Fanatics, Nike take sports merchandise model global in deal with Yomiuri Giants, Japan’s most popular baseball team

Fanatics, Nike take sports merchandise model global in deal with Yomiuri Giants, Japan’s most popular baseball team


A woman browses a merchandise shop in Tokyo Dome ahead of the Japan Central League baseball match between Yomiuri Giants and Hiroshima Carp on October 14, 2020 in Tokyo, Japan.

Carl Court | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

Sports commerce platform Fanatics is expanding a recently signed long-term partnership with Nike to include manufacturing and distribution of merchandise for the Yomiuri Giants, Japan’s most successful and popular baseball team.

In addition to exclusive merchandising rights, Fanatics will operate e-commerce and physical retail businesses for the Yomiuri Giants and plans to refurbish the retail stores at the Tokyo Dome ahead of the 2023 season. Nike will become the official uniform supplier of the Yomiuri Giants. Fanatics will make on-field uniforms and player performance items, as well as additional Nike-branded fan jerseys and apparel sold both online and at physical stores. Fanatics is also creating autograph and collectible products for fans of the Yomiuri Giants.

The Yomiuri Giants are the first sports team outside the U.S. to adopt this Nike-Fanatics model for on-field and sports merchandise. Fanatics, a major player in sports merchandising, has exclusive licensing deals with the NFL, NHL, MLB, as well as various colleges and universities. Several of those deals, including the NFL and MLB, also overlap with Nike jersey and apparel deals.

A partnership between Fanatics and Nike was struck earlier this year for manufacturing of U.S. college sports apparel by Fanatics, set to begin in 2024.

The three-time CNBC Disruptor 50 company has a private valuation of $27 billion.

Fanatics is going through a pretty fast transformation, says CEO Michael Rubin

Fanatics has evolved in recent years to include collectibles, sports betting and NFT businesses. The closely held company, founded by Michael Rubin, has also completed several acquisitions. In 2020, it acquired sports merchandise manufacturer WinCraft, and earlier this year it bought trading card company Topps for $500 million. Earlier this year, CNBC reported that Fanatics was in talks to buy sports betting company Tipico, though a deal hasn’t yet been reached.

Rubin recently divested from stakes in the New Jersey Devils and Philadelphia 76ers due to the growth of business lines with potential conflicts of interest, including betting and licensing deals with individual athletes.

Fanatics has grown to more than 10,000 employees in 57 countries, serving nearly 100 million sports fans worldwide.

Sign up for our weekly, original newsletter that goes beyond the annual Disruptor 50 list, offering a closer look at list-making companies and their innovative founders.



Source

WBD is renaming streamer Max as HBO Max, again
Business

WBD is renaming streamer Max as HBO Max, again

Scene from season 3 of White Lotus. Source: HBO HBO became HBO Max became Max. Now, it will be HBO Max once more. Warner Bros. Discovery is renaming its streaming platform again starting this summer, restoring a name it ditched just two years ago. The company announced the rebranding Wednesday during its upfront presentation in […]

Read More
Video podcasts are having a moment at media upfronts
Business

Video podcasts are having a moment at media upfronts

Jason and Travis Kelce with Dunkin Donuts on the New Heights podcast. Courtesy: Wondery Amazon’s second-ever Upfronts pitch to advertisers this week featured an appearance by NFL champion brothers Jason and Travis Kelce. They weren’t there to hype live football rights. While Amazon’s Prime owns the media rights to the NFL’s Thursday Night Football games […]

Read More
American Eagle shares plunge 17% after it withdraws guidance, writes off  million in inventory
Business

American Eagle shares plunge 17% after it withdraws guidance, writes off $75 million in inventory

A customer enters an American Eagle store on April 4, 2025 in Miami, Florida.  Joe Raedle | Getty Images American Eagle on Tuesday said it’s writing off $75 million in spring and summer merchandise and withdrawing its full-year guidance as it contends with slow sales, steep discounting and an uncertain economy. The apparel retailer said […]

Read More