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Starbucks Stadium? Coffee chain applies for naming rights

Starbucks has sought approval to use its name in "providing stadium and training facilities for sports and entertainment activities" and "promoting business, sports and entertainment events of others."

  • Many companies already adorn professional stadiums and arenas.
  • Naming rights agreements often run for decades and can cost several or tens of millions of dollars annually.
  • The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office plans by early September to assign a lawyer to review Starbucks` application.

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Starbucks Stadium? Coffee chain applies for naming rights

Starbucks Corp has applied with the U.S. trademark office for the right to use its name on a sports stadium or training facility.

In a June 2 application, the coffee chain sought approval to use its name in "providing stadium and training facilities for sports and entertainment activities" and "promoting business, sports and entertainment events of others."

Approval could enable Seattle-based Starbucks to join companies such as AT&T, Bank of America, Canadian Tire, FedEx, Oracle, PPG Paints, Target, Toyota and United Airlines whose names already adorn professional stadiums and arenas.

"Either it is actively looking to make a deal to sponsor a venue, or it wants to protect its right to potentially use its name in that manner," said Ashley Dobbs, a law professor at the University of Richmond in Virginia who specializes in intellectual property.

Starbucks declined to comment.

Naming rights agreements often run for decades and can cost several or tens of millions of dollars annually.

Amazon.com Inc took a different path from most corporate sponsors when it named an arena in downtown Seattle the Climate Pledge Arena.

That building will house the Seattle Kraken expansion team in the National Hockey League, and the Seattle Storm of the Women`s National Basketball Association.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office plans by early September to assign a lawyer to review Starbucks` application.

If the office has no objection, Starbucks will have six months to show it is using its mark in commerce. The company may apply for extensions. 

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