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With
the unveil of the new uniforms, Oregon State University athletics look a little
sleeker, a little fiercer, and a lot more styling. The same, however, cannot be said of the new
Benny logo. I’m sure Kim Possible loves
this, but if comments on the University athletics Facebook page are any
indication, students don’t.
Most
commenters seem puzzled by the direction the administration has taken the new
logo, while others voiced concerns that students’ opinion were not sufficiently
solicited—especially since students are expected to wear what looks decidedly
un-beaverlike at nationally-televised games.
Kim Possible Naked Mole Rat |
Athletes
at least have financial incentives to brandish the new logo; students are being
asked to pay for the privilege of looking ridiculous.
Beyond
what seems like a pretty major fashion gaffe, students remain concerned that
the administration and athletics departments are attempting replace substance
with style. It appears that the new
direction is a concerted effort to bolster support and encourage enthusiasm
about Beaver athletics. The concern,
however, is that athletics is doing so at the expense of substantive
improvements in the athletic program itself.
Encouraged
by U of O’s rebranding in the 1990s, OSU has unsuccessfully tried to rebrand itself,
following trends instead of setting them.
Even though nifty uniforms and a rebranded logo are nice, and
demonstrate a willingness to consider new strategies and reorient means to
accomplish goals, OSU athletics acknowledges that uniforms don’t win games—which
is the ultimate recruiting tool.
Despite
Nike’s insistence that the new logo doesn’t deviate too far from tradition, one
need only look at the friendly Benny that represented Oregon State for over
forty years and wasn’t retired until 1999.
That looks like tradition to me.
What’s more, “Angry Benny” was an acknowledged marketing ploy to help
shore up support for construction of Reser Stadium. Bearing that in mind, Nike would have stuck
to tradition by returning to something resembling the acknowledged mascot.
1951-1999 |
I
have a sense that the new uniforms aren’t really about students, or even
student athletics, however. The
sequestration debate is only the most glaring example of fiscal responsibility
at the federal level, but across the nation state spending on institutions of
higher learning has been on the decline.
State universities have been hit especially hard and have turned to
alternative forms of income.
Football
especially, but collegiate sports in general, attracts incoming freshman and national
recognition; the sales of sports apparel help shore up budgets increasingly
weakened by fiscal cuts.
OSU’s
billion dollar fundraiser relies on the enthusiasm of donors and a winning
athletic program is the most obvious way to generate that enthusiasm. Certainly, the administration has
demonstrated its commitment to academics, and we lead the state in research
grants; our nuclear engineering and forestry programs especially are
world-renowned. While these are
exciting, they fail to communicate the University’s success the way a winning
football team does.
And
that excitement is only bolstered by a dynamic new uniform, and a logo that
better represents the spirit of the institution. Which is where the new Benny logo simply
falls flat.
Perhaps
it’s a matter of generating false buzz—like Crystal Pepsi, or New Coke these
were genuine attempts to reinvigorate flagging sales and create heightened
consumer demand. But in both those
instances, the effort backfired.
Well,
sort of.
In
each case, consumer demand for the original product actually boosted sales of
original Coke and regular Pepsi. So
maybe that’s the strategy OSU Athletics have adopted in concert with Nike, who
designed new Benny.
Fearing
this is the logo I’ll be stuck with next year, I’m planning to hit up the
Beaver store in the spring before the old logo is phased out. And I know many of you are doing the same. Perhaps they’re expecting sales to skyrocket,
after which, buckling under pressure from alumni and students, Student Athletics
will release the real Benny
redesign. I don’t want to speculate as
to their motives, since this scenario seems particularly Machiavellian, but at
least it makes a measure of sense. The
alternative is that the redesigned Benny is meant
to look like a cross between a nutria and a naked mole rat. That, or it’s part of a strategy to re-brand Oregon
State University as the Rats.
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