Electronic Arts says it will stand behind Tiger
Woods - at least for the release of a new online golf game
featuring the embattled athlete.
The relationship between EA and Woods stretches back more
than a decade, and Tiger Woods-branded games have pulled in
hundreds of millions of dollars for the company over the
years.
Woods' image has been tarnished following a Thanksgiving
holiday car accident at the golfer's Florida home, which led
to an admission of extramarital "transgressions." He is
taking a break from golf and has been dropped by major
corporate sponsors AT&T and Accenture.
Gillette, a unit of the Procter & Gamble, and Swiss watch
maker Tag Heuer, a unit of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton,
have also said they will cut back their use of Woods in their
advertising campaigns.
On Monday, EA Sports President Peter Moore said the company
decided to stick with Woods because he is "still one of the
greatest athletes in history" despite his "mistakes" off the
golf course.
Moore added in a statement that the company has spent
"considerable time" developing and testing the new "Tiger
Woods PGA Tour Online" game, which he called a "breakthrough
experience."
The game will be released in so-called "open beta" later this
month, which means it is still being tested but anyone can
play and help find areas that can be improved. EA said it
doesn't have a date yet for the launch of the finished game.
The company, which is based in Redwood City, wouldn't comment
on whether Woods' sex scandal will affect EA's plans for a
new edition of Woods' popular console game, "Tiger Woods PGA
Tour," a franchise that that doesn't do as well as the
company's enormously successful "Madden" football series but
is still a serious moneymaker. EA has raked in more than $670
million from the Woods franchise in the United States alone
over the length of the partnership, according to estimates by
market research firm NPD Group.
The most recent installment of the console game, "Tiger Woods
PGA Tour 10," was launched in June 2009. The next one is
scheduled for the summer of 2010. The games are especially
popular on the Nintendo Wii, whose intuitive motion controls
lend themselves to sports games.
EA can continue to make "PGA Tour" games without Woods. It
could pick another golfer with a more pristine family life.
Or it could go back to the pre-Woods days, and simply call it
"PGA Tour."
The game has no real competitors. EA is the only company
licensed by the PGA to make games that carry its name. It
lets players play in a setting that looks as close to the
real thing as possible.
Most of Woods' $100 million in annual earnings have come not
from tournament winnings but from companies that wanted to be
associated with his persona.
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