Making the Majors: The Transformation of Team Sports in America

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Harvard University Press, 2009 M06 1 - 378 páginas
In this in-depth look at major league sports, Eric Leifer traces the growth and development of major leagues in baseball, football, basketball, and hockey, and predicts fundamental changes as the majors pursue international expansion. He shows how every past expansion of sports publics has been accompanied by significant changes in the way sporting competition is organized. With each reorganization, the majors have created teams closer in ability, bringing repetition to competition across time, only to expand and energize the public's search for differences between teams and for events that disrupt the repetitive flow. The phenomenal success of league sports, Leifer writes, rests on their ability to manufacture inequalities for fans to latch on to without jeopardizing the equalities that draw fans in. Leifer supports his theory with historical detail and statistical analysis. He examines the special concerns of league organizers in pursuing competitive balance and presents a detailed analysis of how large-city domination has been undermined in the modern era of Major League Baseball. Using games from the four major league sports, he then shows how fans can themselves affect the course of competition. In NFL football, for example, fans account for nearly all of the persisting inequality in team performance. The possibility of sustaining inequality among equals emerges from the cross-pressures that fans and leagues place on competition. With substantial data in hand, Leifer asks the essential question facing the leagues today: how can they sustain a situation that depends entirely on simultaneous equality and contention, one in which fan involvement may evaporate as soon as one team dominates? His answer has significant implications for the future of major league sports, both nationally and internationally.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Reluctant Modernization
155
Late Modernization
171
Persisting Localism
179
Where They Stand
186
Changing Ways
191
Deal Making in the Past
194
The Meaning of Deals
201
Structures of Deal Making
207

Building a Viable League
64
Early Challenges
70
The Early Prototype
79
A Successful Challenge
80
The Landis Years
88
Overview of a Successful Prototype
94
Attachment Failures
98
Out of Canton
99
Into the Midwest
109
Across the Border
118
Failure Reconsidered
124
The Modern Prototype
126
Television and the NFL
127
Problems Facing Rival Leagues
135
Organizational Innovations
143
Persisting Performance Inequality
149
Modernization
154
The Impact of Deal Making on Performance
221
Pursuing Opportunities
230
Publics and Performance
234
No Place Like Home
237
Game Outcomes
249
Publics and Performance Inequality
265
Publics in Perspective
276
The Accomplishment
281
Facing the Future
287
A Strange New World
294
The Major Leagues
313
Statistics Brief
315
League Statistics
323
Notes
337
References
361
Index
373
Derechos de autor

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Página 41 - I want you to develop teams which we can send around the country and knock out all the colleges.
Página 89 - Both sides must understand that any blows at the thing called baseball would be regarded by this court as a blow to a national institution."3 That being said, Lee Magee (Leopold Hoernschmeyer), who had played for the St.
Página 312 - It is calculated as the square root of the average squared deviation from the mean.
Página 22 - In times of high demand, ie during those hours of the day, days of the week and weeks of the year...
Página 39 - You have done more," he said, "to make Columbia known than all your predecessors because little was known about Columbia one month ago but today wherever the telegraph cable extends, the existence of Columbia College is known and respected
Página 134 - Walk down any street in America and observe the diversity of team logos on caps, tshirts, and bumper stickers. Fans for any team can turn up anywhere, and they contribute to the support of "their" teams not just by purchasing team paraphernalia but by uniting in front of the television.
Página 338 - Heretofore Base Ball Clubs had won and lost games, matches, tournaments, trophies. Henceforth this would be changed. The function of Base Ball Clubs in the future would be to manage Base Ball Teams. Clubs would form leagues, secure grounds, erect grandstands, lease and own property, make schedules, fix dates, pay salaries, assess fines, discipline players, make contracts, control the sport in all its relations to the public...
Página 11 - Competitive balance yields winners and losers in both games and seasons, but it keeps open the chance that winners will lose and losers will win in subsequent competition. This helps undermine the significance of past winning and losing by arousing public interest in upcoming competition, no matter what has happened in the past.
Página 31 - One reporter complained acidly that the crowd seemed to think that games were got up for their special entertainment and that they were conferring a favor on the players by their presence.

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