National Basketball Association - Houston Rockets
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Houston Rockets Logo Information
Rockets' new look to include logo with stylized,
twin-tailed R
By DAVID BARRON
© 2003 Houston Chronicle
It's only one letter, scarlet though it may be.
But if the Rockets have their way, the stylized,
twin-tailed R unveiled Tuesday as the team's new logo
will symbolize the city's NBA franchise as surely as the
Celtics and Lakers have been represented for decades by
their trademarks.
And at least the flying R will retire the Rockets'
needle-nosed, snaggletoothed cartoon rocket to the
fashion scrapheap where it belongs.
The
Rockets unveiled the logo Tuesday as the first step of a
redesign that will culminate in September with the debut
of red and silver uniforms.
The rollout began about 10 days ago with a
choreographed leak of 200 caps bearing the new logo to
team employees and their friends. Another 800 caps will
be distributed during the next two weeks as part of the
Rockets' efforts to sell luxury suites in the new
downtown arena.
The logo, which resembles a rocket's nose cone at the
top and features twin exhaust trails at the bottom of
the R, will show up on billboards next week, and it will
play a role in the ticket sales campaign that will begin
late this month.
And,
come September, the logo will be available on caps,
shirts, pins, bumper stickers and jackets leading to the
uniform unveiling and the tipoff of the 2003-04 season.
"We wanted to come up with something that would be
timeless," said Tim McDougall, the Rockets' vice
president for marketing. "You'd like to get something
like the Celtics and the Lakers have -- a timeless look
that becomes our look and can stick around for a long,
long time."
It will take time to determine whether the new design
meets that standard. But in one regard, the Rockets'
makeover is already a smashing success.
Ever since the decision to discard the Rockets'
familiar red and gold uniforms after back-to-back NBA
titles in 1994 and 1995 in favor of pinstriped cartoon
pajamas, Rockets fans have said that red should be the
color of the home threads. And, at last, the Rockets
have listened.
"We did some surveys, and what came back is that
people defined red as the Rockets' color," McDougall
said. "Some liked it with black or with white or blue or
silver or platinum, and they were split on red and gold.
But 99.5 percent of the answers mentioned red in some
form or fashion."
Execution of that directive fell to Eiko Ishioka, who
won an Academy Award in 1993 for costume design in Bram
Stoker's Dracula. Ishioka initially signed on to design
uniforms but came up with a logo that was adopted by
Rockets owner Leslie Alexander.
"What Eiko saw was the amount of upward motion that
is unique to basketball and characterizes the sport,"
McDougall said. "When you look at the logo, you get the
same feel of upward motion that the sport gives you."
Once they decided on the logo, the Rockets asked
employees to give sample caps to aerobics trainers,
bartenders, ex-athletes -- anyone who was out and about
enough to give the new design a wider audience.
Joel Blank, the Rockets' director of broadcasting,
gave his cap to Mike Shoelen, the director of golf at
Tour 18.
"I put it in the pro shop, and a lot of people asked
about it and wanted to know where they could get it,"
Shoelen said. "And then my wife saw it, liked it and
took it from me so she could wear it to an Astros game.
She stuck me with wearing a golf hat instead.
"I like the flames coming out of the bottom and the
fact that it looks like a Rocket ship taking off. I
don't know if classy is the word, but it's a refreshing
change."
The Rockets also are working with clothing suppliers
on logo merchandise. About twice a week, McDougall
receives a 250-page stack of proposed clothing designs
to accept, reject or return with suggested changes.
Although Alexander was an outspoken fan of the
uniform that was adopted in 1996, McDougall said he has
taken an active role in the new design.
"Les wants something that people will feel good
wearing and something that will look good on
television," he said.
"One thing he likes about the current uniform is that
when you turn on the TV, within a second you know you're
watching the Rockets."
McDougall said the uniforms are still being modified
by NBA officials and won't be unveiled until September.
Other than confirming the main colors -- Pantone PMS 200
red and PMS 877 silver, with accents of white and black
-- he refused to offer details.
"There are no pinstripes," he did offer.
"The R plays a prominent role," McDougall added. "One
rumor I heard was that it was going to be just a giant
R. That's not true. There is some trim outside the
trademark and the logo."
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