π Johan Cruyff refused to wear Adidas uniforms at the 74 World Cup final.
π‘ His move changed the way the sports industry works today.
β½ Johan Cruyff invented 'Total Football' and led the great Ajax and Dutch teams of the 70s.
π Johan Cruyff was a football maverick and won La Liga in his first season.
π Cruyff's shirt dispute with Adidas during the 74 World Cup final was a memorable commercial conflict.
π€ Cruyff had an exclusive deal with Puma and refused to wear Adidas, causing tension between him and the brand.
π Cruyff's refusal to wear a Barcelona shirt and his choice of Puma showcased his rebellion and business savvy.
β½ Cruyff's success in Dutch teams and his transfer to Barcelona demonstrated his peak power and influence.
π The battle for power between athletes, teams, and brands has been a significant aspect of sports marketing throughout history.
π Sports and athletes are valuable for marketing and building brands.
π° Brands pay for visibility, not the athlete's performance.
ποΈ Ownership of valuable real estate at sporting events raises conflicts of interest.
π The sports industry has seen hilarious stories regarding contracts and court cases.
π Arsenal players have traditionally followed a directive to wear the same type of shirt as the captain, until Mathieu Flamini broke this tradition.
π Some players combine their forces with brands, such as Ian Wright with his Nike-sponsored goal celebration.
π¦ΈββοΈ Players sometimes portray themselves as superheroes, like Aubameyang did in 2017 to promote the Nike campaign 'The Masked Finisher'.
π° Dortmund bosses fined Aubameyang 50,000 euros for his behavior in celebrating with a mask.
In 1974, Stan Bowles played a football match wearing different boots from different brands and earned a bonus of Β£450.
Johan Cruyff's two-striped shirt showcased his business-savviness and power, but such actions are unlikely to happen in modern times.
The difference in treatment between Cruyff and Aubameyang highlights how times have changed in terms of sponsorship and brand restrictions.
β½ Adidas threatened legal action against Cruyff's sportswear company for selling replicas of his legendary kit.
π Cruyff claimed that the two stripes on the kit belonged to him and compared himself to famous artists who were initially misunderstood.