PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Allen Iverson seems to have accepted that
no matter what he does on the court, he'll never achieve the
endorsement success of Michael Jordan. Corporate America fears
him the way a lone defender on the wing does.
The Philadelphia 76ers controversial star has only one
endorsement deal, with Reebok, even though his jersey is one of
the top-five sellers in the country. The Sixers are trying to
change that, but it's a tough sell.
On Friday night, the Sixers will undertake the latest attempt
to sell Iverson, who leads the NBA in scoring but trails mightily
in the race for endorsements. The Sixers brain trust came up with
the idea of a beanbag doll modeled after their star player --
complete with cornrows, a goatee and tattoos.
Iverson hopes the promotion, which is responsible for the
Sixers' third sellout of the season, doesn't just turn into
another missed opportunity or ill-perceived reach for acceptance.
``I'm just trying to be me, man,'' Iverson said. ``If people
are going to market me, I don't want it to be anything phony. If
they're going to market me, I want it to be the way I am.''
Not exactly music to the ears of Madison Avenue.
It's no secret that Iverson's rocky past and his public image
work against him. Few in the corporate world have walked the
streets Iverson has.
He's been arrested on marijuana and gun charges, spent four
months in jail for his role in a bowling alley brawl, been
implicated by friends who were pulled over while driving away
from an alleged drug dealing in his Mercedes.
He has seen death up close, in the tragic, senseless way that
it happens in America's blighted outposts. He once had eight
friends killed in one summer. His father is serving nine years in
prison for assault, and a surrogate father figure, Tony Clark,
also was killed.
In Iverson's mind, he has coped in the most admirable way
possible -- by refusing to abandon the people and places who made
him who he is. Thus, the braided hair, jewelry and tattoos that
decorate his sinewy arms, the most prominent one proclaiming,
``Only the strong survive.''
``Madison Avenue isn't ready for cornrows,'' said Rick Burton,
director of the Warsaw Sports Marketing Center at the University
of Oregon. ``That's racist, but that's the way Madison Avenue
tends to be, because they have to sell to a broader audience.
``They don't understand cornrows or African American history
or culture. It's hard for them be able to appreciate a young man
like Iverson, who is so driven and so focused.''
This is part of the dilemma facing the Sixers, who have on
their watch an incredible basketball talent perceived as a
ticking time bomb. Dave Coskey, the team's vice president for
public relations, recalls working with a similar lightning rod
for controversy in his early days with the Sixers.
Fellow named Charles Barkley.
``He was incorrigible. He was outrageous. He was outspoken,''
Coskey said. ``The older basketball writers used to say, `He's
nothing like the guys we're used to covering.' Now fast-forward.
Charles is the elder statesman in the NBA. A lot of analogies can
be drawn.''
More so than with Barkley, the Sixers are torn when trying to
market Iverson. On one hand, they see a young man up close whose
allure to children defies his public image. Earlier this season,
after a Sixers loss, Coskey stood in awe while Iverson taped a
segment that was to be shown to a child dying of AIDS and brain
cancer in Atlanta.
Then, they stand by helplessly while Iverson curses his coach,
Larry Brown, and causes a weeklong controversy that threatens to
derail the team's bid for a first playoff berth since 1991.
The contradictions hurt Iverson's chances for endorsements,
but maybe it's too early to write him off as a marketing failure.
Iverson hopes the doll is a start. The toy, named ``Alien
Iverson,'' will be given away to the first 5,000 kids in the
building for Friday night's game against Indiana. And surprise,
it managed to attract a sponsor -- Rold Gold pretzels.
Burton has studied athletes who overcame negative images to
gain appeal as pitchmen. He was involved in Miller Lite's famous
``Less Filling, Tastes Great'' commercials that showed tough,
seemingly aloof jocks in a humorous light. He believes the same
approach may someday work for Iverson.
``When show you can laugh, you can break a lot of people's
defenses down,'' said Burton, hitting on Iverson's favorite
pastime on the court. ``Let's laugh at some of what Larry Brown
and the media represent. Let's laugh at ourselves.''
Iverson recently fired agent David Falk, saying he wants his
replacement to be more aggressive in pursuing endorsements. But
he remains steadfast in his position that he won't change.
``If I want to see myself on TV, I can just turn on ESPN every
night,'' Iverson said. ``I'm not big on having a bunch of
commercials and all that. That's not what it's all about.
``Sometimes I feel like it isn't fair, but I don't ever cry
about it. It's not fun all the time, because I'm not the person
that they try to make me out to be.''
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