Late sponsorship of Takuma Sato pays off for mortgage broker with Indy 500 win - Action News
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Late sponsorship of Takuma Sato pays off for mortgage broker with Indy 500 win

When Takuma Sato took home the checkered flag at the Indy 500 on Sunday, the Japanese race car driver wasn't the only big winner: his car's main sponsor, which only agreed to back him less than a week ago, got more publicity than they likely expected.

Lender got unexpected bang for their buck especially since they likely paid less than other sponsors

Takuma Sato of Japan came out of nowhere to become Indianapolis 500 champion over the weekend. (Michael Conroy/Associated Press)

When Takuma Sato took home the checkered flag at the Indy 500 on Sunday, theJapanese race car driver wasn't the only big winner.

One of the main sponsors of his car, Indiana-based lender RuoffHome Mortgage, only decided to put financial support behind Sato's Andretti Racing Team early last week.

So when he won, becomingfirst driver from an Asian country to win theIndianapolis 500, the lender got an unexpected bang for their buck especially since they likely paid less than other sponsors did, for much less exposure.

"I'm guessing since it was a last minute thing, that team owner Michael Andretti probably gave Ruoff a lowball figure of only $750,000 to $1 million to be the major sponsor of the Sato car," automotive journalist Mark Smythtold CBC News in an email.

Sponsors of other top drivers likely paid $2 million and up for pole position on the cars of some of the circuit's top drivers "and when you win the Indy 500, it's always a great deal, so whatever they paid is a bargain," Smyth said.

Associate professor Richard Powers of the Rotman School of Business in Toronto says multi-million dollar endorsements are not out of the ordinary in the sport, due to the TV audience alone. Rival racing league Nascar is regularly the fourth-most popular TV sport in America ahead of hockey, but behind football basketball and baseball.

"And the Indy 500 is the Super Bowlof auto racing," he told CBC News. "Win the Indy and you are famous forever."

Foreign exposure too

Sports marketing instructor Vijay Setlur, at the Schulich School of Business at York University in Toronto, says the value of the IndyCar series is not what it once was, but the Indianapolis 500 race is still the jewel in the crownfrom a marketing perspective.

"There's no doubt it's the marquee event," Setlur said in an interview. "There's definitely a value there."

While the Indy500 is a major event in the U.S., the IndyCar series is trying to expand internationally, so having a non-U.S. driver win on its biggest stage is good for the driver, and good for the series.

Indiana-based Ruoff likely doesn't have any use for a sudden surge in exposure in Japan, but other sponsors may well be interested if he can keep it up.

"That's a market that a lot of leagues are trying to tap into," Setlur said.

Ruoff is led by CEO Mark Music, who appears to have been at the race on Sunday, tweeting his congratulations to his new-found partner.

Ruoff did not reply to a request for comment on Monday, which was Memorial Day in the United States and thus a statutory holiday.