So yesterday, out went a press notice from the Vancouver Canadians media office, announcing that the following day, the team would be ‘recreating’ Jeff Francis’ UBC Thunderbirds locker at Nat Bailey Stadium. The media, if they so desired, could come and take pictures.
Now, for the layman, that sounds about as exciting as watching the Minnesota Wild do defensive drills. It sounds as entertaining as watching Ben Mulroney talking about himself. It sounds as thrilling as a jumping castle with a slow leak.
But that’s why you’re the layman and Rob Fai is a media darling.
See, if you cover sport in Vancouver on a day like today, what are you going to do for a story? The Canucks aren’t playing, the Lions aren’t playing, there’s no ballgame, no NFL… it’s a dead day.
And when you’re sitting there scratching your head, dying for something - anything - to take a camera to, so as to keep the boss off your ass, well a nice little photo op, complete with a few of Jeff Francis’ old teammates for quotes, well, that’s just manna from heaven.
And they did flock. 14 separate media outlets in all jammed into the long emptied Vancouver Canadians/UBC clubhouse to take pictures of a shirt. That’s basically every media outlet in the city; radio, TV and print.
I tell you no lie, tonight as the missus was getting ready to watch her Coronation Street, she flicked through the stations, and on three of them, all at the same time, there was the C’s clubhouse, bold as brass.
Now, to be sure, there will be no tickets sold this day as a result of the morass of media. Things just don’t work out that way, and that’s why the old ownership couldn’t get the press office staff off the payroll quickly enough at the end of each season, but what they didn’t get way back then (and what most sporting organizations don’t get, to be honest) is that marketing isn’t about selling a ticket today.
It’s about building a brand. It’s about building awareness, and reminding the press that The Nat exists, and, "Yes, it DOES look wonderful now that it’s been all painted, doesn’t it? Here, have a beer and a media guide."
It’s about getting people watching TV to remember there’s a ballpark in Vancouver, and a ballteam to go with it. It’s about getting people to UBC baseball games when their season begins. It’s about making sure people are watching Jeff Francis throw in the World Series on Wednesday night, and thinking, "He’s a local kid. Wonder what other local kids we might have missed at The Nat this season?"
When Coca-Cola puts up a billboard, they know it won’t sell one single bottle of pop. Nobody will look at that sign and think "must buy a Coke right now" - ever. But if they put up enough of them, and keep the brand in your face, when you feel thirsty, what are you going to pick up?
Rob Fai, and the Vancouver Canadians management and ownership team, understand this concept, and they are playing it brilliantly.
And maybe, just maybe, if more Canadian sporting organizations played for the long term, instead of the short, we might have fewer articles like this one in circulation:
Once, near the beginning of the current century, there were six
professional baseball teams in Canada at the triple-A level or higher,
as of Opening Day 2008 there will be just one. We all know what
happened to Les Expos de Montréal, who bolted French-speaking
Canada after the 2004 season to become the Washington Nationals. But
did you know that Canada has also lost four high-level minor league
franchises? The triple-A Vancouver Canadians, Edmonton Trappers,
Calgary Cannons and Ottawa Lynx have all left Canada for the United
States in the last 15 years.It left me wondering, while the
pro ranks have diminished, what is the state of the game itself up in
Canada? Do they even still play it up there? Or is the country so
hockey mad that they a) haven’t really noticed that all the pro
baseball teams have gone south and b) don’t play much baseball on the
youth level any more?
It’s a great article. But it’s sad that it should ever have to be written.







1 user commented in " This is why you pay staff to work year-round. "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackThanks Oz, even I was a bit surprized by the turnout. But - I can say that looking back about a week ago when the Rockies first clinched the NL, I thought how I could capitalize on this - and I thought it out like a reporter would. I thought if I was at TEAM 1040 and I needed a story, what would intrigue me. It started out as the shirt, and eventually I thought that wouldn’t be enough… So I put out a call to Brent Mutis, Cav Whitely and Brooks McNiven who all didn’t blink in saying ‘I’ll be there”… They got it just the same way I did… I didn’t put the media together for the C’s persay… It was for the UBC Thunderbirds, for fans of Jeff Francis who now had something physical to touch and be a part of even though they could never afford a ticket to see him pitch - and most of all just for baseball… No C’s logos smeared in the background - no tickets for the 2008 season available - just a day for the C’s to step back and give Francis, his time at the Nat and his old friends a little ink… And ink they got - with my thanks to the Vancouver media.
Simply put, in this business - you have to think like a reporter, and think like a fan. You are right Oz, its not about selling a ticket today - its about making people realize that this team is about baseball as a whole. We support minor baseball in the Lower Mainland, we support the T-Birds and we support the fans that pay to walk through our gates…
My favorite moment of the media day came about an hour after the media left… And a dad and his son came to the front office hoping to get a look at the Jeff Francis exhibit… I didn’t even hesitate and took them to the clubhouse - turned the lights back on and gave them a few minutes to look around. And that was special. I told the boy to take the jersey off from its hanger and try it on - he was thrilled… So there was a kid, off from school, with his dad in a locker room all to themselves remembering the days when Jeff Francis played at the Nat… He tried on his hat, the shirt and loved every minute of it… And then I took a picture of the two of them together, just a father and his son… Yesterday’s exhibit was different… It symbolized the local kid making good… It symbolized a dream come true dreams - and a moment where a father and a son managed to find a common ground from a simple memory of the day they went to the Nat and together watched a young, scrawny kid pitch for UBC only to find out a few years later he’d be the starter for Game One of the World Series…
That was why yesterday - it was so much more than just a shirt hanging in a locker - even though it WAS just a shirt hanging in a locker.
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