The Under Armour lesson: Star athlete endorsers can't save a brand

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Under Armour has had four very bad quarters in a row, and on Tuesday the company slashed its outlook for 2017 and its shares fell to a four-year low.

This is despite having an incredible, star-studded lineup of sponsored athletes: Steph Curry, Tom Brady, Jordan Spieth, Michael Phelps, Cam Newton, Lindsey Vonn, Bryce Harper, Clayton Kershaw, and Misty Copeland are all Under Armour athletes.

But it hasn’t much moved the needle for the company: sales in North America fell 12% in the third quarter to $1.07 billion. With big displays in stores showing off Under Armour’s stars, you might think it would draw kids over to the Under Armour section.

Star endorsers don’t usually boost sales

If you ask Adidas U.S. CEO Mark King, “Most of the athletes at Under Armour are kind of milquetoast.”

King made that provocative comment to Yahoo Finance during an interview last year. He was basing his argument on personality and creativity, not on-the-field ability. “Spieth, Brady, hey, they are great athletes,” King said, “but when you talk about Carlos Correa and James Harden and some of these guys that have personality and really stand for being an individual, that’s unique positioning for us.” (Adidas’s current marketing campaign with its sponsored athletes is all about “creators.”)

Steph Curry, Tom Brady, Jordan Spieth are some of Under Armour’s biggest star endorsers. (Under Armour, Rex Shutterstock, Getty Images)
Steph Curry, Tom Brady, Jordan Spieth are some of Under Armour’s biggest star endorsers. (Under Armour, Rex Shutterstock, Getty Images)

Still, it’s hard to see fault with Under Armour’s roster. The company boasts the best quarterback in the NFL in Brady (or second-best, if you ask Green Bay Packers fans or Adidas, which sponsors Aaron Rodgers), the No. 2 golfer in the world in Jordan Spieth (Adidas has the world’s No. 1, Dustin Johnson), two of the biggest baseball stars in Bryce Harper and Clayton Kershaw, and the highest-paid movie star on the planet, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. (Johnson, a former college football player and pro wrester, arguably counts as an athlete as well; Under Armour released his gym sneaker this year.)

But Under Armour is flailing in America, star athlete roster or not. It has not seen big basketball market gains, despite its Curry signature shoe line. The Curry 3 shoe, which came out last year, was not a hit. Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank said on the company’s third-quarter earnings call, “We’ve applied the lessons from Curry 1, 2, and 3, and we put them in the Curry 4.”

It isn’t just Under Armour that shows endorsements aren’t always a boon to a brand. Adidas is on a hot streak in the U.S., but it’s unlikely that it has much to do with its athletes, a list that includes soccer stud Lionel Messi, basketball players James Harden and Joel Embiid, baseball sluggers Carlos Correa and Kris Bryant, marketable NFL players Aaron Rodgers and Von Miller, tennis star Caroline Wozniacki, and WNBA queen Candace Parker.