On Wednesday evening in Los Angeles, Steven Mena, founder of streetwear label Menace, was finalising designs on his computer for a run of graphic T-shirts inspired by the Los Angeles Dodgers. Heâd been creating graphics non-stop since the Dodgers won the National League Championship the previous Sunday.
His plan: Get the T-shirts printed that evening, pick them up at midnight after finishing this interview with The Business of Fashion, shoot the product on his iPhone on Thursday and then release the T-shirts on his web store on Friday, just in time for the start of the World Series the same day. Itâs set to be baseballâs biggest championship in decades, pitting the Dodgers against the New York Yankees, two teams with a historic rivalry representing the USâ most iconic cities and showcasing two of baseballâs most exciting players, the Yankeesâ Aaron Judge and the Dodgersâ Shohei Ohtani.
âItâs just one of these moments weâre probably not going to see happen for a long time,â said Mena, hours after unveiling a teaser video for the collection on Instagram.
With teams from two fashion capitals set to compete in a high-profile showdown, brands have been racing to take advantage. Polo Ralph Lauren and Madhappy were among those fortunate enough to release official Yankees collaborations during postseason games in October, but other brands are finding unique ways to create merch and marketing moments even without being official team partners.
None of Menaceâs T-shirts, for example, are officially licensed merchandise. While Mena said heâs reached out to the league for partnerships in the past, heâs never received a response. Instead, the shirts feature art such as an airbrushed graphic of Los Angeles in Dodgers colours. Similarly, streetwear label Awake will release a T-shirt for pre-order in a Yankees colour palette that takes a jab at Dodgers fans. Los-Angeles based sportswear brand Undefeated is hosting viewing parties at a local bar in partnership with Nike and Union Los Angeles.
While brands from Gucci to Supreme have long used baseball team logos â especially the Yankees â the sport itself hasnât always received so much attention from fashion brands, even as theyâve increasingly looked to sports generally as a marketing platform.
âThis World Series is a dream scenario for many reasons. Itâs the two biggest teams, theyâre coastal and thereâs some real healthy competition going on there,â said Mark Maidment, New Eraâs senior vice president of brand and marketing for North America. âIn terms of that big resonance across the country and globally, it doesnât really get bigger than the Yankees and the Dodgers.â
The Licensing Curveball
Both teams also have players with notable brand endorsements and followings. Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani boasts over 8.3 million followers on Instagram and has partnerships with fashion labels like Hugo Boss and sportswear brands such as New Balance. Yankees captain Aaron Judge is signed to the Jordan Brand and recently became a Ralph Lauren Fragrances ambassador in March 2024.
On the day following each teamâs respective league championship series wins last weekend, StockX reported that searches for âYankeesâ and âDodgersâ spiked 56 percent and 128 percent, respectively.
Alex Tantum, the 24-year-old baseball fan behind MLB.Fits, an Instagram account with over 123,000 followers that tracks the personal style of MLB players, believes that more casual fans will be invested in the World Series this year because of the big names playing and the coastal rivalry. Although Tantum doesnât think player fashion within the MLB is on par with the NBA or NFL yet (and believes it challenging for players to dress up because the MLB season is significantly longer) he feels the league has been placing a larger emphasis on playersâ style since starting his page in 2019.
âThe red carpet for the All Star Game is something that Iâve noticed turns into a bigger deal each year,â said Tatum. âThey have a red carpet correspondent whoâs asking players about what theyâre wearing and I feel like theyâve really leaned into that.â
But while this seasonâs World Series may provide an ideal moment for brands, taking advantage isnât so simple. Without securing the right licences, brands canât use team logos, and even if they do get permission, they face a lengthy approval process that isnât exactly conducive to creating products on the fly.
New Era is a long-time MLB licensee thatâs been a part of streetwearâs lexicon ever since Spike Lee asked the brand to craft him a custom red Yankees cap for the 1996 World Series. (Post-pandemic, its 59Fifty fitted cap became as coveted as limited-edition sneakers.) Maidment said it can take nine to 18 months to get its MLB collaborations on the market because of league and team approvals. Even restocking an existing collaboration takes time.
âEven if weâre one of the fastest in the industry, itâs more in weeks or a few months rather than being able to do it in a day,â said Maidment.
There are ways brands are getting around these challenges. Loafer label Blackstock & Weberâs collaboration with the Yankees and Mets, which released in July, took three years to hit the market because of league and team approvals. But on Monday, the brand announced it would restock the Yankees loafers as a pre-order.
âThese licences can be very expensive but itâs because of the money you can make off them, especially during World Series time,â said founder Chris Echevarria, who declined to disclose the cost of the licence or sales figures for the collaboration. âThe sheer media value of the collective shares, media coverage and reposts were astronomical. Itâs still one of those things that people talk about or want us to bring back, which is the reason why we brought it back for the World Series.â
A Merch and Marketing Opportunity With Extra Innings
Lifestyle label New York or Nowhere released a co-branded New York Yankees merchandise collection earlier this year, but by the time the Yankees made the World Series, inventory from the collaboration had almost sold out. Founders Quincy Moore and Liz Eswein said theyâre making the most of the moment by continuing to promote the project.
But to get around the lack of official inventory, the brand is also promoting a core collection of unlicensed products that feature Yankees-inspired colourways and leaning into social marketing by gifting the remaining inventory from the collaboration to alumni players and other notables attending the World Series. Itâs also planning a World Series ticket giveaway via socials next week and will be posting on its social channels with imagery and iconography inspired by the Yankees during the games.
âThe idea is to be the brand and the thing that people are thinking about and sharing when it comes to the World Series,â Moore said.
Mena of Menace said heâs noticed other local businesses in Los Angeles releasing merch this week that slides around the MLBâs trademarks. Heâs familiar with the long process that comes with creating official merch from previously collaborating with sports teams like the Major League Soccer team LA Galaxy. Unofficial merchandise is a quick play, and heâs not worried about legal repercussions.
âI think itâs just in the spirit of streetwear, and itâs a fun challenge because when you look at the stuff that Iâm making, Iâm not using any of the logos for the shirts that weâre selling,â he said. âSo itâs a creative exercise for me as well.â
Even if brands canât conceive a World Series play right away, Maidment at New Era said products tied to historic World Series matchups have a long lifespan. New Eraâs fashion collaborators frequently request logos from past series even for new products. A showdown between the Yankees and Dodgers is likely to keep generating requests for months, he said.
New York or Nowhere is counting on it. It decided not to take pre-orders for its Yankees merch this week, counting on demand to carry on until it can restock. It opted to instead focus on the release of New York Knicks merch for the start of the NBA season.
âI think weâve made a bet on ourselves that the demand [for our Yankees merch] will be retained and continue to grow with the lack of availability over the next few months,â said Moore.