The Olympic athlete has been charged with murdering his girlfriend.
NEW YORK
Nike has suspended its endorsement deal with Oscar Pistorius, the Olympic athlete charged with murdering his girlfriend at his home in South Africa."Nike has suspended its contract with Oscar Pistorius. We believe Oscar Pistorius should be afforded due process and we will continue to monitor the situation closely," Nike said in a statement posted on its website late Wednesday.
Pistorius competed in the 2012 Olympics despite having both his legs
amputated as a child. He is known as the "Blade Runner" because he
walks and runs on carbon fiber prosthetic legs shaped like blades.He has maintained his innocence since the Feb. 14 shooting that
killed Reeva Steenkamp, his model girlfriend, saying he mistook her for an
intruder. But he was charged with
murder the day after the shooting. Pistorius had been getting
about $2 million annually in endorsement deals, according to published reports.
Eyewear maker Oakley, his other major sponsor, has already suspended its deal
with him, according to reports.
Nike's campaign with Pistorius, which started soon after his
2012 Olympic appearance, is particularly bad public relations for the company
as it refers to him as "the bullet in
the chamber."He first appeared in a 2008 Nike
commercial, a spot that also included cyclist Lance Armstrong.
Nike ended ties with
Armstrong after evidence emerged that he had used
performance-enhancing drugs to win seven Tour de France titles.
But Nike has been slow to cut ties with disgraced athletes. The day of
the shooting it issued a statement extending its sympathy but saying it
wouldn't comment because it was a police matter. It initially stood by
Armstrong, even as the anti-doping authorities accused him of
cheating and moved to strip him of his titles.
It also kept its endorsement deal with Kobe Bryant
while he faced sexual assault charges. It was the first major company to strike
a sponsorship deal
with Michael Vick after the football star got out of prison for
staging dog fights. And it has stood by golfer Tiger Woods
during his sexual infidelity scandal that chased away other major sponsors
including PepsiCo's (PEP,
Fortune 500)
Gatorade, General Motors (GM,
Fortune 500)
, Procter & Gamble's (PG,
Fortune 500)
Gillette razors and AT&T (T,
Fortune 500).
Nike (NKE,
Fortune 500)
spends far more than any other company on sponsorship deals. Its most recent
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission show it is committed to
$3.8 billion in future endorsement deals
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