Queens Park Rangers Football Club is delighted to announce that we have agreed a new two-year extension to our sponsorship deal with Sellotape.
The lucrative deal will see Sellotape's famous blue and yellow logo on the players' home and away shirts for the next two campaigns, creating awareness on a massive scale.
It will provide extensive media exposure for the brand in the national press, on television and via worldwide internet coverage.
We are also very pleased to announce that Sellotape will now sponsor the School End Stand at Loftus Road.
Speaking to www.qpr.co.uk, Colin Gadd, Sales Director at Henkel, owners of Sellotape, commented: "Sellotape are very pleased to have secured this two-year extension to our agreement with both shirt sponsorship and ground advertising.
"We are also delighted at the response to our Pritt half-time competition, which gives boys and girls from schools in the area the chance to play on the famous Loftus Road pitch, as well as potentially winning their school £1,000 worth of Art and Craft products.
"We wish John Gregory and the team every success for the season ahead and hope, as al Rangers fans do, that we can push forward towards the Premiership dream."
R's Commercial & Communications Director, Paul Parker, added: "We are delighted to continue our fruitful working relationship with Sellotape.
"Sellotape is one of this country's most recognisable and well-known products and we're delighted to be associated with them.''
Sellotape was first launched in to the stationery trade in the 1930's and has become the leading brand of clear adhesive tape. The word Sellotape even has its own entry in the Oxford English Dictionary as a brand name.
It has been featured in the 'Superbrands' book of the world's greatest brands and 71 per-cent of UK consumers will buy Sellotape in preference to other brands of sticky tape.
The Sellotape brand is the favourite Cellulose tape throughout Europe. It is the number one office tape in the UK and Ireland.
Outside Europe, Sellotape is the clear brand leader in New Zealand and number two in South Africa.