Football
Associated Press 15y

Sports-star restaurants have to earn diners' stars

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Amos Zereoue grew up in a family where cooking was important, where meals were more than mac-n-cheese in the microwave. So when Jean Claude Zereoue found his son subsisting on ramen noodles at college, he quickly rectified the situation, providing Amos with some basic culinary skills.

It stuck with him: Not long after his seven-year career as an NFL running back ended, Zereoue opened his own restaurant, an African-French fusion place in Midtown Manhattan.

And, unlike so many other athlete-owned restaurants that quickly flame out, Zereoue has been a success because the owner put more than just his name into it.

"I didn't want to be that guy who put the money in someone else's hands and watch it go to waste," Zereoue said. "The restaurant thing, it's a very difficult business I didn't realize how difficult it was until I actually got into it."

If you live in a city with a professional sports franchise, chances are there's an athlete-owned restaurant nearby. The difference between the successes and failures, at least in the long-term, is what's inside the restaurant, not who's name is outside it.

Michael Jordan has steak places in New York and Chicago, so does former Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino, in Florida and Las Vegas. Hockey Hall of Famer Wayne Gretzky has a restaurant in Toronto; former Chicago Bears player and coach Mike Ditka has places in the Windy City and Pittsburgh; and there are steakhouses named after John Elway in Denver.

And it's not just the stars who have their own places.

Former NBA player Dan Majerle owns two Marjele Sports Grills in Arizona. Former Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Mike Alstott is proprietor of the Island Way Grill. There's also Al Hrabosky's Ballpark Saloon in St. Louis, named after the former pitcher.

These places run the culinary gamut, from the predictable sports bars -- these are athletes, after all -- serving buffalo wings and beer to five-star steakhouses with elaborate wine lists.

Some have been rousing successes, like Michael Jordan's Steak House in Manhattan, the two Elway's locations in Denver, or former Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula's chain of steak places.

There also have been numerous big-name athletes who have closed up shop, including George Brett, Dwyane Wade and Brett Hull.

No matter how cool it might be to see photos of Larry Bird while you're eating or how exciting it might be for that slight chance Johnny Bench may walk through the door, people aren't going to come back if the food is horrible or the service bad.

"You have to have other reasons to go to the restaurant other than the athlete possibly being there or the memorabilia because that can be fun once," said Darren Tristano of Technomic Inc., a Chicago-based restaurant consulting and research firm. "The food and the execution and the concept are going to play heavily into it."

Clearly, celebrity plays a part, too. A restaurant gives the famous a chance to branch out to a world beyond the playing fields.

"Athletes, especially the high-profile ones, who open up restaurants, it kind of extends their brand," said Kate Krader, restaurant editor for Food & Wine Magazine. "It's a place where fans can come and they can get some of the acclaim they're used to from playing."

Some athletes are intricately involved in their restaurants, picking the decor, developing the menu, choosing the chef.

Baseball player Jim Edmonds had a hand in just about every detail when his restaurant, F-15teen, opened in St. Louis, and he's kept track of it even while playing in San Diego and for the Chicago Cubs.

"If it's going to have my name on it, I want everything to be just right," he said.

Others, well, they don't care quite as much, lending their name, a little money, not much else.

"I don't even know why I opened the place," said Detroit Red Wings forward Chris Chelios, owner of Cheli's Chili Bar in Detroit. "My mom and dad wanted me to do it, so I did."

No matter how involved an athlete is in their restaurant, one thing is for certain: they need to show up every once in a while to give it a chance at success.

Sports fans will do just about anything to feel close to their favorite players, from wearing their jerseys to buying autographed pictures. The chance that the athlete might show up at his restaurant? That's enough to order a $20 plate of fish 'n' chips right there.

"If you feel like you're going to see some kind of athletes or celebrities, that's never going to hurt you," Krader said.

But if the athlete isn't around? Chances are the restaurant isn't going to last.

Jared Allen's Sports Arena and Grill in Kansas City is a prime example.

When the restaurant opened in March, its namesake was one of the most popular players on the Kansas City Chiefs roster. After Allen was traded to the Minnesota Vikings two months later, his partners tried to keep the place open, hoping his name alone was a strong enough draw.

No chance. Allen's restaurant closed about a month after the trade, a pile of trash in front of the shuttered doors where the player once stood greeting customers at the opening.

"It doesn't surprise me at all," Tristano said. "It's very tough and your name isn't as strong as a Michael Jordan or a Tiger Woods, you're not likely going to have the long-term success, especially if you're traded. The restaurant is only going to go as far as the athlete's name carries it."

The exception, of course, is the athlete who actually puts some time and thought into how his restaurant is run.

Count Zereoue in that group.

He didn't just throw his name and some money at the restaurant. Zereoue consulted with his family, people in the restaurant business, then surrounded himself with capable businesspeople, kitchen staff.

The approach made Zereoue a success in a crowded Manhattan restaurant market and its owner as proud of the rave reviews as anything he did on a football field.

"If it works, great, then you feel like you put what you needed to make it successful. If not, you also know you're a big reason why it didn't work," he said. "I'm proud of what comes out of the kitchen."

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