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Why the NFL Should Be More Like NASCAR

By Sameer Pandya, Miller-McCune.com. Posted December 1, 2008.


In a manifesto for sports fans, two professors call for more merit and less monopoly.
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When I was growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1980s, you could go to an Oakland A's game for next to nothing. And though the Oakland Coliseum at that time was not Ebbets Field, I can, to a limit, understand the nostalgia with which people remember the Brooklyn Dodgers. It was a time and place where the admission was cheap and the players were more or less accessible.

It doesn't take much to see that sport spectatorship and sports stars have changed dramatically in the past two decades: Phil Mickelson wants to play more in Europe next year because the dollar is "stagnant"; The New York Knicks still have some of the highest ticket prices in basketball, even though they haven't had a winning season their 2000-01 campaign; and ESPN — part news source, part broadcaster of games and one long sports advertisement where athletes and sportscasters make commercials together — has completely destroyed the illusion that there is a line that separates sport and commerce.

Rooting for the small-market, low-payroll Tampa Bay Rays in the recent World Series seemed like a bit of resistance, even though rooting for the Rays was rooting for the pup among the same breed of big dogs.

Never before has the act of supporting a sports team, or even watching a game on TV, felt more like lining someone's pocket. Most of us realize that nostalgia is blood sport. We don't want to go back to Brooklyn in the '40s and '50s or Oakland in the '80s. After all, Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco, who have come to represent everything that has recently gone wrong in baseball, were Oakland rookies in the mid-80s. We want a way forward.

In Fans of the World, Unite!: A (Capitalist) Manifesto for Sports Consumers, Stephen Ross and Stefan Szymanski provide a cogent, well-argued way ahead for fixing some of the woes experienced by the everyday sports fan.

As the title suggests, the authors' primary concern is with the health of the American sports consumer, whom they feel is exploited in a number of ways by the four major sports leagues in America: Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association, the National Football League and the National Hockey League. Taxpayers often end up footing a large part of the bill in building new stadiums; television blackouts and high-priced league-wide TV packages force consumers to pay to watch games; the leagues tolerate mismanagement by allowing teams lifelong membership into the league; and the centralized structure of the leagues leads to mishandling of licensing and overall mismanagement.

To remedy some of these ills, Ross and Syzmanski suggest a two-part solution. "Sports leagues should be restructured to vest control in a for-profit commercial enterprise that is separate and distinct from the owners of clubs participating in the competition, and participation in each sport's major league should be based on merit, demonstrated best by performance in the prior season."

The first solution is best understood through an example. In 2001, the Committee of Management at the Wimbledon Championship offered a wild-card spot to Goran Ivanisevic, who in previous years had three second-place finishes on the grass courts. The tournament is open to players based on world rankings, and in 2001, Ivanisevic had fallen far down the ranks due to injuries. Based on his previous finishes, Ivanisevic was given the wild-card spot. He took great advantage of the gift, and beat Patrick Rafter in the final.


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See more stories tagged with: nascar, monopoly, nfl

Sameer Pandya, formerly an assistant professor of English at Queens College, CUNY, is now a lecturer in the Department of Asian American Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

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NFL
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Dec 1, 2008 4:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sports fans are not consumers; they are junkies. Where there is addiction, there will be exploitation. If you see a shivering pile of rags in an alley somewhere, it might be a heroin addict, but more likely a football fan whose big-screen is in the shop.

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Bread And Circuses...your tax dollars at play
Posted by: GarrisonPayneLeonard38H on Dec 1, 2008 5:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where did these "professors" buy their degrees?

They have lumped together genuine public problems (socialized risk with privatized profit) and -- as the first poster notes -- abuses those addicted to "professional" children's games have brought on themselves.

I am eager to fix the tax scamming on all fronts, but once public dollars are protected, I'd ignore the rest of the abuses and hope that the biggest of all bubbles -- America's sacrifice of sensibility to its sports mythology -- finally bursts.

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NFL and NASCAR are both a DISGRACE to sports all in all !
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 1, 2008 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both of them are over-commercialized and they have very little to do with the actual sports themselves. And they're nothing more than perfect tools of distraction to keep people bloated like a bunch of sorry ass couch potatoes !

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You've Got To Be Kidding
Posted by: FoonTheElder on Dec 1, 2008 7:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Both NASCAR and the NFL are different types of the same monopolists who use their power to fill their pockets.

The NFL is a socialist organization of owners who, having made millions in capitalism, have to revert to socialism in their sports playtoys. They revert to socialism because, unlike their corporate businesses, they can't control the costs of their employees. The same freedom of employment that they like to use to their advantage in the real world, isn't an advantage where the employees have the upper hand. So the NFL has salary caps, drafts and restrictions on movement.

On the other hand, NASCAR is a monopolistic dictatorship. The France family, who owns NASCAR, also owns many of the tracks. There are only a few owners of all of the tracks that they run at. The majority of the money is made by the track owners and the sanctioning body. A few megateams are successful and the rest are left scrambling for a shrinking pot of money and sponsorships. The teams themselves have little relative value, as all they really own is their equipment. NASCAR is already worried about not being able to fill out their fields next year.

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bread and circus........
Posted by: muktuk on Dec 1, 2008 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
kept the Roman elite in power

and beer and circus works much the same way:

http://www.bloomington.in.us/~sperber/

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While agreeing that pro-sports are a distraction...
Posted by: truthteller on Dec 1, 2008 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...And that the collective "We" need to pay far less attention to them, I disagree about the approach for ownership in the NFL. I hold out the example of the Green Bay Packers as a desirable model for any pro-sports team. The team is publicly owned by the people of Green Bay, the smallest and one of the oldest franchises in the NFL. They don't have luxury boxes, the stadium concessions are run by service clubs and organizations in the community as fund-raisers, and the fans are some of the loyalist of any sports franchise. They have been so successful for so long that the other owners have banned public ownership of any other NFL franchise to prevent this model from spreading. I find this to be outrageous.

The Packers represent everything that MIGHT be good about a major sports franchise. It contributes to the overall good of the community and creates a sense of camaraderie within the community. This is really the model that should be used for sports franchises, not the millionaire-as-god-almighty franchise owner who can blackmail the town for new stadiums and other tax incentives to stay.

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I'm with kepstein7777: sports fans have gone way beyond simple enjoyment.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Dec 1, 2008 9:06 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've never understood why fans (stands for "fanatic"; maybe that explains it) get so worked up and will spend so much money to watch OTHER people play a sport – for the most part, people who are overpaid with those fans' ticket money – when the vast majority of fans don't play a damned thing themselves. (O.K., maybe some of them play the sport they're so nuts about; but I've seen the flab on a lot of the fans who watch action sports, and, believe me, they ain't exercisin'.) I've seen fans of opposing teams come to blows - get into fist fights! – over whose team or which arrogant, overpaid team member is playing better. What a waste of time and energy!

Here's a thought for the spectating class: stop wasting your money on $200 basketball tickets and go out and play a sport yourselves, be it basketball, softball, soccer, cycling, swimming, whatever. You'll be healthier, you'll save a TON of money (better to buy sports equipment with), and the lack of attendance will drop players' salaries back down to a realistic level, and ticket prices down to reflect what watching professional sports really is: the same as watching TV game shows.

(Oh, by the way; no city should EVER use taxpayer money to build a sports stadium for billionaire team owners, just so they can then rip off those same taxpaying fans with stratospheric ticket prices and $20 beers!)

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Sports and religion (is there a difference?)
Posted by: phatkhat on Dec 1, 2008 9:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
are definitely the opiate of the American masses, and neither needs to be supported by the American taxpayer.

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Understanding the desire for watching football
Posted by: rickiey on Dec 1, 2008 11:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For those of you above who claim they don't understand football fans: (If you already do, then skip this; it'll bore you.).

Ever watch a movie, for pure enjoyment? Ya know, the one thing about movies, is that you know who is the good guy, and who is the bad guy, and you probably have a good idea that the good guy wins in the end. That's entertainment.

Entertainment on another level, is watching a football game. Twice the length of a movie. Who is the good guy and who is the bad guy? It's up to the viewer. Who wins at the end?

You never know, because on any given sunday, any given team, can beat any other team.

Thats entertainment. As for sport? It combines the best attributes of all other sports. Big fan of brute strength? Watch the battles on the line. Big fan of speed? Watch the defensive backs. Big fan of grace and poise? Watch the acrobatics that receivers do to catch the ball. (There is a reason that Lynn Swann did ballet). Strategy and chess matches? Pay attention to play-calling, it is more sophisticated than a typical tournament chess game.

Most of all, it is a game, an art form and a diversion, like all other forms of entertainment.

As for the NFL and how it treats it's players with respect to the salary cap, restricted movement and draft?

No union has as much impact on management decisions as the NFL Players union.

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Well, Aren't We All Such Superior Beings
Posted by: gradioc on Dec 1, 2008 5:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Somebody lend me a towel to wipe the condescension off my monitor. While I agree with some of the points above especially about taxpayer funds being used to build the stadiums, Rickiey above is on the right track. Sports are entertainment. We love to see people do things most cannot, whether it is singing a Verdi aria, leaping halfway across the stage in a ballet, or hitting a fastball 500 feet. I personally love dance but detest opera. I don't call opera lovers stupid. I also object to the "go out and do it yourself" argument. Why read great books when you could be writing your own drivel? That makes as much sense. Why go see a play when you could put on your own production of "Our Town"? If you don't get sports, fine. Just try not to be so smug about it.

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