Tuesday, July 28, 2015

How The WNBA Can Succeed in North Texas

This post originally appeared on the Blotch page at the Fort Worth Weekly. To read it on their site : http://www.fwweekly.com/2015/07/28/sports-how-the-wnba-can-succeed-in-north-texas/

It’s got the makings of a great story. Oklahoma girl, originally from Detroit, leaves the hinterlands of Northwest OK and heads to the big city in Texas to make her fortune.
We recently learned of such a story in the offing, although it involves not one girl, but rather several women (really tall ones at that). The ladies in question play basketball for the Tulsa Shock of the Women’s National Basketball Association and the team’s owner announced last week he wants to move the franchise to North Texas. They expect to play home games at UT-Arlington’s College Park Center.
To that, I say super. It means more high-quality basketball in the area, with visits from the best women’s players in the world. It also pleases me because I have two nieces who like hoops and could benefit from the chance to observe, and become invested in, a team of that caliber.
So I hope the team does well, but they should know success won’t come easily. Local arenas are strewn with remnants of pro teams that have come and gone. I still own Fort Worth Fire jerseys and a Fort Worth Cavalry golf shirt. Maybe your attic houses a Fort Worth Cats cap (old or modern) or a Dallas Chaparrals program your dad bought. To help the A-Town Shock (or whatever decide to call themselves) avoid the fate of, say, the Dallas-Fort Worth Spurs, I put together a committee to make some recommendations.
Leiberman
It’s a committee of two. I got a spot because I write this column and because I did broadcasting work for a lot of the defunct teams and marketing work for some of the ones still in existence. The better half of the committee (in so many ways) is Nancy Lieberman. She made the cut because she’s in the dang Basketball Hall of Fame, she played pro ball here, and she knows a heck of a lot about the WNBA and hoops in general. I also picked her (blatant plug alert) because she runs a really great foundation that helps a lot of kids. I’ve done some videos for it and helped at some NLF events.
Lieberman pointed out “You get one chance to do it right,” which means the team has to hit the ground running and have a good plan.
Let’s start with the challenges. This seems like an attractive market because of its large population and affinity for sports. The NFL, NHL, NBA, MLB, and MLS certainly liked the looks of it and their teams have shown staying power here. The newest of the Big Five pro franchises, the one I wish they still called the Dallas Burn, has lasted in the area since 1996.
In 1992, the new Central Hockey League began with, among others, the Fort Worth Fire, Dallas Freeze, and Tulsa Oilers. The Oilers won the league’s first championship and still reported drawing 5,479 fans a game last year despite never having won another title. The Fire and Freeze exist only in my closet, I think. I might still have a Fire puckhead somewhere.
The point is that the North Texas market is a lot different from Tulsa and so are the teams that stick here long term. The Shock moved to Tulsa from Detroit, so they could have some institutional memory about the challenges of sharing a large media market with teams from the country’s dominant sports leagues. In fact, Lieberman coached them their first three seasons in Motown. She had a strong opinion about the most important thing they could do to start carving a local niche.
“Grassroots, grassroots, gassroots!,” she said emphatically. Trust me, you could hear the exclamation point in her voice.
She suggested the team be everywhere from “camps to birthday parties.” She cited a model used by the NBA D-League team with which she is affiliated.
“Every team in the WNBA should borrow from the Texas Legends,” she said, noting also their kid-oriented approach to game presentation
My top point of emphasis relates closely to Lieberman’s: “Group tickets, group tickets, group tickets!” I didn’t actually say that out loud, but if I did, you would hear the exclamation point.
They can’t monetize their grassroots strategy without building in reasons to come to a game. Not only does a solid groups strategy allow a team to sell a bunch of tickets at once, but it can do so before the season starts. Preseason sales offer some revenue certainty that isn’t subject to the vicissitudes of a won/loss record.
Speaking of “Ws,” that “W” in WNBA matters. It’s a point of differentiation for the team brand. Lieberman pointed out one has to “get with the parents who are going to send their kids to you.” Parents who see value in inspiring their girls to pursue sports and fitness would seem a vital community outreach target.
Geography matters when it comes to the grassroots outreach. A WNBA team will have the advantage of being the most high-profile women’s pro team in the area, so they can draw some fans from throughout North Texas. Because the area is so enormous, however, driving distances will discourage fans in East Dallas and the northern suburbs from coming to games in Arlington. The Shock, then, need a solid strategy for establishing a base of fans near where they play. I’d start a lot of the grassroots activity by identifying pockets of likely ticket buyers in Arlington, Grand Prairie, and eastern Fort Worth.
They must keep regional tensions in mind as well. The Cowboys can play in Tarrant County and get away with having “Dallas” for a first name. Another team that tried that would risk alienating potential fans in Fort Worth and its environs.
The size of this media market can seem daunting as well. Going beyond the grassroots in Tulsa by, say, buying TV ads or airtime to broadcast games, incurs costs appropriate to the 61st largest media market. In North Texas, top-five market costs mean major sticker, um, shock. One has to pay to reach millions of viewers/listeners who live too far away to drive to many games. Big-market media costs make a more targeted PR strategy really important (and grassroots outreach, too).
The franchise will still want earned media attention, certainly, and an NBA-affiliated entity offers advantages there that are unavailable to, say, the Grand Prairie Airhogs. But one has to keep in mind that the media will expect major-market service. The D-League’s Fort Worth Flyers, for instance, didn’t put an emphasis on PR support. They lasted two seasons (with lack of media savvy helping compound lots of other issues).
One tricky part, then, of operating in this market is that one has to act major league without having the budget of a team that generates substantial TV revenue and draws 18,000 fans a night. Lieberman believes that doesn’t have to be an insurmountable problem.
“Even if you don’t have the budget, what you have to do (to be major-league) is work hard,” she said. The Shock do have to go the extra mile as a little fish in a big pond, and have to show creativity as well. For instance, they may not be able to afford to shell out the scads of money the Mavs spend to produce scoreboard features, but digital technology has made it possible to create really good ones much less expensively than ever before. Quality concepts can make up for lack of cash outlay.
Part of the hard work element comes in the form of digital strategy (creativity is pretty important here, too). A strong social media plan, one that goes hand-in-hand with the grassroots fan engagement plans, is a must, especially with a spread-out fan base and high traditional-media costs. Constant updates and new features require a significant time commitment.
So, to summarize, here’s what our committee thinks the team needs to do to succeed:
1.      Get involved in the grassroots (with an exclamation point).
2.      Sell group tickets like crazy.
3.      Understand the market and overcome its challenges with creativity and hard work.
One thing I didn’t add to the above list: Win.
Winning a lot of games never hurts, but finishing first is actually not as important at driving fans as it is for the Mavs or Rangers. The Shock won three titles in Detroit and moved. The Houston Comets won four and folded. Establishing a loyal fanbase matters more than even championships.
Lieberman won a title in this area in the WABA and also led a team to the WBL finals. Her Dallas Diamonds drew sustainable crowds but the rest of those leagues did not. Since the current well-established NBA-backed women’s league seems unlikely to fold like those earlier circuits, the Shock would seem to have a chance at success.
For the record, Lieberman thinks they will. “(Owner) Bill Cameron is a wonderful person,” she said. She believes he will put a plan in place to turn the move to Arlington into a success story. Heeding the recommendations she made in this piece would probably be a great place for Mr. Cameron to start.


Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns and related creative projects for sports entities through his company, Rush Olson Creative & Sports.
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Tuesday, July 21, 2015

A Tour of Le Tour

This post originally appeared on the Blotch page at the Fort Worth Weekly. To read it on their site : http://www.fwweekly.com/2015/07/21/sports-a-tour-of-le-tour/.

Quick, how many bicycle races can you name?
My guess is that the average American could come up with somewhere between one and zero.
If you did name one, you may have spent a few mornings watching it unfold on NBC Sports over the past couple of weeks. And as you observed the only cycling you’ll watch this year, you may have wondered a little about what’s going on with those guys in the tight pants trying to win the Tour de France.
To enhance your viewing experience, I thought I’d consult a local with knowledge of the sport to come up with a few choice nuggets of information designed to help you understand what’s going on.  I trekked (by which I mean “drove”) out to Fort Worth Cycling and Fitness on Cherry Lane to talk to Josh Crain, who was fixing a bike when I got there, so I figured that meant he knew a good bit about such machines. The store has been there since 1988 (with heritage dating back to the days when former Fort Worth mayor Bob Bolen ran a bike shop) and I counted that as a good sign, too.
Bikes
We started with the bicycles. They aren’t the single-gear Huffy whose tires you’ve been meaning to air up for years.
“It’s a bike that’s designed to be ridden fast, ridden hard,” Crain explained. “You’re going to get a very aerodynamic frame, wheels, and handlebars, as well as any kind of advantage you can get.”
The competition bikes are incredibly light, with more gears (many with electronic shifting) than recreational models to offer bigger ratios for adjusting to incredibly steep climbs followed by long descents.
Tires
Keep an eye on where the rubber hits the road. Teams change tires depending on the conditions they’ll encounter.
“If you’re riding somewhere really fast, really dry, and smooth, you’re going to go with a tire that has as little rolling resistance as possible,” Crain explained. “That’s usually something really skinny, aired up very hard, so 120 to 150 pounds (per square inch) possibly.”
“There are some stages where they have to go through some cobblestones, where the harder tires are going to be rough and actually slicker and slower. So they go with as wide a tire as they can get, while still being fast, and run those at a lot lower pressure to make it more comfortable and also to be able to roll, or form, over the cobbles.
“When you get to the rain and snow, same way. You go with wider tires with a little bit lower pressure so you can get more contact (with the road).”
The wheels matter, too, and have a lot to do with the bike’s overall aerodynamics.
“On flatter stages, a lot of people are going to have deeper rims,” Crain said. “If it’s more mountain stages, you’re going to get shallower rims, because while the deeper rims are more aerodynamic, they are a little heavier. The shallower rims are a little bit lighter and when you’re trying to get up a mountain, you want as little weight as you’re allowed and you don’t really need as much of the aerodynamic advantage going uphill.”
Teams
You’ll notice groups of riders wearing the same jersey. This was not a situation where they showed up to the party and were horrified to discover someone else had found the same dress on sale at Kohl’s. While individuals win races, they do so as part of a team.
“Each member of a team has a specific job. Not everyone is out there to win,” Crain explained. “Usually they know coming into the race who they’re going to push as their top rider. Sometimes, if there are a lot of good guys, they’ll find out who does better in the first few days and then start to focus on keeping him at the front of the pack.
“A lot of the guys on the team, their job is to spend almost all day out in the wind.”
These “domestiques” block the wind, chase down rivals, slow down the peloton (the main group of riders) when their main man breaks away – basically do whatever it takes to keep the team’s anointed rider in the best position possible.
Attire
Speaking of jerseys, it’s France, so fashion matters. That includes shoes. As with much fancy footwear, the participants’ shoes aren’t designed with walking comfort in mind.
“All of these guys are clipped in. Their shoes are attached to their pedals,” Crain pointed out. “It’s not fun to walk around (in them).
You may notice different styles of headwear, as riders seek a balance between comfort and speed.
“You’ll see some of the guys who stay in a group and they don’t really get in the wind, usually the top riders who are protected. They’re going to use just the standard really ventilated helmets just to stay cool,” Crain said. “The guys who are going to be out in front are going to be wearing something that’s more aerodynamic, (with) not as many vents, although some new helmets have a vent now that actually opens and closes.
“On time trial stages (where riders don’t ride at the same time as their competitors), you’re going to see the very aerodynamic helmet with the point in the back,” he said. “Having the point makes it to where there is no gap between their heads and their backs. It’s completely streamlined.”
You’ll also notice some riders wearing shirts that don’t precisely match those of their teammates. These signify some accomplishment the rider has attained. Crain ran them down for us:
Yellow Jersey: “That’s the general classification, the overall winner. That’s the guy whose (cumulative) time each day is the lowest at the end of the race.”
Polka Dot Jersey: “That is a climber’s jersey and that’s done based on a points system (awarded for) the first guy to the top of each mountain. Some days there are several mountains that they have to climb, some days there aren’t any.”
Green Jersey: “The sprinter’s jersey. That’s done on a point system,” with checkpoints at midway sprint lines after stretches of flat ground, in time trials, and at the ends of stages.
White Jersey: “It’s done just the same as the yellow jersey, or the general classification, except it’s for young riders, so anybody under 26.”
Castles
I didn’t actually ask Josh Crain about castles, and they don’t have anything to do with who wins the race. I just think one of the awesome things about the tour broadcasts is the amazing flyovers of the French countryside, including its ancient fortresses. I therefore included a photo of Château de Vincennes so you know what a castle looks like and can knowledgeably exclaim “That, my friends, is a castle.”
Hopefully the above information will help you impress your friends who named fewer cycling races than you did. Perhaps you can show off your knowledge while watching the 2015 Tour’s final stages this week. And maybe you’ll get inspired to finally air up the tires on that old Huffy in the garage. Crain told me that they do everything from basic repairs on department store bikes to custom bike builds, which kind of eliminates your excuses. See you on the trails.

Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns and related creative projects for sports entities through his company, Rush Olson Creative & Sports.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2015

A Presidential Lineup

This post originally appeared on the Blotch page at the Fort Worth Weekly. To read it on their site : http://www.fwweekly.com/2015/07/14/a-presidential-lineup/

The old saying about the Washington Senators, as coined by baseball writer Charles Dryden, always went: “First in war, first in peace, last in the American League.” The Sens did tend to find themselves at the caboose end of their annual whistle stop tour of the A.L. They finished in the second division 41 times between 1901 and their move to Minnesota after the 1960 season. And the powerful people of D.C. could do nothing about it.
Rush 1
Baseball: America’s Presidents, America’s Pastime, the current special exhibit on display through October 4 at Dallas’ George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, covers the sport of baseball and how U.S. presidents interacted with it. So that could beg the question:  What if the most powerful man in the world could do something about what happened on the field? Not by signing a minimum-run bill or conducting NSA-style surveillance on the Astros’ front office (that’s apparently already been done, anyway), but by actually contributing on the diamond.
If you had to pick any president to start a baseball team, whom would you choose?
Most presidents since the beginning of the 20th century have thrown at least one pitch a year. William Howard Taft began the practice of tossing ceremonial first pitches. On April 14, 1910, Taft addressed a women’s suffrage convention, then went to American League Park, where the Senators played their home games at the time. He threw out the ceremonial first pitch of the season to Walter Johnson. The Hall-of-Famer Johnson then threw a one-hitter in a 3-0 Sens Opening Day win against the Philadelphia Athletics.
The tradition continued, and, in fact, Barack Obama threw out a first pitch on the 100th anniversary of Taft’s inaugural presidential delivery.
One pitch, however, does not a Sabermetric analysis make.  Luckily, the exhibit had some information on which presidents actually played baseball, plus their heights, weights, and records of offices held.
With baseball known as the National Pastime, it follows that a lot of the National Heads of State have played the game. After reviewing the information, I speculated on how a GM might assemble an all-Presidential team. As you listen to their games broadcast by former Cubs play-by-play announcer Ronald Reagan, keep in mind that I’ve assigned them positions based on available knowledge of where they actually played or where their abilities would seem to place them.  It’s all subject to change, of course, because when you’re the Commander in Chief, you can really play whatever position you want to.
1B : George H. W. Bush
This is probably the guy with whom you start the team. He played D-1 baseball and captained his Yale squad to the first two College World Series tournaments in 1947 and 1948.  A 1990 Topps baseball card of Bush 41 indicates he hit .251 (with a wood bat) in 175 at-bats those two years, some of which came against future Major Leaguers. He socked two home runs and eight doubles.
According to William Mead and Paul Dickson in their book Baseball: The Presidents’ Game, Bush 41 was probably the best natural ballplayer of all the presidents. John Sayle Watterson, in his book The Games Presidents Play: Sports and the Presidency, ranks George H.W. Bush as the top overall presidential athlete.
2B: Woodrow Wilson
He played college ball as a freshman at Davidson, so he must have had some ability, although Watterson ranks him as one of the least athletic presidents. Wilson loved baseball, attending many games after he left office. Perhaps he would have been a David Eckstein sort of player, who doesn’t look like a good ballplayer but finds a way to get it done. On the other hand, Baseball Almanac cites this contemporary observation about the 28th president: “’Wilson would be a good player if he weren’t so damned lazy.’ – Comment by the Team Captain of Wilson’s Davidson College.”
SS: Herbert Hoover
Hoover loved baseball and played shortstop at Stanford as a freshman. Ted Williams (known for being the Rangers’ first manager, among other things) considered him America’s greatest president.
3B: Warren Harding
He played first base as a boy, but we’re moving him across the diamond because the team’s top player occupies that position. Baseball Almanac reports that Harding played in a charity game in 1920 and injured his finger.
C: William Howard Taft
According to Mead and Dickson, there are accounts that Taft was a young catcher who would have had a contract with the Cincinnati Red Stockings had he not injured his arm. Taft loved the game, though he missed throwing out the first pitch in 1912 due to an understandable preoccupation with the recent Titanic shipwreck. At more than 300 pounds, the 27th president probably isn’t your leadoff hitter, but might be your Prince Fielder in the middle of the order.
LF: John Kennedy
One of the best presidential athletes, Kennedy grew up a Red Sox fan. He concentrated more on other sports, like swimming, but I think he’d be projectable as at least a good defensive outfielder.
CF: Dwight Eisenhower
The general loved baseball, but didn’t make the West Point team.  He wanted to be a ballplayer like Honus Wagner growing up, which is relevant here because the museum just added to its exhibit the most valuable and famous baseball card around, a T-206 Honus Wagner.
RF: Gerald Ford
Ford was an excellent athlete, having played football at Michigan. He played baseball growing up as well, and Baseball Almanac reports him as having said “I had a life-long ambition to be a professional baseball player, but nobody would sign me.” He played on the Congressional baseball team before occupying the Oval Office.
LOOGYs (left-handed-one-out-guy): Barack Obama and Bill Clinton
This isn’t a joke based on their politics. They both throw left-handed and a team needs situational southpaws. Clinton listened to Cardinals games growing up and later rooted for his wife’s favored Cubs. Obama likes the White Sox. Based on the video I’ve seen, Clinton looks to be the most game-ready. Obama, a fine basketball player, may have to take the Michael Jordan path and spend some time in the White Sox minor league system as he converts to a different sport.
Pat Venditte’s Position : Harry Truman
Truman could throw with either arm. He didn’t play that much as a kid, but loved the game and attended more games while in office than any other president. His wife Bess was apparently considered the best third baseman in Independence, Missouri as a young person, a fact one learns in the First Ladies section of the exhibit.
By the way, are there a kids in third-world countries wearing “Congratulations, President Dewey” shirts?
Closer: Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln apparently played ballgames on the White House lawn with local kids and had a baseball field built behind the White House. We don’t know his true position, but with his height, I am thinking he could throw some heat on a serious downward plane. If he can learn a breaking pitch, he could be a dominating closer.
RHP: Jimmy Carter
Carter pitched growing up and continued playing softball during his presidency. His mom loved the Dodgers and the exhibit shows a letter Carter wrote to Los Angeles owner Peter O’Malley thanking him for treating his mom well. Carter attended Game 7 of 1979 World Series but never threw out a first pitch as president. That’s kind of Arlington’s fault. Texas persuaded the Senators (an expansion franchise that replaced the one that moved to Minnesota) to vacate the nation’s capital in 1972. Presidents had no Washington team to patronize until the Nationals arrived during the Bush 43 administration.
RHP: George W. Bush
The younger Bush played on the Yale freshman team but didn’t progress to the varsity. Still, even playing at that level puts him ahead of most of us. Where the 43rd president would prove especially valuable to your team-building would be in actually building it. He spent time as Managing General Partner of the Texas Rangers.
“One of the pleasant surprises for all of us, not knowing him when he put the group together to buy the team, turned out to be how much of a student of the game that he really was,” said Tom Grieve, who served as Rangers General Manager under Bush. “It was obvious when you talked to him that he knew the history of the game. He could quote lineups from 30-40 years ago. He loved baseball.“
Bush no doubt absorbed a lot of knowledge about building a ballclub through his interactions with the Rangers baseball operations staff
“He was in a lot of meetings. He asked a lot of questions,” explained Grieve. He never imposed his will or his thoughts on anybody else, but he was very aware of everything that went on in the baseball operation. He wanted to know about it.”
For his Assistant to the General Manager positions, Bush might choose Bill Clinton, who got involved in resolving the 1994 baseball strike or Richard Nixon, a huge baseball aficionado who turned down offers to head the MLB Players Association and to become MLB Commissioner. Also, Warren Harding owned part of the Marion, Ohio town team, which developed future Major Leaguers Wilbur Cooper and Jake Daubert.
Bush 43 had one of the most poignant presidential baseball moments when he threw out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium in October, 2001, shortly after the September 11 attacks. It was Game 3 of the Yankees/Diamondbacks World Series. Yankees (and former Rangers) catcher Todd Greene caught the pitch.
The exhibit talks about all the ways presidents impacted the game beyond just playing it. Perhaps the most historically significant artifact comes courtesy of Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1942, he wrote the famous “green light letter” to Kennesaw Mountain Landis urging baseball’s commissioner to keep the game going during the war.
Most of the information for this article came, quite naturally, from the backs of baseball cards. In this case, we mean oversized cards in the exhibit you can pull off the wall and flip over to discover facts about baseball and presidents.
Many of the artifacts in the exhibit came from presidential libraries and the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. You’ll learn a lot, with details ranging from how George Washington played catch at Valley Forge, to why the athletically inclined Teddy Roosevelt disliked the sport, to a display of the jersey movie actor Ronald Reagan wore when portraying a ballplayer named after a president. There’s a video about baseball and presidents, narrated by the Bush Center’s Scott Robertson. Its highlight might be footage of Bush 43 at 2001 World Series where you see how the Secret Service did its thing, including an agent dressing up as umpire. And, of course, there’s a souvenir stand. You can pick up exhibit-branded jerseys, pins, and postcards, plus the inevitable baseball autograph (George W. Bush’s, on a $100 copy of his book about his father).
With a big baseball event on national television tonight, we’re reminded of an election none of these professional politicians would have likely won, even if they had continued to pursue power hitting instead of executive power: selection to the MLB All-Star Game.
Which begs the question of whether the public should actually elect All-Star starters or leave it up to a system of electors equal to the number of total congresspersons. We’ll address that in a future blog post.
Disclosure : The Bush Center sometimes pays me to help produce their webcasts. Also, I once had a dog called “Hoover.” He was named after a president, but not of the United States. I named him for the president of Delta House.


Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns and related creative projects for sports entities through his company, Rush Olson Creative & Sports.

RushOlson.com
Linkedin.com/company/rush-olson-creative-&-sports
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Friday, July 10, 2015

The Liverpool Way: Texas Style

The goalkeeper dived to his right. His outstretched hand made just enough contact with the ball to deflect it over the crossbar. As he landed, the red “Liver bird” logo on his left shoulder hit the ground with the rest of his torso. He stood, yelled at his defense, and got set to defend the ensuing corner kick.
While a home game for Liverpool, it did not take place at historic Anfield in Liverpool, England.
It was in North Fort Worth.
Specifically at the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw school district’s Rough Rider Stadium.
And it wasn’t technically the Reds in action – no one was expecting to see Steven Gerrard, the Liverpool legend who recently became a member of the Los Angeles Galaxy. It was the Liverpool Warriors, who don’t compete in the Premier or Europa leagues but in the National Premier Soccer League, a semi-pro league that represents the third tier of U.S. soccer.


The Warriors, however, are still affiliated with the U.K.-based franchise. In 2009, North Texas businessman Peter Brody worked out an agreement with the Merseyside club to not only use the name of Liverpool FC America but also establish in-kind support for an academy.
“Our contract allows us to have the United States market,” said Tim Trevino, who oversees business relations and marketing for LFCA, whose office is in The Colony. Their players wear their trademark red shirts on fields from Rockwall to Burleson, and they also just reached an agreement to conduct activities at Rolling Hills Park in Fort Worth.
“One of the parents who has a child that plays in our club works for the Fort Worth Parks Department and he was seeing the growth of Liverpool. He was seeing a lot of things that he liked and actually set up a meeting with their Parks Department,” Brody explained. “They’re going to allow us to train teams out there, to run tournaments, and to help promote the Liverpool Way, the Liverpool brand out of Rolling Hills. We pay them a fee for usage of the field.”
Any clubs or players, Trevino said, “in the United States that [have] interest in being part of Liverpool [have] to come through us.”
Unlike the dozens of other soccer clubs and academies in North Texas, some also with major club affiliations, the LFCA folks believe their superior curriculum differentiates them from the rest. Technical Director Armando Pelaez also feels LFCA is more integrated with its parent club than its North Texas competitors are with theirs 
“We are part of Liverpool directly,” he said. “As you can see, we are called ‘Liverpool.’ It’s not ‘Solar’ or ‘Texas,’ and then they have the little logo that says, ‘Manchester City’ or ‘Chelsea.’ We are Liverpool.”
Brody explains further. “A lot of clubs will create kind of what we call a ‘patch on the sleeve’ relationship, where you’ll maybe do a camp or you’ll pay some money to one of the big England Premier League clubs.” He indicated that those sorts of relationships don’t typically go much further, and he feels the Liverpool relationship runs much deeper. 
The last time a North Texan got involved with Liverpool soccer ownership, it turned out poorly for everyone involved (except for maybe some lawyers).
In February 2007, Tom Hicks bought half of Liverpool FC in England, splitting the purchase with partner George Gillett. At the time, Hicks owned the Texas Rangers and Dallas Stars and Gillett the Montreal Canadiens. The Americans generated goodwill early on by authorizing sizable spending in the transfer market, roughly equivalent to the free-agency period of the big four American sports. But the good feelings soon dissipated as the debt-burdened ownership fought among themselves, alienated supporters, and failed to break ground on a promised new stadium. Hicks and Gillett unwillingly sold the club to Boston Red Sox owner John Henry in 2010, and the legal fallout lasted until 2013. By then, the Rangers and Stars had gone through bankruptcy and Hicks no longer held his once-significant sports empire.
The LFCA operation’s aspirations differ from the ones Hicks failed to realize. Brody made his mark in the soccer business by setting up Blue Sky Sports Centers in 1999. He now has locations in Keller, Euless, Allen, and The Colony.
 Through the Liverpool partnership, he hopes to create a nationwide system of clubs in the United States that all bear the Liverpool brand name.
 Dan White, Liverpool FC’s head of soccer schools, said he has reason to expect solid results from this Texas collaboration.
“The most important thing [about LFCA] was the quality of the overall program, ensuring that the very best environment is in place for the players to thrive,” White said via e-mail. “It was also important that they share the same values as LFC and are continually looking to improve the way they operate.”
Brody began the Liverpool affiliation while looking for a superior training program for two of his children who played soccer.
“I started looking around to potentially create something that was very kid-focused and kid-friendly and was also going to be focused on the development, and yet I wanted a strong enough brand that would help us really drive forward in a very crowded market. And so I started reaching out to Premier League clubs, because the brand is probably one of the best in the world. And one of the clubs that was at least willing to hear what I had to say was Liverpool.”
Brody began the relationship by working with supporters groups.
“After two to three years of trying to build the club and build the relationship with Liverpool, they came back and said, ‘We really like what you guys are doing, we like how you are doing it, let’s go ahead and make this an official relationship,’ ” Brody recalled.
 The affiliation comes through Liverpool’s International Academy program, which works with local clubs in a dozen countries.
 “In our international academies and soccer schools around the world, we provide opportunities for young players to play The Liverpool Way,” White said. “The way we do this is via an authentic training program which offers an all-around education for the young participants, helping to improve both their abilities on the pitch and their life skills off it.”
 For Liverpool, the academies provide a way to stretch their global reach. The brand loyalty they build through grassroots marketing can translate into merchandise sales and eyeballs for sponsors. From a soccer perspective, it allows them to develop players who could one day contribute to their team on the pitch.
 “These programs are about taking the club to the fans no matter how far they live away from Anfield,” White said. “It’s also about playing our part in the development of the game on a local level through both coach and player education.”
With exclusive rights to run Reds-affiliated clubs in the United States, LFCA already has operations in South Carolina and Florida in addition to five regions in Texas. And further expansion is on the way. Trevino said they’re currently talking to approximately 30 local clubs interested in signing up with Liverpool to “have a competitive edge in their particular market.” 
LFC and LFCA vet prospective clubs based on factors like size of staff, facilities, and number of “A” licensed coaches, the top coaching level established by the United States Soccer Federation, which runs all organized soccer in America.
Liverpool-affiliated clubs are given access to proprietary “Boot Room” insights and are expected to teach the game the way the parent club dictates. The “Boot Room” draws its name from a former Anfield space of the same name where boots (soccer shoes to Americans) were stored and coaches planned strategy.
The Liverpool Way dates back to 1892, when the club formed amid a dispute with the existing Everton FC club. (The two teams are still intracity derby rivals.) It adopted its city’s “Liver bird” symbol as its own in 1901, the same year the team won its first league title. The first team had on-and-off success until the 1960s and 1970s, when the great manager Bill Shankly established a system that won multiple cups and league titles. Overall, Liverpool has won more European titles than any other English team and more league championships than all but Manchester United. Though recent years have seen the club garner less silverware, it has avoided relegation to lower leagues (which can happen in European sport) and regularly challenges for berths in prestigious continental competitions. Its past successes could certainly add credibility to its sales pitch to prospective club players.
The large and devoted fan base embraces tradition. “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” from the 1945 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel, was not only a hit in 1963 for Liverpool’s second most famous musical export, Gerry & The Pacemakers. The song also quickly became the team’s anthem. Fans sing it before every home game and often at other junctures as well. And The Kop, named for a historic Anfield terrace, has become a term used to mean the seating section, the club’s most devoted supporters, or even the club itself. “Team spirit, hard work, determination, and the ability to overcome any obstacles in life” are, according to the team’s promotional materials, the Reds’ core values, values that White wants taught wherever the Liverpool brand appears.
“Our international academy and soccer school programs are about delivering an authentic LFC experience, so what we’re actually striving for on a daily basis is consistency,” he said. “Whether we are working with a young player in Sweden, India, Egypt, Japan, or the U.S.A., the core coaching is always the same.”
Like most U.S. youth athletic clubs, Liverpool FC America runs boys and girls teams across a range of ages. The youth squads bear the names of Liverpool FC legends like Shankly, Keegan, and Dalglish. Liverpool insists on adherence to club tradition, such as social media silence on the anniversary of the infamous Hillsborough disaster, when 96 Liverpool fans lost their lives. To ensure students understand the full picture, the parent club takes a hands-on approach with its affiliates’ coaches.
“We provide ongoing technical support,” White said. “We send LFC coaches to work in situ, and we welcome coaches from the U.S.A. over to Liverpool for an intensive coach education program each year.”
 LFCA coaches go to England annually.
 “We sit down, and we see all the sessions about what is going on from the youth system to the top team,” Pelaez said.
 Two LFCA academy players have already been to England for training. While it’s still a long shot that any LFCA player will end up on the Reds, he still knows that he will now be on the Premier League team’s radar.
 “We just had two coaches from the U.K. that were here running camps and programs for us that attended Warriors games and were able to look at some of the boys,” Brody said. “So if they do want to consider possibly trying to pursue soccer at even a higher level than that, it’s a great bridge for them to be able to do that.”
Pelaez has also used connections from his days as a professional player to set up a trip to the continent to showcase his American players.
 “Twenty-two players will be traveling to Europe, training over there, getting some friendly games, and being seen by the teams abroad,” he said. “If they’re good enough, probably some of them will get an offer to stay.”
 He hopes interest in his players from overseas teams will also eventually translate into opportunities to represent their country in international competitions. The United States Soccer Federation runs national sides that range in age from under 14 to under 23. Pelaez specifically cited the under-18 and under-20 teams as the ones his players might work into if they gain playing time abroad.
An athletic club system, the primary developmental model in Europe, has different tiers of teams. They typically range from the youngest kids’ squads all the way up to a first team made up of professionals playing in one of the country’s top leagues. The Warriors are at the top of LFCA’s pyramid.
 “It allows our kids a chance to play at a highly competitive level,” Brody said.
Eventually, the LFCA coaches and administrators want their No. 1 team to consist entirely of players who have come up through the LFCA system. Even now, though, a number of young up-and-comers appear in the regular lineup, some as young as 17. From a developmental perspective, having the Warriors helps LFCA determine how well they have coached and evaluated at the lower levels.
The Warriors team “is the highest level [in the American club’s structure], and it is always interesting to see how the final product works after you develop it,” Peleaz said. “You want to see if the job you did during all these years is the one that will be effective at the highest level, so you will know the truth by getting these players that you’ve been developing into the Warriors.”
 The coach hopes the Warriors can offer up-and-coming academy players the chance to play against quality competition, as well as mix in LFCA graduates who have played at the college or pro levels.
The team attracted the likes of Edvaldo Pedro, a central midfielder originally from the African country of Angola who speaks very good English. “I had played in [U.S. Soccer’s] Olympic development program for about five or six years, and I played freshman year at Lipscomb University in Tennessee,” he said.
He got on with Liverpool in America when the team started four years ago when he was only 16 years old, earning a roster spot among some 200 players who tried out in Plano. “The regular playing time helps me compete. I just want to keep developing and eventually play professionally.” 
The 2015 Warriors haven’t won a lot in the NPSL. Sitting in last place in the South Central Conference, 21 points behind first place Corinthians FC of San Antonio and 20 behind second-place FC Wichita, the team is still adjusting to the high level of play, Coach Peleaz said. After a loss Saturday to a Vaqueros side reduced to 10 men after their goalkeeper’s red card, Peleaz said he was less interested in scoreboards than developing his charges. Rather than keep his starters in throughout the game, he substituted frequently (the NPSL allows seven substitutions per game).
 “I made [all] seven subs because to me, the NPSL is still a development league,” he said.
 Coach Pelaez does believe that wins may come more frequently in the future.
 “If I was able to keep this group of young gentlemen for two or three years, it’s a fact that this group would become a champion within three years,” he said.
 The Warriors ended up in Rough Rider Stadium thanks to a connection from an LFCA coach who also works for the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw school district. Trevino said the Warriors would likely remain at the facility next season, but they won’t play in Fort Worth forever. For one thing, the stadium sits within the Fort Worth Vaqueros’ territory. More importantly, an LFCA facility under construction in Carrollton will include a 1,000-seat stadium to supplement indoor and outdoor training fields.
Brody said he chose Carrollton after the city’s parks director approached him based on the Blue Sky Sports partnerships he had created with Allen, The Colony, and Keller. He decided it made sense to make the project Liverpool-branded and will house the LFCA offices there. The city will also add a retail component to the development.
“It’s a public-private partnership where the city actually leases us the dirt, and then we build the facility and operate it as a part of the Parks Department,” Brody said. “We still do have to pay some taxes on it.”
Training philosophies may help the club differentiate itself among customers who want to pay $2,500-$3,000 plus expenses yearly to advance their children’s soccer prospects. The Liverpool name may bring huge advantages when it comes to the academy side of its business. An international brand, however, faces different challenges in attracting paying spectators to fill a new stadium. A team like the Vaqueros has its home city in its name and a roster made up entirely of Fort Worth players. It offers a local pride appeal not easily available to a franchised product. To create a fan following, Pelaez believes LFCA’s approach on the training side will have to translate into on-field results.
Fans will come, he said, “if we do a good job developing all these kids, and they go to the Warriors, and we start getting the results we are looking for,” he said. “We have to show the market, especially here in the Metroplex, that we have the right way to develop players, and then the way we are going to show that is by the results of how these players are developing according to how many we get to the top universities or the professional level.”
With a stable location and some marketing, it seems logical that the Warriors might attract the portion of LFC’s massive global fan base that lives in this area. (Fort Worth and Dallas supporters clubs do exist.) If people do turn out to cheer on the team next season, they’ll see players wearing the official kit. The side had previously worn red Liverpooly garb manufactured by Warrior (hence the team nickname) but not the apparel actually worn by the first team in England.
“Liverpool did not allow anybody to wear the replica jersey officially,” Trevino said. “With the new five-year contract that we’ve just signed this past fall, they have allowed us to wear the replica jersey now. So it’s the first time in the club’s history that they’ve allowed a club outside of England to actually wear the replica.”
And the Warriors won’t be the only LFCA team dressed in the authentic shirts.
“We are the first group in the world that will wear the replica jerseys in our youth levels,” Pelaez said. “All the kids will be wearing the red replica just like the first team in England. That’s not happening anywhere else in the world.”
LFCA’s and LFC’s relationship continues to evolve. The parent club experienced a major change earlier this year when an iconic player left for the United States. White said the exposure for such a high-profile product of the Liverpool system could potentially benefit the U.S.-based club.
“Steven [Gerrard] is a fantastic role model for the young players on our programs around the world,” White said. “Having progressed through the club’s youth development system to go on and make such a significant contribution for club and country serves as a real inspiration for those just starting out in the game.”
Steven Gerrard (photo courtesy LA Galaxy)
When Gerrard takes the field against FC Dallas on Saturday, Aug. 15, at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, some lucky youngster associated with his old club’s U.S. affiliate will hold the legend’s hand and accompany him onto the field. Can Liverpool FC create a lasting presence in the area and the country? They have linked hands with LFCA to find out.

  
This article originally appeared in the Fort Worth Weekly. Read it at their site here : http://www.fwweekly.com/2015/07/08/the-liverpool-way-texas-style/


Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns and related creative projects for sports entities through his company, Rush Olson Creative & Sports.

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