Lionel Messi and the Chery Riich

The World Is Flat: An Argentine playing in Spain selling Chinese luxury cars sold on six continents.

Argentina and China may be having a spat over trade and tariffs, but one Chinese company is banking on Argentina’s #1 export to help sell some minivans.

China-based automaker Chery International is rolling out a new MPV called the Riich, and the company chose Lionel Messi to be the face of the vehicle roll-out. Besides making an intriguing global marketing case study, the selection of an Argentine who plays in Spain for a Chinese car sold on six continents also demonstrates the growing appeal of the worlds’ greatest soccer player.

“Messi is the best football player in the world,” said Chery’s Jin Yibo, “and thus he makes a great ambassador to represent our premium Riich brand.” The announcement was made yesterday during the vehicle’s unveiling at the Beijing Auto Show.

While automakers are struggling in other corners of the world, Chinese producers posted a whopping 45% gain in sales last year to 13.6 million vehicles, and analysts predict another double-digit gain this year fueled by government incentives, lower borrowing costs and the added cachet of celebrity endorsers like Messi. “It’s a smart move,” said Shanghai analyst Liu Lixi, “because those unfamiliar with Chinese cars need a famous ambassador to develop an initial interest.”

Now whether or not Messi will be caught on the streets of Barcelona in a Mommy wagon remains to be seen. Just as Tiger Woods was rarely spotted in the Buicks he once endorsed, Messi is unlikely to part ways with his Q7.

Angel Cabrera celebrates his 2009 Masters victory

On the eve of this week’s 2010 Masters, Tim Rosaforte of Golf Digest pens what is arguably one of the most stirring portraits of a professional athlete and his meteoric rise from nothing to sporting elite.

In “Hungry for More,” Rosaforte breaks warm Publix bread with Argentine Angel Cabrera and shows us a man who has overcome so many obstacles in life, it makes the fact that he has won two golf majors including the 2009 Masters that much more impossible to comprehend.

“I grew up fighting against the world,” Cabrera tells Rosaforte about his life on the streets in Cordoba after being abandoned by his parents, “When you grow up hungry, you’re not afraid of anything.” Fitting then, that sharing food and drink with friends and family (he adores his two sons) plays such a central role in Rosaforte’s piece and Cabrera’s life.

In the lead and on the verge of winning the 2009 Masters, Cabrera & Co. went to Kroger to stockpile Corona for a celebration. It’s a scene straight out of Tin Cup and just like Roy McAvoy, Cabrera gives you the sense that if it ended tomorrow, he would go back home (happily) and never look back.

Rosaforte says El Pato’s homesickness for his native Argentina is so great, he makes the 14-hour trip home practically every two weeks. Bottom line, amid the mind-numbing rotation of Tiger Watch, Nike ads, text messages and Bootyism banners, you won’t hear Cabrera’s story this week, and that’s a shame. If “El Secreto de Sus Ojos” can win the Oscar, “El Triunfo de Angel” would be box office gold. (“Hungry for More”)

 

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Mendoza

Uruguay

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