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Scott Allen
The Bud Bowl: A Definitive History
by Scott Allen - January 29, 2008 - 4:00 PM

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On the subject of the greatest football dynasties of all-time – and yes, the New England Patriots have already cemented their place in this discussion – the 1970s Pittsburgh Steelers, 1980s San Francisco 49ers, and 1990s Dallas Cowboys likely all come to mind. You would be remiss, however, if you failed to mention a less heralded and, uh, less human team that dominated its competition in, quite frankly, unbelievable fashion: Budweiser.

bud-bowl-bottles2.jpgFrom 1989-1997, the self-anointed “King of Beers” dominated Anheuser-Busch’s Bud Bowl, the yearly clash between animated bottles of Bud and Bud Light that was featured in a series of commercials during the Super Bowl. The advertising campaign, which persists today in the form of Bud Bowl-themed packaging and promotional events, remains one of the most popular ever.

The Bud Bowl Architect

Grant Pace wrote the six original Bud Bowl ads that appeared in 1989 while working at D’Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles. Pace said he developed the ads under the assumption that Bud Bowl would be a one-year phenomenon, but Anheuser-Busch representatives liked the prototype so much that Pace actually changed the original ending to leave open the possibility for a sequel. (To see the ending that never aired, go here and click on the third white box from the left).

More Exciting Than The Actual Super Bowl

bud-light.jpgThe first spots were an instant hit with viewers, as reflected by an amazing 17% surge in January beer sales. This guaranteed a grudge match the following year. As the cost of air time, production and other expenses grew from $5 million in 1989 to $8 million in 1991, so too did sales and Bud Bowl’s popularity. Inflatable helmets and other related paraphernalia dominated liquor store and supermarket displays, while fans and sports columnists opined that the annual “Battle of the Bottles” was more exciting than the actual Super Bowl. (Considering that the average margin of victory in Bud Bowl history was less than three points, that notion held more than a little bit of truth.)

Tapped Out

By 1994, when Bud announced a new advertising deal with DDB Needham Worldwide, it was clear that the Bud Bowl idea as Pace and his colleagues had originally conceived it was nearly tapped out. The game took a one-year hiatus in 1996 before making an unsuccessful comeback attempt in 1997. The buildup to Bud Bowl 8 featured a sweepstakes, inviting fans to go online and vote for their all-time favorite Bud Bowl players and moments. Though I was only 13, I managed to score an official football.

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Television spots for the Bud Bowl were abandoned for good in 1998, as Anheuser-Busch brought back the Budweiser frogs campaign, which debuted two years earlier.

Today, the Bud Bowl’s legacy endures in stores [photo courtesy of MauryStory]…

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…on eBay

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…at BudBowl.com

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…and even in Glendale, Arizona, the site of Super Bowl XLII. Snoop Dogg and Kid Rock will headline the Block Party at

Bud Bowl 2008, while the Budweiser Clydesdales will also make an appearance. Similar events have been held in other Super Bowl host cities in recent years, including a 2006 shindig at Detroit’s Tiger Stadium. But while the modern Bud Bowl remains a marketing success, it hardly compares to the stop-action awesomeness that fans came to know and love in the events formative years. To watch every Bud Bowl commercial in its entirety, along with thousands of other commercials, I highly recommend the nominal one-week membership to commercial-archive.com. The fine folks behind that site have granted us permission to use their screenshots.

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Continue reading for a look back at Bud Bowls I-VIII…

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Comments (15)
  1. Fantastic and exhaustive. Can’t wait for the interview tomorrow.

  2. Maybe I’m making this up but wasn’t spuds mackenzie involved in the early bud bowls ??

  3. Spuds was the Bud Light owner in Bud Bowl I. There’s a shot of three women fawning over him in his luxury box following a Bud Light touchdown.

  4. Wow. You wherent kidding when you said “everything about Bud bowls. Great post, dude! (feeling flossed)

  5. i can’t beleive i just read this article.

  6. Damn… I remember when I was a kid and thinking how entertaining these commercials were over the actual game and loaded nachos I was eating. Ahhh… The memories.

  7. Well, there’s ten minutes of my life I won’t get back.

  8. I *love* that Bud Dry was part of the 1991 Bud Bowl. That beer is AWESOME!

  9. Wasnt the winner of the bowl based on annual sales of the beer?

    I remember reading this somewhere. Can anybody corroborate?

    thx
    ken

  10. Hmm an interesting point but I’m not sure if I agree with you.

    Jared Lorz

  11. You can pretty much bet that Bud will be dominating the polls at spotbowl.com this year too. Exclusive sources from A-B are backing their 60-sec Dalmation and Clydesdale spot for top pick in ‘08.

  12. Thanks for the memories !
    This was awesome.

  13. Where’s the football you won? Did you find yourself drinking Budweiser at an early age?

  14. who cares about bud when you have SAINT ARNOLDS! IT IS THE NEW BEER…

  15. Although I am way into NFL, the Bud Bowls were always pesky to me. However, I did very much enjoy the parody on Letterman around Bud Bowl III of IV (?) when they showed a “preview” of the actual Bud Bowl. They had the bottles lined up on a fake field, blew a whistle or something, and then whacked all the bottles to the middle of the table where they were immediately shattered on impact. I loved it!

    For Super Bowl XXXI, I worked at a liquor store and set up a display of Sam Adams from Boston (New England Patriots) versus Mickey’s from Wisconsin (Green Bay Packers). One of my prouder moments in beer-hawking!

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