Showing posts with label Golazo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golazo. Show all posts

Thursday, May 19, 2011

VIDEO - Golazo Energy's "Walk Among Us" And How Supporters Sell Soccer

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If you're a long-time or recent follower of the Free Beer Movement, you've probably noticed that we take a pretty keen interest in the supporters of Major League Soccer teams. When it comes down to it, the action on the field is what is it... the teams change, the scores differ, and the players come and go, but what remains a constant is the passion and the intensity of the supporters in the stands.

For anyone that's ever been to an American soccer game you always know where to look to find the loudest and proudest fans at the park. This is where and how American soccer is sold to the newbie. For anyone that has ever brought a newbie into the supporters section for American Outlaws, Emerald City Supporters, Timbers Army, Barra Brava, Section 8, any number of other fantastic groups in Major League Soccer the experience with these people is unlike any other sport in our nation.

When we set out to start the Free Beer Movement we were certain that the product we were selling, American soccer, was beautiful on its own. From the local pitch to the stadiums around this country our game is gorgeous. Reasonable people will debate that, but our love for soccer is unquestioned. What sets soccer apart even more from its American counterparts is the game day experience.

Buy the newbie a beer and have them enter the supporters section of an American soccer team and they will become a fan for life. The camaraderie, the chaos, the coolness of the supporters section is something unique to the sport of soccer.

Golazo, a Seattle-based and soccer-centric energy drink played up this angle in their latest video called "Walk Among Us" which follows the supporters of Seattle Sounders (primarily) with the Portland Timbers, and Chivas USA supporters making cameos.

One of the guys pretty much summed up our feelings, "Soccer is a way of life. It's not something you do just for the game. It's always apart of you."

And that's what sells soccer. The undeniable connection that people feel for their team. Certainly that passion lives in many sports, but, in our opinion, nothing like the at-birth or in-my-DNA sort of love that comes from the intimate connection between a person and soccer.

Golazo's video captures that and the essence of this sport. The proof is in the video of why we keep on asking you all to grab a friend, family member, or co-worker (toss them in the supporters section), buy 'em a beer, and help "Build American Soccer One Beer at a Time".

Walk Among Us from GOLAZO on Vimeo.

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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

In Vegas, It's All About The Fans: American Outlaws Rally Coverage

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Editor's Note: This article originally appeared on The Shin Guardian and was written by Free Beer Movement founder, Dan Wiersema, an attendee and speaker at the event. More coverage of the FBM's speech and presence at the event coming tomorrow.

The old adage “What Happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas” shouldn’t hold true when one is talking about the first-ever American Outlaws Soccer Supporters Rally which took place this past weekend. From prime presentations by former USMNT defender Alexi Lalas and FIFA Presidential candidate/Sports Illustrated soccer writer Grant Wahl to the simple act of hanging out with 100 of your closest AO friends, an event like this needs to be talked about from sea to shining sea.

AO's Fearless Leaders: Justin Brunken (VP, left)
and Korey Donahoo (President)
For Outlaws President Korey Donahoo and Vice President Justin Brunken this weekend’s events were the culmination of months and months of leg work finding a location for the rally, nailing down speakers, filling gift bags, and getting sponsorship commitments from companies like Golazo Energy Drinks, Pepsi Max, Parlaid Clothing Co. and Fox Soccer Channel. After all was said and done, a visibly exhausted Brunken acknowledge that every late night was worth it.

“We didn’t really know what to expect,” he said of the rally which was attended by over 80 members of the American Outlaws. “It was surprisingly smooth. It was awesome.”

Brunken said that the Rally’s main goal was to energize their members, network, exchange ideas, and talk about what works (and doesn’t work) for AO without the pressure and hectic schedule that would have accompanied a weekend tied to a National Team game.

“Everyone I talked to had an amazing time,” Brunken added.

The American Outlaws Rally featured speeches and Q & As with the Outlaws leadership, Lalas, Wahl, Little Feet, Free Beer Movement, and a sneak preview of One Goal’s new South Africa film “Laduma”.


Alexi Lalas, duh.
It was Lalas, member of the 1994 and 1998 USMNT World Cup squad and current ESPN commentator that got the festivities rolling in the morning. For as enamored as AO members were with Lalas (especially as the real Ginger Prince partied with fans both nights in Vegas), he was just as impressed by the organization. Lalas called his speech “a love letter from me to you”.

“From the bottom of my heart… thank you,” Lalas told the assembled audience, both hung over and wide-eyed. “We’re all a part of this soccer family.”

The former Serie A and Major League Soccer player recalled his days playing for the national team, from his youth days to his days as general manager of the Los Angeles Galaxy less a world-wind tour of his own exploits, but how the fans have shaped him and how they’ve grown since his early days from “pockets and pockets” of U.S fans to crowds “that were getting bigger and bigger” each time the USMNT stepped on the field.

“I feed off of you. You have passion from the bottom of your soul,” Lalas said.

He continued, “The people who have done the work off the field have done just as much as we have on the field” to grow the sport.

In the afternoon AO members saw a moving presentation and appeal from Little Feet founder Trevor Slavik, whose program donates one LF soccer ball to kids in need across the United States and the developing world every time someone purchases one on their own. Slavik spoke of the power that a soccer ball could have for good in the world and challenged AO members to go back to their chapters and become a part of his “Little Feet Army”.

Sports Illustrated head soccer writer and FIFA Presidential candidate headlined the afternoon (although had a tough act to follow, the Free Beer Movement’s Dan Wiersema!) Wahl’s arrival on stage was met by a Golazo-fueled crowd. The soccer-specific energy drink company out of Seattle made a real meal of Wahl’s candidacy printing posters and handling out American flags to AO members; and all of a sudden a simple speech became a political rally (and an impromptu march outside became another Wahl campaign video).

Grant Wahl, duh.
But like Lalas, Wahl’s speech wasn’t really about him, but about the incredible growth of U.S. soccer, and more specifically, the fans’ role in that growth. Catering to his audience he singled out American Outlaws for a lot the sport’s recent strides. He pointed specifically to the Outlaws’ show of support for USMNT forward Charlie Davies during the 2009 World Cup qualifying game against Costa Rica in Washington DC. AO (along with help of this soccer publication) was able to organize and mobilize the “9th Minute Tribute” for Davies at this game that took place less than 48 hours after his career-threatening car crash.

Through the smoke bombs and “number nine” signs emerged the fact that the American Outlaws had landed on the nation’s soccer radar (and did not go unnoticed by Davies, who indicated to Wahl, in an interview coming out in this week’s SI, that the gesture was incredible motivation for his recovery).

“You guys have something going on here and I can’t wait to see what’s next,” he said.

He pointed out that American soccer fans were a part of an extraordinary time in the sport’s history here.
“We’re all creating this American soccer history. Not many countries get to do that.”

That’s what made this weekend’s American Outlaws Rally so crucial because it gave members of this supporters group and opportunity to work and talk and play with other member that are writing the next chapter of this country’s history in terms of soccer. The Outlaws are a shining example of the strides that it has made.

AO was founded in Lincoln, Nebraska, as President Korey Donahoo joked, a “soccer hotbed” in 2007, to “unite and strengthen” American soccer supporters. Sam’s Army paved the way, but AO has taken the baton and pulled around the bend. Today, less than four years later, the organization has nearly 4,000 members in 46 official chapters and every state in the nation.

Through strong brand identification, passionate support in the stands, and, like every growing movement in world today, a great grasp of social media, the American Outlaws has become THE United States soccer supporters group, eclipsing Sam’s Army and even U.S. Soccer’s own “Supporters Club”.

Wahl accurately pointed out that with membership like AO’s “any city in America can now be a soccer hot bed” because of the Outlaws’ work.

For one weekend in March it was Las Vegas, Nevada.




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