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Madison Avenue keeps distance from Bonds' chase

 

SAN FRANCISCO -- Bob Cramer inked several star athletes to lucrative endorsement deals in nearly a decade as a marketing executive for Mastercard International Inc. But he might be best known for walking away from a deal with Barry Bonds.

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In 2005, the credit card company called off negotiations with the San Francisco Giants slugger when it became clear that Bonds wouldn't soon extricate himself from a burgeoning scandal involving his alleged use of performance-enhancing drugs.

"That sealed the deal," Cramer said.

Bonds might be destined for baseball immortality as he closes in on Hank Aaron's career home run record, but he has never been a popular pitch man. Perhaps it's a prickly personality that drives his Madison Avenue toxicity. Or the steroid rumors he can't seem to shake. Or the ongoing federal criminal investigation into the truthfulness of his grand jury testimony. Or all of the above.

"It should be one of the most celebrated endorsement deals of all time," said Cramer, now president of the sports marketing firm Genesco Sports Enterprises. "But whether he's guilty or not, no one is going to attach themselves to him now."

After he set the single-season home run record in 2001, Bonds scored some short-term sponsorship deals with KFC parent Yum! Brands Inc., and the discount brokerage firm Charles Schwab Corp. Since 1999, he's been paid to wear spikes from the Italian sporting goods company Fila, and Franklin Sports pays him to wear its batting gloves, but he has few other endorsements.

Last year, according to Sport Illustrated, he took in $2 million in endorsement fees -- no paltry sum, especially when added to his one-year, $15.8 million contract with the Giants.

But consider the $7 million in endorsements for New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter; or the $6 million for Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez. Roger Clemens, Albert Pujols and Manny Ramirez all earned more on the side last year than the man who might be the greatest hitter of his era.

Bonds' marketing agent, Jeff Bernstein, didn't respond to numerous requests for an interview.

Bonds' value as a pitchman has sunken so low that Victor Conte, the convicted dealer at the center of the BALCO steroids scandal, recently pulled the slugger's photo from the home page of his Web site hawking legal nutritional supplements.

"All companies rotate the design of their home page to maintain interest," Conte said in an e-mail explaining why he took down the Bonds photograph.

Even Fila discontinued sales of its Bonds XT cross-training shoes in 2004 after only about a year on the market. Fila spokeswoman Lauren Mallon said the decision to discontinue the shoe, for which Bonds was to share in sales, was made by a new management team. The company also scrubbed plans to introduce a children's baseball cleat signed by Bonds.

"We've had a very long and fruitful relationship with Barry Bonds," Mallon said. "We will continue to provide him with product."

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