Dubai Telegraph - Treading fine line, NBA money machine kicks into gear on China return

EUR -
AED 4.258508
AFN 73.052649
ALL 94.746493
AMD 427.523191
ANG 2.076094
AOA 1063.9017
ARS 1657.565213
AUD 1.641065
AWG 2.090121
AZN 1.971378
BAM 1.954078
BBD 2.336641
BDT 142.415706
BGN 1.960691
BHD 0.437511
BIF 3471.810088
BMD 1.159568
BND 1.48629
BOB 8.045909
BRL 5.86544
BSD 1.160177
BTN 109.649358
BWP 15.545299
BYN 3.211969
BYR 22727.532488
BZD 2.333343
CAD 1.625048
CDF 2691.357342
CHF 0.922332
CLF 0.026229
CLP 1032.433269
CNY 7.839317
CNH 7.836303
COP 4048.631617
CRC 528.434251
CUC 1.159568
CUP 30.728552
CVE 110.16885
CZK 24.148177
DJF 206.597909
DKK 7.474627
DOP 68.060014
DZD 154.08225
EGP 58.18666
ERN 17.39352
ETB 187.042945
FJD 2.567226
FKP 0.863732
GBP 0.864765
GEL 3.06705
GGP 0.863732
GHS 13.051497
GIP 0.863732
GMD 84.072602
GNF 10162.130974
GTQ 8.843282
GYD 242.686102
HKD 9.083649
HNL 31.023389
HRK 7.531741
HTG 151.516457
HUF 349.674703
IDR 20551.023382
ILS 3.37737
IMP 0.863732
INR 109.609961
IQD 1519.847335
IRR 1595278.555519
ISK 144.40121
JEP 0.863732
JMD 183.488278
JOD 0.822167
JPY 185.958742
KES 150.071696
KGS 101.403745
KHR 4658.893761
KMF 492.816648
KPW 1043.611592
KRW 1749.336082
KWD 0.357553
KYD 0.966848
KZT 565.776459
LAK 25529.498901
LBP 103892.731395
LKR 388.670787
LRD 211.153894
LSL 18.725857
LTL 3.423903
LVL 0.701411
LYD 7.391549
MAD 10.726538
MDL 20.245156
MGA 4820.751104
MKD 61.631605
MMK 2434.398662
MNT 4147.269075
MOP 9.36055
MRU 46.304588
MUR 54.778191
MVR 17.915646
MWK 2011.726911
MXN 19.948837
MYR 4.717233
MZN 74.108256
NAD 18.725696
NGN 1574.925498
NIO 42.69274
NOK 11.046711
NPR 175.43786
NZD 1.990526
OMR 0.445857
PAB 1.160177
PEN 3.952251
PGK 5.082564
PHP 69.933306
PKR 322.789684
PLN 4.243514
PYG 7079.760066
QAR 4.241298
RON 5.232004
RSD 117.348278
RUB 83.691794
RWF 1720.483606
SAR 4.350808
SBD 9.351963
SCR 16.042513
SDG 696.324105
SEK 10.899348
SGD 1.486795
SHP 0.865735
SLE 28.699244
SLL 24315.565092
SOS 663.009921
SRD 43.504676
STD 24000.716112
STN 24.478425
SVC 10.151141
SYP 128.169482
SZL 18.722337
THB 37.704564
TJS 10.754721
TMT 4.058488
TND 3.396007
TOP 2.791962
TRY 53.673622
TTD 7.881054
TWD 36.539032
TZS 3038.071623
UAH 51.958953
UGX 4292.216941
USD 1.159568
UYU 46.839121
UZS 13933.839207
VES 686.204098
VND 30496.637982
VUV 137.834314
WST 3.178627
XAF 655.379364
XAG 0.016417
XAU 0.000267
XCD 3.133791
XCG 2.090939
XDR 0.815985
XOF 655.385011
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.67096
ZAR 18.774507
ZMK 10437.509391
ZMW 20.505927
ZWL 373.380418
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.34

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    2.1500

    62.87

    +3.42%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    71.59

    +0.63%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    52.23

    -1.55%

  • RIO

    0.5400

    105.89

    +0.51%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    81.57

    -0.33%

  • RELX

    -0.9000

    32.84

    -2.74%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    177.27

    -0.83%

  • BCE

    -0.2369

    24.04

    -0.99%

  • JRI

    0.1135

    12.78

    +0.89%

  • RYCEF

    1.0700

    18.11

    +5.91%

  • BTI

    -1.2600

    61.06

    -2.06%

  • BP

    -1.1900

    41.59

    -2.86%

  • VOD

    -0.5300

    15

    -3.53%

Treading fine line, NBA money machine kicks into gear on China return
Treading fine line, NBA money machine kicks into gear on China return / Photo: Eduardo Leal - AFP

Treading fine line, NBA money machine kicks into gear on China return

The NBA brought star-studded lineups to Macau this week for the league's return to China after six years but many of the biggest wins happened off the basketball court, industry insiders and experts told AFP.

Text size:

Thousands of fans cheered Friday as the Phoenix Suns -- led by four-time NBA All-Star Devin Booker -- beat the Brooklyn Nets, with celebrities such as David Beckham, actor Jackie Chan and Alibaba founder Jack Ma in front-row seats.

It heralded the NBA's return to China for the first time since being effectively frozen out of the country in 2019 after a team official tweeted support for democracy protests in Hong Kong.

Hours after Friday's pre-season match at a sold-out Venetian Arena, US President Donald Trump announced an additional 100 percent tariff on China, underscoring the volatile backdrop of the NBA's detente with Beijing.

Even so, the NBA and star players are rushing back to the post-pandemic Chinese market, with LeBron James and Stephen Curry visiting the country this year to hawk their brands.

"One thing a lot of the athletes would say is that everyone read about James Harden coming to China (in 2023), selling his wine and selling out in like 60 seconds," said Michael Lin, a VP at sports digital agency Mailman, an IMG company.

Booths near the arena showed off the NBA's Chinese brand partners, including e-commerce behemoth Alibaba, live-video app Kuaishou and dairy giant Mengniu, as well as merchandise aimed at younger consumers.

David Leiner, president of trading cards for Fanatics Collectibles, said the company recently started selling China-specific NBA card packs in more than 30 cities, adding that the 10 yuan ($1.4) entry price point was "critical".

"For us, it was very important to get the product broadly distributed," Leiner told AFP.

- Decades of business -

China became a priority for the NBA in the early 2000s in part due to Yao Ming's superstardom, said Mark Fischer, former managing director of NBA China.

Fischer said the business entity NBA China was valued at $2.3 billion around the time of its 2008 formation.

That figure grew to more than $4 billion a decade later, according to NBA deputy commissioner and COO Mark Tatum in a 2018 Forbes interview.

In 2019, the league signed a deal reportedly worth $1.5 billion with Tencent on exclusive online streaming rights.

But that was soon overshadowed when Houston Rockets official Daryl Morey went public in support of Hong Kong protesters.

The NBA making its return in Macau showed that Beijing was "opening the side door but not the main gates and red carpet just yet", said Fischer, now an international sports consultant.

Macau is a special administrative region of China, distinct from the mainland, and famous for its casinos.

The teams are also taking their chance to claw back missed revenues from the vast China market.

The Suns hired the marketing team behind American internet celebrity IShowSpeed's well-received China streaming tour.

"We're going as far as working with (the Suns) to shoot content around the players eating mooncakes and making sure that the correct terminology around Lunar New Year versus Chinese New Year is used," said Andrew Spalter, founder and CEO of digital marketing firm East Goes Global.

The Nets, owned by Alibaba chairman Joseph Tsai, have an in-house Chinese social media team.

- Warning -

Victor Cha, a geopolitics expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, warned that China still held the "ultimate form of power over the NBA" and could leverage its huge market to force firms to self-censor.

A sports marketer in China who spoke on condition of anonymity said the Morey tweet took just minutes to trigger online outrage and that because of the sheer number of people in and around the NBA it will be "impossible" to avoid a similar incident.

"We know how quickly things can spiral out of control," the source said.

"It's not even about an individual NBA player, it's anybody associated with the brand."

Appearing in Macau on Thursday, Las Vegas Sands president and COO Patrick Dumont tried out Alibaba's AI technology that purported to translate spoken NBA match commentary from English to Chinese, or vice versa.

The Dallas Mavericks owner asked if he could say anything he wanted, as opposed to reading out scripted lines shown to him on a screen.

His host pointed at the text and replied, "Technically, you can say what you want, but this would be the most optimised."

I.El-Hammady--DT