nko11
Juniors
- Messages
- 718
Actually yeah you are correct with 'Football' alone being used quite often. Probably a bad example. MLS is a better example and more relevant to where we'd be positioned. And 100% for teams and even players being used as references for what they're watching. Nonetheless the branding of using 3 letters is strong and will help to make it feel less foreign than just 'Rugby'.Really, you must hang out with very different Americans. The ones I spoken to say football, basketball, baseball and hockey if they refer to the sport. More often they'd say the team like going to the Lakers, cubs, pats, Rangers etc . It's only really the talking heads that say acronym for dramatic effect.
Occasionally you do get NFL if you are getting to a college v pro level of granularity.
Admittedly I haven't had an American say "American" football. But it's pretty strongly implied.
But on do they search "rugby"? Yes.
When I was in Miami for the game last year US clients and colleagues were calling it rugby and I had to explain the difference, including to one guy who did an exchange year in sydney.
In terms of, searching 'Rugby' - I'd say from what I've seen it's about 50-50, maybe even a bit more towards 'NRL', which is actually pretty good after the first year and works well with drawing existing rugby fans to check it out. But it should be turned to full NRL branding in the next few years.
For context, I went to college in the US for a year, so not totally speaking out of my a**.
On that topic, one of the blokes I knew over there who played College Football and now plays for the US in the 7's - came over to trial for 1 or 2 NRL teams. I'm presuming he didn't get picked up, as it was a bit back. But would be good for the NRL to bring in cap dispensations for US based players if they want to make a real go of carving out a niche in the US market. He would be one of the fastest in the NRL and easily has enough skills to play Wing at the very least.