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Fox Axes Host in Ad Boycott Over Soccer Stadium Deaths

By Jim Edwards | Jul 29, 2009

Steven Cohen, the Fox Soccer Channel personality, has been replaced as a host of Fox Football Fone-In by Eric Wynalda, the former U.S. national team star, according to USA Today’s soccer blog. The move came after a months-long advertising boycott called for by fans of Liverpool F.C.

Cohen lost at least four sponsors of his Sirius XM radio show, World Soccer Daily, in the boycott. Liverpool supporters urged the blacklist after Cohen said on his radio show that unticketed Liverpool fans were to blame for 96 deaths in a crush at the Hillsborough stadium in 1989. The fans, and a government inquiry, say few unticketed fans attended the game and that a badly designed stadium and miscommunications among officials led to the deaths.

Among the sponsors siding with the fans were Heineken, FourFourTwo magazine, the Fado pub chain and Ruffneck Wear. More recently, Chelsea F.C. disowned Cohen, even though he is a longtime fan of the club.

Cohen’s removal from the show came despite a combative apology and a correction he gave on July 16. It said:

I made a series of claims that were incorrect. I claimed on air there were 6 to 8 thousand ticketless fans and I also claimed those fans were the main cause of the tragedy. … Those claims were incorrect and obviously hurtful to the victims of the tragedy. While there were a small number of ticketless fans there that fateful day, my closer reading of the Taylor report leads me to believe that the incident could have occurred regardless of their presence.

Cohen did not respond to a message requesting comment. USA Today said “Neither Wynalda nor Dermot McQuarrie, FSC’s senior VP of production and programming and assistant general manager, would comment on Cohen or the Liverpool controversy.”

Fox’s press release on the personnel change doesn’t mention Cohen. It remains unclear exactly why Cohen was replaced. Here are the possible scenarios:

  • Fox wanted to placate advertisers who felt his presence distracted from the show, particulary in the run-up to the World Cup in 2010.
  • Fox felt Cohen would have difficulty getting Chelsea players on the show following the club’s abandonment of Cohen, or that the spat harmed relations between Fox and the English Premier League, upon whom it depends for live game broadcasts.
  • Cohen, as an owner of World Soccer Daily, which has contractual agreements with Fox, has removed himself from the spotlight in order to put the controversy behind him.

A statement from the Liverpool New York supporters’ club said:

Steven Cohen chose to lie and smear the 96 Liverpool fans who died tragically at Hillsborough in 1989, seeing their deaths as a way to boost his ratings by denigrating them. Steven Cohen now finds himself in the position of being rejected by those in football whose opinions matter.

… FSC, like many others in the football world have realized just how toxic Steven Cohen and his odious lies are. Some of the biggest advertisers in the game - Heineken, FourFourTwo – have pulled their support of him and now FSC, the biggest broadcaster of soccer in the USA has done the same.

BNET’s previous coverage of football advertising:

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Q&A: Fox's Steven Cohen on the Advertiser Boycott Over His Remarks on Soccer Stadium Deaths

    BNET Advertising - 153 days 2 hours 25 minutes ago

    Steven Cohen, the host of Fox Football Fone-In and Sirius XM’s World Soccer Daily, is battling fans of Liverpool F.C. who are urging advertisers to abandon his shows. Cohen offended the fans by blaming them for the deaths of 96 people at Hillsborough stadium in 1989. Those who arrived without tickets, Cohen has argued, contributed to the...

  • Steven Cohen Abandons Sirius Radio Show Following Advertiser Boycott

    BNET Advertising - 90 days 2 hours 49 minutes ago

    Steven Cohen, the Fox Soccer Channel host axed from his show following an advertiser boycott urged by fans of Liverpool F.C., abandoned his Sirius

  • Chelsea F.C. Disowns Fox Host in Ad Boycott

    BNET Advertising - 123 days 2 hours 2 minutes ago

    Chelsea F.C. has disowned Fox Soccer Channel host Steven Cohen over his remarks about the death of 96 Liverpool F.C. fans in a stadium crush in 1989. It is the latest turn in an increasingly strange fight between Cohen, fans of Liverpool who have urged a boycott of him, and the advertisers who have departed his show. Cohen has repeatedly blamed...

  • Advertisers Abandon Fox Soccer Channel After Host Blames Liverpool Supporters for 96 Killed in Stadium Crush

    BNET Advertising - 193 days 4 hours 53 minutes ago

    Advertisers on Fox Soccer Channel in the U.S. have pulled out of shows linked to British presenter Steven Cohen after he made remarks blaming Liverpool F.C. supporters for the death of 96 of their fellow fans at the Hillsborough football stadium in Sheffield, England, 20 years ago. The withdrawals were triggered when American fans of Liverpool...

  • Fox Host Lambasts Sponsors for Abandoning Show After Remarks on Soccer Stadium Deaths

    BNET Advertising - 154 days 2 hours 50 minutes ago

    Fox Soccer Channel host Steven Cohen lambasted advertisers on Sirius Radio Thursday for ending their sponsorships of his show following his comments about a fatal stadium crush that left 96 football fans dead in 1989. Several advertisers have been persuaded to abandon Cohen’s shows by fans of Liverpool F.C. who are angry over Cohen’s...

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