
Why does Watford leave adidas to sign with Kelme? New agreement between the English club of the Pozzo family and the Spanish brand
The Watford Football Club has informed adidas that it will decline the option to renew the technical sponsorship contract for the 2020-21 season and is ready to sign a four-year contract with Kelme, a Spanish brand that already wears Alavés, Espanyol, Hércules, Huesca, Rayo Vallecano and other teams in Argentina, Algeria, Bosnia, Egypt, Portugal, South Korea, Russia, Serbia and especially China.
Watford have signed a new three-year kit deal with Kelme worth £10 million. The Hornets’ previous three-year Adidas contract is understood to have had a value of £2.25 million.
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The Pozzo family, owners of the English club since 2012, are not new to solutions that only superficially can seem irrational and inexplicable. Behind the choice to entrust the technical supply to an emerging brand and certainly less appealing than a giant like adidas, there is foresight, there is planning and above all there is a development plan that Watford wants to put into practice . It is not the first time that we have seen such a choice: several clubs have already decided to abandon the brands that cannibalize the market to have among their sponsors young projects that can give their best even if the company is not called Juventus, Real Madrid or Manchester United.
Throughout history, the technical sponsors of Watford have been really many: Umbro, Bukta, Hummel, Mizuno, Le Coq Sportif, Diadora, Joma, Burrda, Puma, Dryworld and adidas. From 1974 to today, the troubled history of the technical sponsors of the English club has been long and full of hitches. The new agreement, however, will bring about £ 10 million (11.3 million euros) in the Hornets' coffers in 4 years, unlike the 750,000 that adidas guaranteed on an annual basis also with the extension of the contract. The economic reason is certainly important but it is not the only one.
The Hornets want to become the most important brand in Kelme's expansion strategies and the choice of having a partner with less coat of arms allows the British to leverage the championship in which they play. Having Kelme and not adidas allows a club to have personalized marketing campaigns, to have concepts for the most innovative and non-standard kits. Ultimately, moving from a high-sounding brand to an average brand is not always negative, neither in economic terms nor in terms of planning.