loss on Friday, the amusingly banal Andy Murray-o-Meter (tracking the burning issue ‘Is Andy Murray a Brit or a Scot?’), had peaked at a ‘yes’ vote of 86%. I checked this morning and see it’s down to 77%. My bet’s on a further slide south over coming days. We Brits are an unforgiving lot, no?

Yet again, after all the acres of press coverage and gargantuan hype, Mr Murray failed to deliver a Grand Slam victory for Team GB. Not his fault – the guy did his best but was beaten on the day by a better player (Roddick). So is Andy Murray the nation’s next planet-conquering sporting brand in the making? I think not. As the always insightful Mark Ritson observed in Marketing recently, ‘the harsh reality is that Murray is a fine tennis player, but a hopeless prospect as the next Beckham, no matter how advanced the brand strategy applied to his future career.’

So best of British – and Scottish! – to you, Andy Murray. But to paraphrase Monty Python in The Life of Brian, I suggest we all remember that you’re not a sports brand messiah, you’re just a very moody and petulant boy who does a fine job swinging a tennis racquet.

Oh, and the day after Michael Jackson’s three-ring circus send off (sorry, Memorial Service), in Los Angeles, this exclusive report just in: He’s still dead, folks. I just love our ‘sleb-obsessed culture, don’t you?

Comments

July 8, 2009 11:34 AM
 

And to think that Federer won the final by only breaking Roddick's serve once and by winning one game LESS!

 
 
July 8, 2009 4:23 PM
 

Murray is going to blow most others out of the water when he comes to renewing his clothing sponsor. He will easily get £3 million a year (i would say double), you just have to look at the ratings over Wimbledon when he was on, considering Heman earned somewhere in the region of £70 million in his career i would say Muzza will do ok...from a corporate point of view they want to be linked to success so if he wins endorsements will follow suit...only time will tell but i would back him...compared to the polished, rather bland persona of Federer he is the new 'bad boy' on the tennis circuit!

 
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DM, Data and Beyond

Mark Roy, CEO of The REaD Group plc, looks at topical issues relevant to all UK marketers.
 

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Mark Roy

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DM, Data and Beyond

Member since: 05 Jun 2008

Last login: 23 Nov 2009

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