CR Blog
Spin bowls out Boom Boom
Posted by Patrick Burgoyne, 4 July 2010, 17:14 Permalink Comments (10)

Just occasionally as a designer you get to work on your dream job: for Spin founder and massive cricket fan Tony Brook the chance to design a new range of cricket bats was one such project
Brook is such a big cricket fan that he even named his studio after one of the game's key skills – spin bowling. Earlier this year he was put in touch with two 'cricket mad' businessmen, Ali Ehsan and Zahid Soorty, by some former clients. Ehsan and Zoorty were planning to launch a new brand of cricket bats named Boom Boom after the nickname of Pakistan star Shahid Afridi.
Cricket, despite its genteel image, has not been immune from the march of branding. In the 60s, bats were typically ink-stamped with the maker's name and, sometimes, an endorsement from a professional player, such as this Hunts County John Edrich model

Today, Hunts County bats look like this

Former player and bat manufacturer Duncan Fearnley claims to be the first to have introduced a logo to the cricket bat. In the late 60s, Fearnley adopted a device based on cricket's three stumps, which appeared on the front and back of all its bats. Such a distinctive, highly visible device was aimed primarily at television audiences who could now identify the model being used by their favourite player who was, of course, paid for their endorsement.

In the 70s and 80s Fearnley sponsored many of the game's leading stars, including Ian Botham, to use bats such as the one above.
This was a period of major design innovation with Gray-Nicolls introducing its famous scoop which had a hollowed out back

And Stuart Surridge's extra-large Jumbo, employed with somewhat mixed success by yours truly and recently revived in a spirit of 80s nostalgia

Today the typical branding on bats from the major manufacturers is a little more sticker-happy

Boom Boom takes a more minimal but bold approach in keeping with the non-nonsense name. Here, the bats are modelled by (in order) Pakistan stars Afridi, Abdul Razzaq and Fawad Alam (Photography: Ruud Baan at Process)




As well as bats, Boom Boom will be producing kit for the Pakistan team with a full range of equipment due out next year.
"There are so many clichés surrounding cricket that need to be given a
wide berth," says Brook of the job. "Also I’m a huge cricket fan, so there was a certain amount of self-induced pressure to make a decent fist of it."
There are some venerable brands in cricket but, recently, too many of them have been obscuring what are, in themselves, objects of great intrinsic beauty under all manner of neon, day-glo, metallic stickerage (new word). It's good to see a newcomer offering a reminder of the value of (relative) restraint.
10 Comments
"neon, day-glo, metallic stickerage" is excellent.
2010-07-05 09:18:09
These are great. Love the oo detail on the side of the bat. The photography works well too, building up the brand image. They obviously mean business.
2010-07-06 12:52:24
nice design, waiting for this boom boom bat
2010-07-06 13:21:30
superb drive pose in the last pic
2010-07-06 16:40:25
Nice AD work.
Boom boom does have sexual connotations, but that doesn't bother me!
2010-07-07 12:10:27
mohammad amir look really nice but they misspell his name :-)
sughra
2010-08-04 19:57:46
there is a mistake in article, it's Zahid Soorty not Zoorty.
Please correct.
2010-08-19 08:47:29
Great photography to make our players look "Nike cool" ....
2010-08-19 13:15:39
Its good to see a good pakistani brand out there. Im not so keen on their ODI and T20 kit, im sure a better design can be made available. but this is a good start.
2010-08-23 12:17:44
cricket focused brand is a good idea as here in sub continent people are cricket crazy and u can see the immediate recognition of the brand based on cricket
2011-04-01 13:00:26
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