11/21/03 – PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE - BUSINESS
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11/21/03 – PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE - BUSINESS
11/21/03 – PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE - BUSINESS - By Teresa Lindeman HISTORICAL PITCH. ADS SUPPORT OPENING OF NEW SPORTS MUSEUM. It wasn’t that hard, really, choosing the right moments to relive in an ad campaign that’s supposed to persuade the public to contribute $1.6 million toward the not-yet-opened Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum. Print ads and billboards set to debut next week will feature some of the best – a Mario Lemieux hockey puck from the Stanley Cup wins, an autographed baseball from Pirates great Bill Mazeroski, a football signed by Steelers owner Dan Rooney. Are those truly the region’s top sports memories? According to Bill Garrison, a partner in the small downtown ad shop Garrison Hughes that did the creative work on the campaign, the achievements represented universally recognized sports moments in the region, and, as an added plus, the museum had easy access to the imagery. That helps when you’re dealing with celebrities and tight deadlines. The campaign came together in a couple of months, said Garrison. Franco Harris happened to be on the museum’s fund-raising committee, so he came up with a good photograph of “The Immaculate Reception,” a revered moment when the former Steeler made a spectacular game-winning catch and touchdown run against the Oakland Raiders in a 1972 playoff game. Lemieux, who still lives here, works and sits on the committee, made it simple to feature the hockey puck to bring back those slick performances as the Penguins captured the National Hockey League’s top prizes. The most complicated task might have been getting permission from the Clemente family to use the picture of Pirates legend Roberto Clemente that will show up on 10 billboards next week. A photographer who knows the family helped make that happen. The Sports Museum will be part of an expansion of the Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center, set to open in November 2004. Already the project has raised $21 million with funding from the state, foundations, corporations and individuals, said Audrey Brourman, a consultant serving as chief fund raising counsel for the history center expansion. Plans call for collecting an additional $5.7 million as early as next summer. This new campaign takes fund raising directly to sports fans, who can show how really rabid they are by spending as little as $250 to get a personalized trading card made and then displayed at the museum, to a pricier $2,000 for a gold plaque on the Black-and-Gold wall. For $500, fans can buy baseballs to autograph themselves. A campaign tag line, “Your pride, your place,” attempts to put the emphasis on the passionate folks in the stands who make sports more fun. The museum itself will not focus on just the famous. There will be memorabilia from high school sports and even softball leagues. But the marketers decided the easiest, quickest way to give people a sense of what this place will be was to feature the familiar stars and events in the city’s sports history. Garrison said one of his main concerns was not upsetting stat-savvy fans. He double-checked to make sure that, yes, Clemente did get 3,000 regular season hits for the Pirates and Mazeroski did turn 1,706 double plays. “We welcome discussion on which moments are the greatest,” said Garrison. But, he added, “We just don’t want to get anything wrong.”