0S S 7W 0 4A & {r ',= '.Y_ ' Y , ,x r _ }r2''s C - y ^t t h w5 2.~: t F 4 + k. :, fi- I The commercialization of college By Ian Herbert Managing Sports Editor hen first man tha Michigan base- Saman- Findlay blasted a three-run shot to left field, the Michigan softball team became the first team east of the Mississippi River to win a softball championship. Michigan Athletic Director Bill Martin spent most of that week in Oklahoma City with his wife - the two of them watch- ing the Wolverines win game after game of the Women's College Softball World Series. To Martin, the Nike swooshes on the players' jerseys were probably insignifi- cant - hardly noticeable after so many years. What he was focusing on was the ping of the aluminum bats and the roll of the ball across the dirt infield. Kit Morris wasn't in Oklahoma, but he cared about the game almost as much. For that first week in June, Morris centered his life on the women of the Michigan softball team. Morris is an executive at Nike, and he is in charge of all of Nike's collegiate contracts - Michigan, Ari- zona, Texas and more. Morris roots for Michigan regularly. The school is one of his company's longest-standing partners; plus, he's always sort of liked the Wol- verines. He even makes it out to the occasional football game at the Big House. That week, Morris spent a lot of his time with the channel stuck on ESPN. Because he lives and works in Beaverton, Ore., he went home early from work to watch the Wolverines take on UCLA. He spent the weekend with his wife at home watching softball. For Morris, and prob- ably for some executive at Adida, the California college's big-time corporate sponsor, the game meant something. In his office at Nike, Morris even keeps a pic- ture of the 2001 national champion Michigan field hockey team that is autographed by all of the players and coaches. It seems odd that big-time executives at multi- million dollar companies care so much about what happens in the Women's College Softball World Series, but these teams and games mean a lot to corporate America. University lands on Planet Nike ichigan was involved with Nike for many years before 1994, but it was that year that still defines the Michigan-Nike relationship. In Oct. 1994, the Michigan Athletic Department - led by then-Athletic Director Joe Roberson - signed the first school- wide contract. In the deal, Nike agreed to provide jerseys, shoes and equipment for all 25 Michigan athletic teams. It also agreed to pay Michigan a substantial sum of money. Including royalties for Nike products bearing the Michigan name, the total came to about $7 million during the six-year contract, or more than $1 million per year. Michigan's current agree- ment, which was signed in January 2001 and runs through August 2008, will pay Michigan nearly $30 million for the opportunity to put the Nike swoosh on all Michigan apparel. Roberson, who is now 70 years old and retired, insists that the money was the last consider- ation he made when negotiating the sponsorship deal - and it's true that the Michigan Athletic Department was already running a pretty strong surplus throughout the years with Roberson at -the helm. "The first thing I wanted to get was control," Roberson says. "I wanted to be able to have the say in what our coaches were getting, what they were giving away. The second thing I wanted to have was equalization - I wanted the whole department to have it. And the third thing I want- ed was to maximize it. ... We didn't need money, but if you're going to do that kind of thing, you might as well get as much as you can out of it." Roberson, sitting at a small restaurant that is walking distance from his house in Bloomfield Hills discusses one of the more stressful peri- ods of his eventful life. Standing up, his nearly 6-foot-6 frame gives him away as a former ath- lete - he played minor league baseball for five years out of high school before getting degrees in education and athletic administration. But sit- ting down, wearing a golf shirt with a country club emblem, khaki shorts, sneakers and white tube socks, his athletic frame is disguised as he discusses his former life as a Michigan athletic director. "I took heat like you can't believe," Roberson recalls. "The number of times people told me that I had sold out - which was insane." For the same reasons he did a dozen years ago, Roberson says he still believes that signing with Nike was the right call. At the time, many Michi- gan coaches had individual contracts with apparel companies. Even though Nike and the Michigan athletic department confirmed the coaches' con- tracts, neither would discuss how much they were worth. Roberson estimates that both former basket- ball coach Steve Fisher and former football coach Gary Moeller were raking in more than $100,000 a year to guarantee that their players wore Nike products. And even though Nike had wrapped up the two major revenue-producing sports, other corporate sponsors could be found on the jerseys, shoes, socks and wristbands of dozens of other teams. "To me the issue then became, who was giving what to whom for what," Roberson says. "Some- times these contracts were written, sometimes they were handshakes, and nobody knew who was providing what to whom." "Frankly, our women's soccer team looked like a walking ad for Adidas - they had huge letters all over their jerseys." Roberson claims that he wanted to reel in these corporate contracts under one roof. Uncomfort- able with Nike and Adidas and Reebok paying his coaches more than he was, he wanted to replace all the existing contracts between indi- vidual coaches and apparel companies with one, all-encompassing contract. "The whole notion that intercollegiate athletics wasn't commercial - and that Michigan wasn't commercial - before this contract was totally off-base," Roberson says. "If anybody sold their soul, intercollegiate athletics did it. They sold it a long time ago, and they sold it to television." "We're in show business" o with that argument, Roberson took a proposal for the Nike contract to the then-University president James Duderstadt. If it had been a couple of years earlier, he probably wouldn't have even approached the president. A few years ear- lier, Michigan required the athletic director to get approval of higher University authorities - the president and the chief financial offi- cer - on any outside agreements. For his own conscience, Duderstadt probably wishes it had stayed that way. The president emeritus is now one of Michigan's most outspoken critics of the growing commercialization of collegiate athlet- ics. Via; 8B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 22, 2005 The Michigan Daily - Thursd