- Mar 13, 2009
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four horsemen of the apocalypseDear Wiggo said:Nike is surely becoming the touch of death for sponsored athletes?
Pistorous
Armstrong
Woods
great list to stick your name under eh?
4th man is Oscar's prosthetics
four horsemen of the apocalypseDear Wiggo said:Nike is surely becoming the touch of death for sponsored athletes?
Pistorous
Armstrong
Woods
great list to stick your name under eh?
D-Queued said:Chef de l'exploitation
D-Queued said:Here is the response that was received:
Dear ,
A lot of vomit....
Scott
Scott Smith
Chief Operating Officer
Chef de l'exploitation
Hockey Canada
Dave.
D-Queued said:Here is the response that was received:
Dear ,
Thanks for taking the time to send us this e-mail.
Nike has been a great partner and supporter of Hockey Canada for nearly 20 years. In this role, Nike has supported all levels of hockey, including grassroots and female hockey.
With the introduction of a third jersey that Canada’s National Women’s Team will wear for its opening game at the 2013 IIHF Ice Hockey Women’s World Championship, Hockey Canada is proud to support Nike and the Livestrong Foundation. The Foundation assists thousands of victims of cancer across Canada and around the world. Nike has helped to raise over $100 million for the Foundation, generating almost $500 million to battle cancer since its inception in 1997. The Foundation’s Cancer Transitions program is available throughout Canada, while Livestrong also operates programs for people living with cancer at two locations in Montreal, and hopes to expand its resources in Canada.
Hockey Canada feels strongly that the Livestrong Foundation is a cause worth supporting, regardless of any past association with any individuals. In the case of Lance Armstrong, Nike has assured us that he is no longer a Nike athlete, and is no longer on the board or involved with Livestrong in any way.
But the Foundation’s battle with cancer will continue, and Hockey Canada is proud to be supporting it.
Scott
Scott Smith
Chief Operating Officer
Chef de l'exploitation
Hockey Canada
Dave.
huntelk said:I wrote to 10 or so of the most senior people I could find in Hockey Canada and received the exact same response.
Disgusting.
Interestingly, many people on their Facebook page are upset as well. I thought I was in the minority. Happy to see I am not!
Dear Scott,
Thank you for your quick reply, though to be honest it appears to have been written by the Nike marketing department.
I guess we will have to agree to disagree on this. Too bad, as Livestrong is most assuredly not the upstanding organisation that is portrayed in your press release. This is an organisation that has used its doners funds to lobby US government officials to attempt to destroy USADA as they pursued Lance Armstrong on doping charges. Is this the kind of organisation you want to associate with?
Armstrong may no longer be sponsored by Nike, but are you sure he will personally receive no financial benefit, direct or indirect, from sales of Livestrong merchandise?
Even the name "Fight With Us" that has been announced as the marketing slogan is the wrong message on so many levels.
First of all, it perpetuates the message that cancer can be beaten by "fighting", and if you don't fight hard enough (bring on the cheerleaders) you will suffer the consequences. This is great marketing, but the wrong message to give to people dealing with the disease in their own, sometimes discreet, way.
Then of course there is the fighting connotation with regards to the sport of hockey. This is a disease in itself, especially in mens hockey.
The commercialisation of cancer is wrong, and that is what you are participating in.
Regards,
frenchfry
D-Queued said:CBC's The National news program will be covering this story tonight.
At least one member of this Forum was asked for an interview.
Dave.
D-Queued said:CBC's The National news program will be covering this story tonight.
At least one member of this Forum was asked for an interview.
Dave.
northstar said:I watched the news clip. It was short but to the point. I think the reporting was a little biased in favor of Livestrong but overall not bad. I liked Wendy Mesley’s lead-in question, Why are these yellow and black jerseys making Canadians see red?
Scott Smith from Hockey Canada looked very uncomfortable explaining their position. It’s just a bad idea on so many levels. Turning a national team into a billboard for Livestrong. Selling out to a charity associated with the biggest fraud in sport. Selling out to an American charity that provide little benefits to Canadians. At least it’s made the national news now.
I’ve made some comments on Hockey Canada’s facebook page and elsewhere.![]()
Hopefully public pressure will make HC reverse this decision.
Nike Team LIVESTRONG ambassador Tessa Bonhomme ...
...Joe Monahan from Nike LIVESTRONG
frenchfry said:Is Livestrong becoming nothing more than a marketing tool of Nike?
In this article there are numerous references to "Nike Livestrong"
http://www.businesswire.com/news/ho...-Introduces-2013-LIVESTRONG-Team-Canada-World
An interesting question is how much of Livestrong merchandise sales revenue goes to Nike, how much to Livestrong, and how much to Wonderboy.
blackcat said:said "ALL" profits, once, to LS org. That is what was said once. no reference to Lance.
Ofcourse, what was failed to note, was what transfer pricing Nike were putting on wholesale merch before they sold it. And what Lance' annual contract was with Nike.
Failed to mention that. Because, it was not like they calculated profits on the per unit pricing out of asian sweatshops.
yeah.
remember when they said the swatch of yellow on the 9/12 merch, the forerunner to the Livestrong line, was giving one buck for each unit sold. But the market value on the yellow ribon/swatch = much more than one buck.
and yeah, I intentionally got the number wrong on that first line of Armstrong merchandise. cannot remember the number. it was the first date, or date of diagnosis of the cancer. instead, i substituted the Glenn Beck Project number.
@ transfer pricing.frenchfry said:As you point out, "all profits" is totally meaningless without a breakdown of who is getting a slice BEFORE profits. Nike is not doing this out of the goodness in their hearts - if they have hearts which I seriously doubt.
huntelk said:The team Canada jersey has left a bad taste. I was looking around the CBC site for more info and found this from Jan 2012.
Is Livestrong more about Lance than cancer?
http://www.cbc.ca/q/blog/2012/01/26/is-livestrong-more-about-lance-than-cancer/
17 min interview with Bill Gifford
TheEnoculator said:Even the name of the organization was named after its founder based on his name. Why does this even need to be discussed?
thehog said:They have a new logo apparently.
miloman said:[/B]
So you don't care what a person's motivation is, just so long as they incriminate the people you dislike? I think most people who have been following this agree that if Floyd would have been given a ride with Radioshaft, none of this would have ever happend. I will be impressed if, and when, something really happens in this case and Floyd receives a settlement from his wb case and he pays everyone back and gives the rest to charity. Like him or not, Armstrong's charity has done more good in the world than Floyd's revelations ever will. Armstong is probably a jerk, and a doper, but what is Floyd?. . four words quickly come to mind: opportunistic, calculating, insincere, hypocritical.
Give the Phooey Fairness Fund a chance!RobbieCanuck said:First of all get your fact straight. There are two Livestrongs (or at least there were). One that does charity work for cancer, not cancer research as so many uninformed commentators believe and incorrectly state. That charity does help cancer victims by assisting those victims in making choices. In other words Livestrong as a charity gives cancer victims advice. In that context the charity does some good. But at the same time there are literally thousands of organizations unattached to a phoney manufactured hero, whose own cancer was probably due to taking PEDs, that give cancer victims advice without asking for a donation.
The other Livestrong was LA's personal company that was paid monies from LA's appearances and endorsements etc. This was the Livestrong from which he paid himself, to the point where his estimated net worth is reported as about $127 million.
Compare this to the Terry Fox Foundation which has directly contributed over $600 million to cancer research. This cancer foundation is based on the activities of a real hero and real athlete. Google it and see for yourself. Terry Fox and his family received NOTHING for his achievements.
What Landis's revelations have done is blow the lid off the culture of doping in cycling. His admissions were the impetus for the USADA investigation that brought down a true fraudster. And that is not to say that Landis did not do his share of defrauding. But LA has done twiddly for cycling. His only concern has always been his own self-serving interests and self aggrandizement. Armstrong is not probably a jerk he is a jerk and much worse.
Landis has gone through hell, and is now at least come fully clean, and has no delusions about his personal reputation or a future career in sport, while LA continues to prevaricate to protect his narcissistic @&&. That is LA's motivation!!!!!!
Glenn_Wilson said:Give the Phooey Fairness Fund a chance!
http://hongkongphooeyfairnessfund.wordpress.com/
Terry Fox foundation is the real deal. Sad that many in the USA don't know the story. Worth a read to anyone who wants to be truly inspired.
Glenn_Wilson said:Terry Fox foundation is the real deal. Sad that many in the USA don't know the story. Worth a read to anyone who wants to be inspired.