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"Dan & Dave" made O'Brien and Johnson &ndash; both unknowns outside the world of [[track and field]] &ndash; into household names in the United States. The campaign led to both receiving endorsements from other companies, including O'Brien with Nike in 1993.<ref name="CNBC" /> Despite a foot injury, Johnson won a bronze medal in Barcelona;<ref name="CNBC" /> he retired from competition shortly after the Games. O'Brien eventually won a gold medal at the [[1996 Summer Olympics]] in [[Atlanta]].<ref name="CNBC" /> Both were inducted to the [[Oregon Sports Hall of Fame]] together in 2005.
"Dan & Dave" made O'Brien and Johnson &ndash; both unknowns outside the world of [[track and field]] &ndash; into household names in the United States. The campaign led to both receiving endorsements from other companies, including O'Brien with Nike in 1993.<ref name="CNBC" /> Despite a foot injury, Johnson won a bronze medal in Barcelona;<ref name="CNBC" /> he retired from competition shortly after the Games. O'Brien eventually won a gold medal at the [[1996 Summer Olympics]] in [[Atlanta]].<ref name="CNBC" /> Both were inducted to the [[Oregon Sports Hall of Fame]] together in 2005.


The "Dan & Dave" idea was parodied by [[Ryder Trucking]] with both athletes shown participating in a mock [[biathalon]] where they started a foot race then would continue in a race in rental trucks. Dan easily was able to complete his reservation at Ryder and continue on in a truck, while a frustrated Dave is held up at second-rate truck service. {{fact|date=April 2009}}
The "Dan & Dave" idea was parodied by [[Ryder|Ryder Trucks]] with both athletes shown participating in a mock [[biathalon]] where they started a foot race then would continue in a race in rental trucks. Dan easily was able to complete his reservation at Ryder and continue on in a truck, while a frustrated Dave is held up at second-rate truck service. {{fact|date=April 2009}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 21:19, 8 April 2009

Dan & Dave was an advertising and merchandising campaign by American shoe manufacturer Reebok during the build-up to the 1992 Summer Olympic Games in Barcelona. The promotion was meant to generate excitement and support for the Olympic competition between American decathletes Dan O'Brien and Dave Johnson.

History

The campaign began with television commercials aired during Super Bowl XXVI.[1] O'Brien and Johnson, though rivals, were favored to win gold medals in Barcelona, and Reebok, which had recently lost U.S. market share to Nike,[1] was hoping to rebound with their endorsement. The television spots featured the same general message: "Who will be the world's greatest athlete – Dan or Dave? To be settled in Barcelona."[2]

Reebok's plan went awry five weeks before the Games began, when O'Brien failed to qualify for the Olympics by missing the pole vault during Olympic trials in New Orleans.[1][3] This resulted in Reebok refactoring the television spots to feature Dan cheering Dave on.

Aftermath

"Dan & Dave" made O'Brien and Johnson – both unknowns outside the world of track and field – into household names in the United States. The campaign led to both receiving endorsements from other companies, including O'Brien with Nike in 1993.[1] Despite a foot injury, Johnson won a bronze medal in Barcelona;[1] he retired from competition shortly after the Games. O'Brien eventually won a gold medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.[1] Both were inducted to the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame together in 2005.

The "Dan & Dave" idea was parodied by Ryder Trucks with both athletes shown participating in a mock biathalon where they started a foot race then would continue in a race in rental trucks. Dan easily was able to complete his reservation at Ryder and continue on in a truck, while a frustrated Dave is held up at second-rate truck service. [citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Rovell, Darren (2008-07-29). "Catching Up With Dan and Dave". CNBC. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  2. ^ Brandon, Steve (2005-10-07). "A 'Dan and Dave' reunion". Portland Tribune. Pamplin Media Group. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  3. ^ Merron, Jeff (2003-08-11). "The List: Biggest sports busts". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2009-03-09.