Beer rules pro sports. Liquor brands like Grey Goose and Diageo want in

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Sports and spirits have long been sideline companions, but beer has traditionally dominated the game-day menu. That’s changing as liquor brands make strategic plays to win over sports fans, expanding their influence from stadium bars to Instagram feeds.

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This week alone saw three industry players make significant moves, including Pernod Ricard announcing Jameson as the official whiskey of Major League Soccer, Grey Goose partnering with the Australian Open, and Diageo launching a responsible drinking campaign with the NFL. These partnerships highlight a growing trend: Liquor companies are capitalizing on the massive reach of sports to shake up their brand presence, taking a shot at beer’s historically dominant role in the field.

On Wednesday, Grey Goose unveiled a new relationship with the Australian Open, opening serve with a citrus vodka libation that will be sold at the tennis tournament next month, and following a playbook popularized at the US Open, where the Honey Deuce cocktail courted celebrities like Taylor Swift and Serena Williams.

And liquor giant Diageo on Monday debuted a new safe drinking ad campaign called “Take a Minute. Make a Plan,” in partnership with Mothers Against Drunk Driving, ride-sharing operator Uber, and the National Football League, the latest activation between Diageo and the sports league.

[Photo: Grey Goose]
[Photo: Grey Goose]

The trio of announcements point to a growing trend among liquor brands to lure sports fans, taking a shot at a drinking occasion that has historically been dominated by beer brands like Budweiser and Miller Lite. Sporting events continue to draw large in-person crowds and millions of television viewers, even amid a fragmented media market, and liquor companies are doing more brand building by investing in TV advertising, promoting cocktails sold at stadiums, launching limited-edition branded bottles, and sponsoring tailgating parties.

“The reach of the NFL allowed us to activate our brands across all 50 states,” says Ed Pilkington, chief marketing and innovation officer for Diageo North America.

For Diageo, linking with the NFL was a slow burn. The league was reluctant to ink an official partnership with a liquor brand. For nearly 50 years, spirits companies adhered to a self-imposed restriction on any TV ads, partly due to concerns the ads could influence minors. But beer and wine companies weren’t as cautious, and over the decades, Budweiser’s Clydesdales and Miller Lite ads featuring prominent NFL stars flooded the airwaves. Beer quickly dominated at America’s largest stadiums.