Connect with us

Cannabis

Mike Tyson’s cannabis brand to sponsor Barcelona stadium

Spain’s most famous stadium might be renamed after a cannabis brand. Mike Tyson wants to become its sponsor and thanks to the corona crisis his dream might become reality. The football club is selling the name through the Barca Foundation and wants to donate the money to the fight to halt the pandemic. If the football club will accept Tyson’s proposal, the stadium would be called SwissX.

Published

on

This picture show a football fan in a stadium.

Mike Tyson has been in the legal cannabis business for a few years now. He is the co-owner of the company SwissX – a Swiss-American hemp/CBD company. With SwissX, the former boxing world champion now wants to become the title sponsor of stadium Camp Nou of FC Barcelona!

Read more about the possibility of renaming the Camp Nou stadium after Mike Tyson’s cannabis brand and be the first to find out the most important business news with the Born2Invest mobile app.

Barcelona sells name stadium in battle against corona

Football is not played these days, but still, there is nice news to report that it is more or less sporty. After all, how cool would it be if the world-famous and biggest football stadium in the world – indeed, Nou Camp of FC Barcelona – would bear the name of a cannabis brand?

The fact that it could even theoretically come this far is due to, however crazy it sounds, the corona crisis. For the first time since Nou Camp opened in 1957, the football club is selling the name through the Barca Foundation. Frenkie de Jong and Messi’s club will donate the money it will earn to the fight against the deadly viral disease. Especially in their home country of Spain, this virus has kept the country firmly in the Top 3 in terms of the number of deaths.

According to the BBC – not the least source of serious news – former boxing champion and now goose champ Mike Tyson (53) and the company SwissX – slogan: ‘For the Higher Good’ – of the flamboyant multi-millionaire Alki David are eager to rename FC Barcelona’s football temple Nou Camp the ‘SwissX stadium’.

Spain and FC Barcelona no accidental choice

SwissX, which is particularly active in the US, where it sells CBD and hemp products, is part of Tyson Ranch CBD Brand. Alki David said to BBC that the Nou Camp name sponsorship is ‘something we’re looking at especially.’

David: “My company is a cannabis company and Spain has a long tradition within the European Union as a leader of a liberal road to legalization, so this idea has come about naturally.”

According to the billionaire, ‘it remains to be seen’ whether naming the stadium after a cannabis company ‘is an attack’ on the reputation of La Liga, said the KNVB of Spain.

David added: “This is an opportunity I am optimistic about. It is a historic moment in the history of sport and it fits in perfectly with my current plans. The contact with FC Barcelona was made at the beginning of last week and I am honestly confident that the deal will come around.”

Selling CBD products in Nou Camp

However, Tyson and David don’t want to just sponsor the name of the Camp Nou stadium. They also want to sell ‘plant medicine products’ in the stalls of the football stadium itself! And that would be something if the maximum of 99,354 fans of Messi, Suarez and De Jong present could smoke a tasty pre-turned CBD joint or drop a CBD oil capsule in the tranquillity of the Nou Camp football matches.

For that to happen, the current crisis will have to end, so that teams could play soccer again with an audience. However, fortunately, the sponsorship deal will only start in the season 20/21, so that’s from September. It would be an absolute world first if a stadium carries the name of a cannabis brand. Asked about any risk for the reputation of FC Barcelona – perhaps the world’s most popular football club – Alki David answered: “That remains to be seen. The world was born on ideas.”

__

(Featured image by damonify via Pixabay)

DISCLAIMER: This article was written by a third party contributor and does not reflect the opinion of Born2Invest, its management, staff or its associates. Please review our disclaimer for more information.

This article may include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements generally are identified by the words “believe,” “project,” “estimate,” “become,” “plan,” “will,” and similar expressions. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks as well as uncertainties, including those discussed in the following cautionary statements and elsewhere in this article and on this site. Although the Company may believe that its expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, the actual results that the Company may achieve may differ materially from any forward-looking statements, which reflect the opinions of the management of the Company only as of the date hereof. Additionally, please make sure to read these important disclosures.

First published in CNNBS, a third-party contributor translated and adapted the article from the original. In case of discrepancy, the original will prevail.

Although we made reasonable efforts to provide accurate translations, some parts may be incorrect. Born2Invest assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions or ambiguities in the translations provided on this website. Any person or entity relying on translated content does so at their own risk. Born2Invest is not responsible for losses caused by such reliance on the accuracy or reliability of translated information. If you wish to report an error or inaccuracy in the translation, we encourage you to contact us.

Desmond O’Flynn believes in minimalism and the power of beer. As a young reporter for some of the largest national publications, he has lived in the world of finance and investing for nearly three decades. He has since included world politics and the global economy in his portfolio. He also writes about entrepreneurs and small businesses, as well as innovation in fintech, gambling, and cannabis industries.