Chelsea line up Turkish Airlines to replace Samsung as shirt sponsors
- Chelsea's current deal with Samsung ends at end of the season
- Turkish Airlines are already sponsors of Barcelona, Manchester United and the Turkey national team
- Europe's fourth biggest airliner made a memorable commercial deal with Lionel Messi and Kobe Bryant
Turkish
Airlines are understood to be top of the list to replace Samsung, whose
contract as Chelsea shirt sponsors expires at the end of the season.
Europe's
fourth biggest airliner, who made a memorable commercial deal with
sports stars Lionel Messi and Kobe Bryant, are already sponsors of
Barcelona, Manchester United and the Turkey national team.
Partnership: Chelsea's agreement with kit sponsors Samsung ends at end of the season
Samsung
have backed Chelsea since 2005 when former chief executive Peter Kenyon
said the club was going to ‘paint the world blue’.
Chelsea renewed their shirt sponsorship contract with Samsung in 2013, but with surprisingly little publicity.
Launch: Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho (left) and then Chief Executive Peter Kenyon at launch in 2005
Lucrative: Turkish Airlines are already an official sponsor of Spanish giants Barcelona
The
deal is understood to be worth around £18million a year but the Korean
electronic giants waited until after Chelsea’s Champions League triumph
before agreeing the contract on the deadline for taking up the option.
Chelsea explained the strange lack of promotion by saying it is an extension rather than the announcement of a new partnership.
Stars: Europe's fourth biggest airliner made a memorable commercial deal with Lionel Messi and Kobe Bryant
Spreading their wings: Turkish Airlines are an offical partner of Manchester United
Chelsea agreed a 10-year kit contract worth £300million with adidas last summer.
However, the numbers show just how far Chelsea are behind Manchester United on the commercial front.
The
Old Trafford kit sponsorship contract with Chevrolet, which the club
trumpeted two years ahead of its start in 2014-15, is worth over £50m a
season.
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