TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS and $500 million later, Tiger Woods has split from Nike.
It is the end of a storied partnership: there is no sports attire as famous as Woodsโ Sunday red, when his shirt blazed as fiercely as his eyes.
Woods made one of Nikeโs greatest TV ads for them with the astounding precision of his chip at the 2005 Masters, when the ballโs swoosh stopped to wink at the viewer before it plopped improbably into the hole.
Jim Riswold made the rest of them. A graduate of the University of Washington, he took a job in 1984 with Oregon-based advertising agency Wieden+Kennedy, where he worked on the Nike account and made a uniquely American art form out of sports commercials on television. He dreamed up the โBo Knowsโ campaign with Bo Jackson in 1989 and created Michael Jordanโs ads with Spike Lee and Bugs Bunny, the latter spawning the movie Space Jam.
So when Nike struck a $40 million deal in 1996 with an amateur golf prodigy named Tiger Woods, Riswold got the daunting job of writing the first TV commercial. He had to assemble it from archive footage, as nothing new would be filmed while Woods focused on being the first man in history to win three-straight US amateur titles. Bobby Jones, co-founder of the Masters, won the competition five times in total but never more than twice in a row.
Woods won the title at Pumpkin Ridge and at the end of the day, he stepped into a room with his parents along with his agent Hughes Norton and coach his Butch Harmon. They were joined by Riswold โ whom Woods had never met โ and Nike CEO Phil Knight, who arranged the meeting having told Woods he had to show him something important. A nervous Riswold pushed a VHS tape into its player and showed Woods his work: a 57-second ad consisting of footage from his US amateur win, onto which lines of text were interpolated, one of which recurred.
Hello world.
โThe spot ends and the room is silent,โ Riswold tells The 42. โEarl speaks first by pounding his fist on the table and says, โAmen.โ I ask Tiger if he has anything to say. He says, โCan I see it again please?โ High fives all around, hugs too. Butch says that was the best golf commercial heโs ever seen.โ
Thus began the 27-year tale of Tiger and Nike. Woods allowed Riswold drink champagne from his trophy, but stopped short of agreeing to Riswoldโs exuberant request for free golf lessons. He would get them anyway, during the downtime that came with filming TV commercials. Riswold and Woods had putting and chipping contests โ Riswold describes them โ โlike going up against Ted Bundy in a serial killing contestโ โ and Woodsโ winning payment came from McDonalds. โItโs not everybody who gets golf lessons from Tiger Woods in exchange for a few Big Macs,โ says Riswold.
Woods loved the Hello world ad but the world didnโt. The ad claimed there were still courses in the US Woods was forbidden from playing because of the colour of his skin. Responding to the Washington Post, Nike subsequently admitted that no course existed, while it jarred with Woodsโ complete disinterest in all matters relating to race. A couple of years earlier, Woods told a journalist the only time he thinks about race is when the media ask a question about it.
โIโve questioned myself if it was the right thing to do, to play the Race Card,โ says Riswold. โBut every time I do, I answer, โHell, yes, it was the right thing to do.โ Iโm proud of that ad. When we played the rough cut at Pumpkin Ridge and we were celebrating, Earl said, โBobby Jones is rolling over in his grave.โ You canโt beat that.โ
Nike helped propel Woods to a level of unprecedented fame for a golfer, and he chafed at this scrutiny. Why else would someone name their yacht Privacy?
โI think the world wanted and took too much of his time,โ says Riswold. โI saw less of him when he closed his circle tight. Who wouldnโt?โ
Woods visited Riswoldโs office before he closed that circle, after winning the 1997 Masters. Wieden+Kennedy mimicked the ceremony at Augusta National with one of their own jackets. Riswold played the Nick Faldo role, and Woods signed a portrait drawn by Riswoldโs then-five-year-old daughter. Itโs now framed on her apartment wall.
Itโs useful that Woods picked 2005 to create Nikeโs ad, because it was the year Riswold quit the business altogether. He was diagnosed with leukemia in 2000 and, at the age of 42, given between two and four years to live. He met Woods shortly after his diagnosis, and joked that leukemia is even tougher than golf. โI think he even let me win our putting contest that timeโ says Riswold. โTiger Woods, Softie!โ
Riswold cheated his death sentence with help from an experimental drug called Gleevec and a helping hand from, er, Adolf Hitler.
โHow Hitler Saved my Life,โ ran the headline on Riswoldโs article for Esquire on 2005, explaining how the fuhrer exploited his weakness for art, specifically the work of Andy Warhol. During his convalescence, Riswold bought dolls of historical dictators โ your Hitlers, your Mussolinis, your Stalins โ and photographed them in absurd dress and contexts. He snapped a toy Mussolini on a toy tricycle; he photographed a dress-wearing Hitler in a dollhouse. An Oregon gallery then asked to exhibit them for sale - Riswold calls this the day Hitler invaded Portland โ and he was subsequently commissioned to do another collection incorporating Napoleon. Suddenly Riswold was a full-time artist with another reason to live.
โThe redemptive power of selling art!โ, he wrote in Esquire. โBut please donโt get me wrong; itโs still a fucking hassle not to die. But at least now itโs a worthwhile fucking hassle.โ
An art professor said Riswoldโs art โteaches us how to deal with monsters, be it a dictator or a deadly diseaseโ, while he describes his own work as therapy, albeit โnot what you would call FDA-approved.โ
โI love making art,โ he says. โIโve gone from a career of selling people things they donโt need to making things they donโt want. Both paths start with the letter a and involve lots of wasted money. This is going to get me in trouble with the art people who see art as this pristine thing in which the artist slaves away in a garret subsisting on paint and his own urine in order to create his masterpiece. Hate to tell you, thatโs marketing too. I like art that disturbs the comfortable and comforts the disturbed.
โI was recently diagnosed terminal with bone cancer. Iโve been cheating death since 2000. Iโm not afraid to die โ and Iโm in no hurry either โ but Iโve found a sense of total wonder and wander. Life is good. I recommend it for everyone.โ
Woods has a favourite commercial from his time with Nike and it was, of course, created by Riswold. It aired in 1997, and featured a series of American kids from minority backgrounds playing golf and telling the camera, โI am Tiger Woods.โ
In 2013, Riswold was inducted into the Hall of Fame at the One Club for Creativity in New York, a year after Steve Jobs. The organisation compiled a video to celebrate Riswold: it riffed on that 1997 ad and featured a few familiar faces.
It opened with Tiger Woods looking down the lens, saying, โI am Jim Riswold.โ
I remember Linekar tweeting that Spurs may have finally found a top class manager who knew what he was doing when they won their first 2 games โฆโฆโฆโฆ Donโt look that way now.
I think he is a good manager but donโt think he has the players. Like Liverpool, they spent big but bought poor players and only have Adebayor as their first choice striker. Little or no chance of top 4.