In Canada, hockey isn’t just a sport. It’s a full-blown religion. And the hockey sweater? That’s the holy relic. Nothing else comes close.
In Quebec, the Canadiens jersey isn’t just merch. It’s tribal skin, passed down like a family curse. Fans treat these things like sacred objects, terrified of ketchup stains and the wrath of the hockey gods.
Easier said than done when the whole point of a hockey game is more than just what happens on the ice. For the fans, it’s a full day out, which means messy food ranging from Canadian staple Poutine to stadium hot dogs and burgers doused in ketchup. Keeping things clean is no mean feat, especially after a few brewskis eh?
Step in, Heinz. The undisputed masters of finding culturally relevant food moments to offer a twinkle in the eye, a move that fuels rivalry and builds brand loyalty with a swagger.
Distributing napkins made from the cut-up jerseys of the opposing playoff team, Tampa Bay Lightning, Heinz offered Rival Wipes as a way for fans to clean their hands and stick a middle finger up to the opposition at the Bell Centre and at La Cage sports bars across Montreal.
Sidestepping the wallpaper approach of high-gloss advertising, over-explained brand manifestos, and shouting at a community who clearly had other things on their mind, HEINZ collapsed the distance between a brand message and fan behaviour.
It’s another local spin on the global ‘It Has To Be HEINZ’ shtick. Obsessive fandom, ketchup, and a bit of irrational love. All bottled up and squeezed out for the locals.
This one specifically turns the threat of ketchup, in this case, to the emotional skin of a hockey top, into a benefit in an aggressively simple execution, facilitating rather than manufacturing a fandom through ritualised tongue-in-cheek vandalism by picking a side and focusing on them rather than trying to appease everyone.
A masterstroke in moving beyond the anodyne “we support the supporters” message and driving deep into. A classy earned first activation that genuinely mirrors the fan’s aspirations and experience.




