The Brooklyn Ratners or the Ratner Nets? What if team names in the U.S. were more like those in Japan?

Q. I noticed in your book that you think a more honest approach to the names of sports teams would be the Japanese one, taking the names of owners, so we'd have the Steinbrenner Yankees or the Turner Braves--or, I might add, the Ratner Nets.
[Japanese team names include the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters, named for major shareholder Nippon Ham, and the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, named for SoftBank.]

[Actually, the NBA forbids corporate nicknames.]
Thereās the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim [now just the Anaheim Ducks], who were named after a Disney movie and [formerly] owned by Disney. Itās just not quite as blatant is it is in Japan. At this point the stadiums are all named after corporations. At this point, the teams are corporate names. What are the New York Yankees if not a corporation? They just happen to be named after themselves.
And in Brooklyn?
A. Maybe the Brooklyn Barclays. Thereās no reason not to do that, except I think thereās still a little bit of squeamishness among fans about having that much of a corporate name. You could be wearing this on your hat and shirt, you donāt want it to be just a corporate logo.
Again, weāre breaking new ground. In international soccer they do it, in auto racing they do it. I think weāre headed in that direction. I think certainly the logos on the uniforms at some point. So if, 20 years down the road, the Nets may have a uniform that says Nets in small letters, and--Iām trying to think of a big Brooklyn company--
Q. KeySpan [actually, now NationalGrid]
A. --and say KeySpan in big letters, whatās the [real] team name?
Sports, or business?
Q. Bettina Damiani [of the watchdog Good Jobs New York] calls the teams āsports entertainment corporations.ā
A. I think thatās a fair way of putting it. Itās an entertainment industry, just as much as the movie business is. It happens to be around sports, but they could as easily be selling something else. Half the time they are selling something else. Theyāre clothing companies as much as theyāre sports teams. Theyāre selling jerseys. On some level, the teams are just the hook for the merchandise--
Q. --Thatās why Brett Yormark is there--the marketing guru for the Nets.
A. --in the same way that Hannah Montana is less a TV show than a toy line. I think thereās a level on which sports teams are less sports teams than they are souvenir marketing devices.
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