Saturday , April 27 2024

PUMA’s world-class Ambassadors celebrate 75 years of sports history!

Sports company PUMA and several of its world-class ambassadors shared some of their most memorable moments of sports history of the past 75 years to celebrate the company’s anniversary as the fastest sports brand in the world.

“I think along all these 75 years, one thing which has not changed at PUMA is the purpose,” said PUMA CEO Arne Freundt. “We are here to write the future history of sports and culture.”

The world’s fastest man, Usain Bolt, was joined on stage by other PUMA legends at the company’s headquarters in Herzogenaurach, Germany, to talk about the highlights of their careers and how they worked together with the brand to write sports history: six-time Grand Slam winner Boris Becker, 1991 FIFA World Footballer of the Year Lothar Matthäus, NBA Hall of Fame inductee Ralph Sampson as well as track and field World Champions Linford Christie, Heike Drechsler, Armand “Mondo” Duplantis, Colin Jackson, Merlene Ottey and Yaroslava Mahuchikh.

“Success came from what happened in the background, the training, the dedication and the sacrifice that you made. So that’s where I put all the work,” said Usain Bolt “But when I competed, I enjoyed it. I was going out there to perform, not just going out there and run. And I think I kind of changed the game by just showing people, you can relax, you can enjoy what you do.”

Boris Becker, who won his first Wimbledon title at the age of 17, reflected on what it was like to be so successful at such a young age.

“The beauty of youth is you’re too young to know that you’re not supposed to win. But you feel that people look at you differently. In the morning, you go to the locker room and the guys stare, like you’re some guy from from Mars, because you’re so young. So it really changed my life in a dramatic fashion,” Becker said.

Merlene Ottey also started her career at a young age but competed on an international level well into her 50s. She told the audience that it was the love for the sport that kept her going.

“I loved what I was doing. When you have that passion, you are mentally ready for any challenge. You’re up for it. And I’m not one to take a defeat sitting down. I would always fight back for the next time,” she said.

PUMA Founder Rudolf Dassler had the vision to create products which would give his athletes the agility and performance of a big cat. From the spikes that helped PUMA’s track and field athletes win titles and set records, to the tennis rackets 17-year-old Boris Becker used to conquer Wimbledon, or the football boots in which legendary players such as Lothar Matthäus played: PUMA has stood by this vision for 75 years.

“Normal shoes were not good for the long jump as they were very unstable. I worked together with PUMA, gave some feedback and they created a really good shoe. This helped me a lot,” said Heike Drechsler, who took Olympic Gold in the long jump in 1992 and 2000.

Throughout its history, PUMA established a culture of firsts to help athletes peform at the highest level with innovative designs such as the first football boot with screw-in studs in 1952, the legendary brush spike of 1968, the pioneering RS-Computer Shoe in 1986, the first laceless sports shoe DISC in 1991 or, most recently, PUMA’s state of the art foam technology NITRO for running shoes.

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