
This makes 3 helmet styles in 3 years. I'm assuming they got rid of the stripe to match the new uniforms. Looks like flat orange also.





You don't, but it is. It would be similar if Apple began packaging their products in black boxes.Globetrotter wrote:I dont see getting rid of a stripe as a rebranding.
A stripe on that matte orange finish would look bad. I like the look of this helmet, very clean. With how big the logo is the stripe clutters things, the matte makes the helmet seem less busy.Ydfalcon wrote:It would seem to me that the stripe may still be there, just not visible from this angle. If that's the case, it's just a change to a flat orange paint. Which is barely a change at all.


I would argue that Oregon has done exactly that. I don't think anybody knew anything of their look/feel until the past 10-15 years where they have pretty much defined "whimsical variation".Rightupinthere wrote:
Succcessful brands have NEVER been built on whimsical variation.

If we are the screwballs, what does that make the schools that use four different helmet designs during a season, or the schools that seem to have a different helmet for every single game. The helmet project people probably love us when compared to the Oregons, South Floridas, and Wyomings of the world.Rightupinthere wrote:The helmet project is likely just under our school 'we can't keep up with these screwballs."'
I would wager every single college football has changed their uniforms and or wore alternate uniforms that look nothing like ones they had worn in years past.Rightupinthere wrote:This is a joke, right? They aren't changing brand identities AGAIN, are they? The helmet project is likely just under our school 'we can't keep up with these screwballs."'
Does the Athletic Department care about building a brand? They have been fiddle-farting around with it for the past ten years. The marketing churn has been pumping faster within the past five years.
STOP! IT!
Succcessful brands have NEVER been built on whimsical variation.


Not its not. It would be like changing a minute detail in the packaging but keeping the coloring, logo and functionality exactly the same. I don't mind minor chanes at all. I love the Brown unis. They are the only jersey I have ever considered buying.Rightupinthere wrote:You don't, but it is. It would be similar if Apple began packaging their products in black boxes.Globetrotter wrote:I dont see getting rid of a stripe as a rebranding.

x1Falcon137 wrote:Rightupinthere wrote:This is a joke, right? They aren't changing brand identities AGAIN, are they? The helmet project is likely just under our school 'we can't keep up with these screwballs."'
Does the Athletic Department care about building a brand? They have been fiddle-farting around with it for the past ten years. The marketing churn has been pumping faster within the past five years.
STOP! IT!
Succcessful brands have NEVER been built on whimsical variation.
I would wager every single college football has changed their uniforms and or wore alternate uniforms that look nothing like ones they had worn in years past.
Virginia Tech is the one school that comes to mind immediately. They had new school, old school, a weird combo of both. The VT logo stayed the same.
As long as BG keeps implementing the same logo on helmets, that's fine.
And I guess I'm ok with the stripe on the helmets, Missouri had similar one's when they wore matte black.