NASCAR evaluating souvenir row: NASCAR fans call it souvenir row,
and for the last three decades, they have gone there to browse for hats
and T-shirts at enormous truck rigs carrying their favorite driver's
merchandise. But that tradition may become a thing of the past. NASCAR
is in the early phases of re-evaluating its trackside merchandise
program, and it is looking to make a change. The company two weeks ago
sent a request for proposal to a dozen companies asking them to submit
plans for how the sport could change the way it sells merchandise at
races.At a minimum, NASCAR is considering reducing the number of truck
rigs along souvenir row, and possibly eliminating them altogether, in
order to replace them with a more traditional retail concept like the
tented stores set up at the entrance to PGA Tour events. NASCAR teams
and tracks have offered their support for exploring a change. The
evaluation process follows years of declining merchandise sales in
NASCAR. Sales reportedly fell from more than $2 billion in 2008 to $1
billion in 2010. Motorsports Authentics, the motorsports licensing
company that was jointly owned by International Speedway Corp. and
Speedway Motorsports Inc., nearly filed for bankruptcy, and SMI this
year abandoned its stake in the business in order to realize tax
benefits that outweighed owning it. Motorsports Authentics had been
responsible for covering the cost of transporting 20-plus truck rigs to
each of NASCAR's 36 Sprint Cup races. The cost of having those trucks
crisscross the country became inefficient as merchandise revenue
shriveled and attendance decreased at races nationwide.(Sports Business Daily)(7-4-2014)
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