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"The positive contributions made by TEAM are far reaching. The NFL strongly supports the TEAM program, and we are proud to be a member of the TEAM Coalition."
--- Roger Goodell, Commissioner, National Football League
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For the first year, The National Collegiate Athletic Association is proud to join forces with Techniques for Effective Alcohol Management
Coalition (TEAM) on the Responsibility Has Its Rewards (RHIR) national campaign at the NCAA Women's Final Four
in St. Louis, MO.
View PHOTOS from the 2009 NCAA Women's Final Four
NATIONAL CAMPAIGN: Responsibility Has Its Rewards™
FAMILY MESSAGE: Buckle Up - Every Trip, Every Time™
ADULT MESSAGE (OVER 21 YEARS OLD): Fans Don’t Let Fans Drive Drunk™
RHIR PARTNERS INCLUDE:
- National Collegiate Athletic Association
- TEAM Coalition (Techniques for Effective Alcohol Management)
WHO: Fans and the Community
WHAT: NCAA and TEAM invited fans to make the Responsibility Has Its Rewards pledge to always have
a designated driver, never drive drunk, and always buckle up and earn valuable rewards:
- At the NCAA Women's Basketball Final Four Hoops City celebration in downtown St. Louis, about 1,000 fans made the
Responsibility Has Its Rewards pledge and received a souvenir photo with a branded frame including the campaign
partners' logos and the campaign's responsibility message.
WHERE: NCAA Women's Basketball Final Four Hoops City celebration in St. Louis, MO
WHEN: Saturday, April 4, 2009 through Sunday, April 5, 2009
National Collegiate Athletic Association: www.ncaa.org
TEAM Coalition: an alliance of professional and collegiate sports, entertainment facilities,
concessionaires, stadium service partners, the beer industry, broadcasters, governmental traffic
safety experts, and others working together to promote responsible drinking and positive fan behavior
at sports and entertainment facilities. www.teamcoalition.org
US DOT / NHTSA 2007 NATIONAL DATA:
- In 2007, 12,998 people were killed as a result of alcohol-related (BAC > 0.08) car crashes, a decline of 3.7% from the 13,491 fatalities in 2006
- Many, if not most of those lives would have been saved if people did not drive when they were impaired by alcohol or if they used sober, designated drivers or if they simply wore their seat belts.
- Statistics and research clearly show that 21-34 year old males are the demographic most likely to be involved in an automobile crash, drive when impaired by alcohol, and fail to buckle up.
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