The best-selling sports jerseys **MERGE**

big dog cowboy

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The best-selling sports jerseys
By Tom Van Riper, Forbes.com

When it comes to sports merchandise, the NFL is king. A league where each team plays only 16 games per year makes each Sunday in the fall an event. And whether they’re headed to the stadium or the nearest big screen, fans don’t consider themselves geared up for game day until they pull on the team jersey. The 10 best-selling jerseys in sports all hail from the NFL, the top five of them quarterbacks.

“The NFL is the most popular organized sports league in the U.S., and it only plays on Sunday,” says Matt Powell, an analyst with SportsOneSource, which tracks merchandise sales in the sporting goods industry, of the popularity of the league’s mock jerseys.

According to SportsOneSource data, the top-selling sports jersey over the past year is the No. 9 worn by Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, a flashy player who got plenty of tabloid publicity from dating singer and actress Jessica Simpson. Over 3 million Romo jerseys have moved through stores over the past year, SportsOneSource estimates, a testament to both Romo’s style and the Cowboys’ premium brand image.

“He’s a good-looking kid with a lot of positives,” says Powell. So strong is the Dallas brand that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones decided a few years ago to run his merchandise business separately from the rest of the NFL – why pool yourself with the rest of the league when that would essentially mean subsidizing your small-market competitors?

Other quarterbacks in the top 10: Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisberger (2.8 million jerseys), a two-time Super Bowl winner for a marquee franchise; the New York Jets’ Mark Sanchez (1.8 million), a young hotshot out of USC; plus brothers Eli Manning and Peyton Manning (3 million and 1.5 million jerseys, respectively). It’s the second straight year that sales of Eli’s Giants jersey have outpaced that of big brother Peyton’s Colts jersey, following the Giants’ 2008 Super Bowl upset of New England.

And a virtual guarantee of sales: When a high-profile player switches teams. This is the second straight year that formula has worked for Brett Favre, who practically had retail stores ordering his Minnesota Vikings jersey before his decision to unretire and join the team was even official. The same thing happened last year when Favre joined the Jets, giving him back-to-back years in the top five.

The biggest sellers among non-quarterbacks: running backs Adrian Peterson of Minnesota, Reggie Bush of New Orleans and LaDainian Tomlinson of San Diego. The only defensive player: Pittsburgh’s high-energy defensive back Troy Polamalu.

The jersey trade doesn’t translate as well to Major League Baseball where, Powell points out, fans are more apt to show their colors with team caps and T-shirts for a fraction of what replica jerseys cost. The MLB leader, the No. 2 of Yankee Derek Jeter, has sold less than 200,000 units over the past year, SportsOneSource estimates.

Another baseball caveat: All the top sellers are everyday players, mostly offensive bashers like Manny Ramirez, Alfonzo Soriano, Derrick Lee and David Wright. Pitchers, who don’t play every day, don’t fare as well. Winning helps, too. Five of this year’s World Series participants don their sport’s top 10 selling jerseys: Jeter and Alex Rodriguez of the Yankees, along with Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Shane Victorino of the Phillies.

Leading the NBA jersey bandwagon, unsurprisingly, are league icons LeBron James and Kobe Bryant, followed in order by Boston’s Kevin Garnett, Orlando’s Dwight Howard and New Orleans’ Chris Paul. But even those five megastars have combined to sell under a million jerseys over the past year, a figure that’s blown away by Romo or Roethlisberger.

Chalk it up to the game day pump-up every Sunday. An A-Rod or Jeter jersey may be fun to some Yankee fans, but to a true Cowboy fan, a Romo jersey is a must.

The top five:

1. Tony Romo: Slideshow
2. Eli Manning: Slideshow
3. Ben Roethlisberger: Slideshow
4. Mark Sanchez: Slideshow
5. Brett Favre: Slideshow

http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news;_y...stopjerseys103009&prov=yhoo&type=lgns&print=1
 

Wrangler87

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Hostile;3046244 said:
Eli outsells Peyton? That's tragic.

I would guess for two reasons:

It's NewYork and jerseys are a mainstay in NYC, as evidence by the Yankee's sales.

A lot of people probably already have a Peyton Manning jersey that they bought the first couple of years he was in the league, when he was always near the top of jersey sales. Eli just recently became a decent QB, so people are still acquiring his jersey. I would venture to say most real Colts fans already have at least one Peyton jersey. The market is saturated, which only shows how popular he actually is, with the fact that he is still in the top 5. If Peyton changed teams, he would go straight to the top, ahead of Romo.
 

JVita17

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Wrangler87;3046263 said:
I would guess for two reasons:

It's NewYork and jerseys are a mainstay in NYC, as evidence by the Yankee's sales.

A lot of people probably already have a Peyton Manning jersey that they bought the first couple of years he was in the league, when he was always near the top of jersey sales. Eli just recently became a decent QB, so people are still acquiring his jersey. I would venture to say most real Colts fans already have at least one Peyton jersey. The market is saturated, which only shows how popular he actually is, with the fact that he is still in the top 5. If Peyton changed teams, he would go straight to the top, ahead of Romo.

Peyton should just change his last name is UNO OCHO to generate some jersey sales
 

RCowboyFan

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Hostile;3046244 said:
Eli outsells Peyton? That's tragic.

Indeed. But probably only due to his winning SB in 2007. If Romo continues to do well this year, his sales will further spike. Especially if cowboys do any kind of damage if they get to playoffs.
 

DallasEast

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big dog cowboy;3045982 said:
So strong is the Dallas brand that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones decided a few years ago to run his merchandise business separately from the rest of the NFL – why pool yourself with the rest of the league when that would essentially mean subsidizing your small-market competitors?
Smart and wise.
 
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By Tom Van Riper, Forbes.com Oct 30, 11:59 am EDT

When it comes to sports merchandise, the NFL is king. A league where each team plays only 16 games per year makes each Sunday in the fall an event. And whether they’re headed to the stadium or the nearest big screen, fans don’t consider themselves geared up for game day until they pull on the team jersey. The 10 best-selling jerseys in sports all hail from the NFL, the top five of them quarterbacks.

“The NFL is the most popular organized sports league in the U.S., and it only plays on Sunday,” says Matt Powell, an analyst with SportsOneSource, which tracks merchandise sales in the sporting goods industry, of the popularity of the league’s mock jerseys.

According to SportsOneSource data, the top-selling sports jersey over the past year is the No. 9 worn by Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, a flashy player who got plenty of tabloid publicity from dating singer and actress Jessica Simpson. Over 3 million Romo jerseys have moved through stores over the past year, SportsOneSource estimates, a testament to both Romo’s style and the Cowboys’ premium brand image.

“He’s a good-looking kid with a lot of positives,” says Powell. So strong is the Dallas brand that Cowboys owner Jerry Jones decided a few years ago to run his merchandise business separately from the rest of the NFL – why pool yourself with the rest of the league when that would essentially mean subsidizing your small-market competitors?

Other quarterbacks in the top 10: Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisberger (2.8 million jerseys), a two-time Super Bowl winner for a marquee franchise; the New York Jets’ Mark Sanchez (1.8 million), a young hotshot out of USC; plus brothers Eli Manning and Peyton Manning (3 million and 1.5 million jerseys, respectively). It’s the second straight year that sales of Eli’s Giants jersey have outpaced that of big brother Peyton’s Colts jersey, following the Giants’ 2008 Super Bowl upset of New England.

And a virtual guarantee of sales: When a high-profile player switches teams. This is the second straight year that formula has worked for Brett Favre, who practically had retail stores ordering his Minnesota Vikings jersey before his decision to unretire and join the team was even official. The same thing happened last year when Favre joined the Jets, giving him back-to-back years in the top five.

The biggest sellers among non-quarterbacks: running backs Adrian Peterson of Minnesota, Reggie Bush of New Orleans and LaDainian Tomlinson of San Diego. The only defensive player: Pittsburgh’s high-energy defensive back Troy Polamalu.

The jersey trade doesn’t translate as well to Major League Baseball where, Powell points out, fans are more apt to show their colors with team caps and T-shirts for a fraction of what replica jerseys cost. The MLB leader, the No. 2 of Yankee Derek Jeter, has sold less than 200,000 units over the past year, SportsOneSource estimates.

Another baseball caveat: All the top sellers are everyday players, mostly offensive bashers like Manny Ramirez, Alfonzo Soriano, Derrick Lee and David Wright. Pitchers, who don’t play every day, don’t fare as well. Winning helps, too. Five of this year’s World Series participants don their sport’s top 10 selling jerseys: Jeter and Alex Rodriguez of the Yankees, along with Chase Utley, Ryan Howard and Shane Victorino of the Phillies.
Leading the NBA jersey bandwagon, unsurprisingly, are league icons LeBron James and Kobe Bryant, followed in order by Boston’s Kevin Garnett, Orlando’s Dwight Howard and New Orleans’ Chris Paul. But even those five megastars have combined to sell under a million jerseys over the past year, a figure that’s blown away by Romo or Roethlisberger.

Chalk it up to the game day pump-up every Sunday. An A-Rod or Jeter jersey may be fun to some Yankee fans, but to a true Cowboy fan, a Romo jersey is a must.


The top five:
1. Tony Romo: Slideshow
2. Eli Manning: Slideshow
3. Ben Roethlisberger: Slideshow
4. Mark Sanchez: Slideshow
5. Brett Favre: Slideshow

http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news;_y...ys-forbestopjerseys103009&prov=yhoo&type=lgns
 

TNCowboy

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Hostile;3046244 said:
Eli outsells Peyton? That's tragic.
I would guess that's because Peyton's been a star for over a decade, so most of his fans have long had one. Or two.
 

Biggems

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I cant believe that there was zero mention of #54 Bobby Carpenter:laugh1:
 

big dog cowboy

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Biggems;3046398 said:
I cant believe that there was zero mention of #54 Bobby Carpenter:laugh1:
If i saw a #54 jersey and it didn't say "WHITE" on the back I would :laugh2:
 

Venger

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Double Trouble;3046327 said:
I would guess that's because Peyton's been a star for over a decade, so most of his fans have long had one. Or two.

Population of the Indianapolis metropolitan statistical area is estimated at 1,715,459

Population of the New York City metropolitan statistical area is estimated at 18.8 million
 

Biggems

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Venger;3046478 said:
Population of the Indianapolis metropolitan statistical area is estimated at 1,715,459

Population of the New York City metropolitan statistical area is estimated at 18.8 million

exactly....to compare the jersey sales for both, instead of basing it solely on the total sales.....do a percentage of sells per population.

BTW, if I was into buying football jerseys, which I am really not, I would buy a white Peyton jersey. I have a few replicas, but I dont go all out like a lot of people.

Of the current Cowboys, I do not have any jerseys. If I were to buy a jersey it would be one of the following

Roy Williams - #11 is my fave number, Roy is my fave UT WR
Jason Witten - He is one of my favorite players (but everyone has this jersey)
DeMarcus Ware - He is one of my favorite players (but everyone has this jersey)
Tashard Choice - He is my choice for the #1 RB job in Big D (but I dont like 23)
 

FLcowboy

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Well, I have my Romo jersey. Might start to look around for an Austin jersey soon.
 

kmp77

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How much money do the players get of that jersey sales?

Say 3mil jerseys x $40 avg (real and fake jerseys?) = $120mil in sales

$120 mil?!?!?! Wow. Heck, 5% would be $6 mil.
 
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