Transcript Document
Chapter 1 The History of Sport Management Introduction Roots of Sport Management Structures • Management structures include clubs, leagues, professional tournaments • Primary theme of chapter – Evolution resulting from broad social changes and/or to address specific issues • Secondary themes: – Honest play and inclusion The Club System • England – Birthplace of modern sport and sport management • 18th century – Development of sport clubs with limited membership • 19th century – Continued club evolution with standardizing of rules, settling disputes, and organizing schedules Thoroughbred Racing • Races drew broad and diverse audience – No admission charged • Local club system initially – Racing existed for entertainment only, not financial gain; prestige more important • 1830s – Rail system allowed horses to compete nationally • Desire of owners to breed and train fast horses and the increasing complexity of gambling lead to more complex club system The Jockey Club • Established around 1750 • Settled disputes, established rules, determined eligibility, designated officials, regulated breeding, and punished unscrupulous participants • Organized, sponsored, and promoted local events • Met need for a strong national governing body to establish rules, standards, and a mechanism for resolving disputes • Served as model for wider sport management practices in England The Modern Olympic Games • International club event, with little resemblance to ancient Olympic Games • First Modern Olympics in 1896, but the revival can be traced back to at least 1850 with club-based Olympic festivals in England • Founder Pierre de Coubertin, inspired by English revivals and Victorian notions of character building and peace movements through sport, introduced concept of amateur Olympic Games every 4 years Present-Day Club Structure • Commitment to serve broad membership and manage elite sport enterprise – No longer local, but international • Clubs organize youth teams and academies, adult recreational leagues, and social events for members • Large built-in memberships and loyal fan bases • Characterized by nonprofit status and exclusive membership – Augusta and male-only membership • Change from European club system to U.S. league system American Structures • European club system did not suit the United States – Lack of aristocratic tradition and prohibition against gambling • League structure arose out of harness racing, sport of the common person • Better spectator sport than thoroughbred racing – Sprint vs. 4-mile race; horses could compete daily, large field of competitors • Managed by track owners and race promoters – Willing to create spectator interest for sport • Issues of race fixing, management lacking credibility led to loss of popularity Leagues • Baseball was first to adopt league system • Cincinnati Red Stockings: First pro team • Some teams in the league paid and some did not— created controversy • 1871: Creation of National Association of Professional Baseball Players • Importance of “breakeven” financial interests of individual clubs © Jones and Bartlett Publishers William Hulbert • Czar of baseball • 1876: Took over management of National League of Professional Baseball Players • Believed stability achieved only if teams were run like businesses • Teams should compete against each other and not collude – Understood that without strict rules forcing honest competition, collusion would occur William Hulbert (cont.) Also believed: • Owners must take some financial risk: – Abandoning seasons early to prevent losses in short term eroded long-term faith of public • Owners must field competitive teams to be profitable. • Integrity of baseball was suspect as long as the players’ honesty was questionable: – Gambling prohibited and ticket prices raised Early Success of National League • • • • Excitement of pennant race Honoring of contracts (reserve system) Favorable media attention Appealed to fans’ loyalty and pride in their cities • Early form of revenue sharing • Rules that distributed talent Leagues Today • Successful contemporary commercial sport leagues depend on consolidated league play with strong centralized control and regulation • Audience has changed – Public’s perception of locus of honest effort resides more with the players than with ownership structure • Single-entity structures: MLS, MLL, AFL Professional Sport Tournaments Professional Golf • Early golf professionals were instructors and caddies. • Professional leagues failed to capture public interest or attract golf professionals. • Attempts to generate gate revenues at tournaments failed. • Stability of tournaments was achieved when prize money was put up by companies and corporate sponsors. © LiquidLibrary Corcoran’s Tournaments • Fred Corcoran: Architect of golf tournament • Golf tournament was medium through which celebrity, politician, manufacturer, charity, town, or product gained exposure • Used athletes and golf tournaments to sell advertising space to the public • Bing Crosby and Bob Hope created charity golf tournaments in pro-am format for WWII fund-raising Corcoran’s Tournaments Continue After War Ends • Good business = Tax deductions • Charities encourage volunteers and good publicity for tournaments • Golf equipment manufacturers paid Corcoran to create golfer association and arrange tournaments using prize money as player payments to reduce cost of hiring player representatives • 1950s press changes policy and begins naming tournament sponsor not location = free publicity Tournaments Today • Golf tournaments have evolved into corporate celebrations of golf and products • PGA Tour viewed as private group – Set rules of eligibility • Associations not as exclusive as private clubs (Casey Martin) • Trend moving away from nonprofit private associations and toward marketing agencies and/or broadcast media Importance of Women • Heraea Games (run by Sixteen Women): – Ancient Greek Games for women • Intercollegiate Sport: – Christine Grant and Judy Sweet • National Intramural-Recreation Sports Association (NIRSA): – Annette Akins, Mary Daniels, Juliette Moore Importance of Women in Sport Management • Sport management industry: – – – – – Effa Manley of Newark Eagles (Negro League) Billie Jean King (WTT, WSF) Lesa France Kennedy (NASCAR) Stephanie Tolleson (IMG) Buffy Filipell (TeamWork Online) Academic Field • Continuing growth of sport industry and its importance to numerous sponsors and institutions created demand for the systematic study of sport management practices. – 1957: Walter O’Malley – 1966: James Mason; first master’s program at Ohio – 1971: University of Massachusetts Academic Field (cont.) • Current status – More than 200 programs nationwide – North American Society for Sport Management (NASSM) – Program evaluation – Globalization • Sport management degree programs throughout Europe • SMAANZ • EASM