The findings below are admittedly inexact; they represent a snapshot in time, taken at individual games over several weeks. More caveats:
- Only dasherboard ads were tracked.
- Digital dasherboard ads with multiple advertisers were not included.
- The NHL has 44 ad positions available at each rink - only ads that were visible via the television camera at center ice were tracked. (Positions #40 - #21, left-to-right on a TV screen.)
- Team category exclusivity agreements with advertisers are not known.
The top 10 advertiser categories:
- Telecom
- Insurance
- Alcohol-Malt Beverage
- Restaurant
- Consumer Services
- Beverage
- Consumer Goods
- Banking
- Gaming
- Automotive-Maker
- Bud Light (20 arenas)
- State Farm (17)
- Geico (16)
- Coca-Cola Zero/Coke Zero (8)
- Tim Hortons (8)
- Air Canada (7)
- AT&T (7)
- Molson (7)
- Toyota (7)
- Verizon (7)
- With franchise ownership in flux, the Phoenix Coyotes, unsurprisingly, lead the league in house ads.
- State Farm is a +1 over Geico. The insurance companies are going head-to-head in nine markets: Atlanta, Buffalo, Dallas, Long Island, New York City, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay.
- There are coffee/doughnut wars brewing in New York state: Tim Hortons and Dunkin' Donuts are both fighting for cruller consumers in Madison Square Garden and HSBC Arena.
- Searching for a geographical explanation for this one: Coca-Cola appears to have re-branded its calorie-free version, now marketing it nationally as Coca-Cola Zero. But not in Atlanta, Detroit, NYC and LA, where it remains Coke Zero.
- The one-market advertiser that seems completely random and a head-scratcher at first, but may be inspired: Starkist Tuna advertising in Pittsburgh's Mellon Arena. (Penguins eat tuna?)
- The one-market advertiser that seems completely random and remains a head-scratcher: Lemonhead candies as a corporate sponsor of the Chicago Blackhawks. Yes, the manufacturer, Ferrara Pan, is a Chicago-based company, but one would think they would've chosen a more appropriate candy of theirs to market to a hockey audience. Say, Jaw Busters?
[Updated: November 5, 2009]
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