Impressively researched and well written, this valuable study by
a business professor at the Universiy of North Florida. . . traces
the erosion of the reserve clause and the rise of arbitration in
salary disputes, examining the participants in
negotiations--players, owners, managers, agents, even
commissoners--and showing the stake each has in the money game.
Many striking points are made, i.e., there is no discrimination in
salaries of minority players and there is little relationship
between pay and performance. "Publishers Weekly"
Jennings . . . gives a detailed account of collective bargaining
in baseball during the last 25 years, leading up to the owners'
lockout this year. He discusses the participants on both sides and
how disunity among the club owners has contributed to the union's
ability to achieve large bargaining gains. He also deals with
salary arbitration and how it has been used to settle pay disputes,
noting that it can resemble 'a high-stakes crapshoot' that leaves
management incapable of controlling a teaM's payroll costs. For
aficionados of the sport, this book provides clarifying insight
into the complicated issues of baseball's labor relations and
offers fascinating anecdotes and a shrewd commentary on the diverse
and colorful personalities involved.
"New York Times Book RevieW"
Kenneth M. Jennings examines union-management relations in
professional baseball, bringing together all the information the
sports fan needs to follow the issues surrounding player-management
arbitration in this unique industry. Covering the history of
collective bargaining action in baseball from 1869 to the 1990
season, this book examines the issues that influence those
high-profile player-management-owner negotiations. "Balls and
StrikeS" reveals: how in recent years the Major League Baseball
Players' Association (MLBPA) has successfully parlayed owner
disunity into substantial gains for its members; that baseball, in
a statistical sense, surprisingly exhibits little discrimination
against black and Hispanic players; how there is very little
relationship between pay and performance in professional baseball.
Baseball fans and sports journalists as well as professionals in
management and labor relations, will find "Balls and StrikeS" a
fresh and exciting look at America's favorite pastime.
"Balls and StrikeS" presents the confrontations and
relationships between players and management from the perspective
of several hundred collective bargaining participants--the union
and management officials who negotiate the labor agreement and the
players who must approve and live with it. Kenneth M. Jennings
derives his perspective from a variety of media sources, related
biographies, autobiographies, and articles. The result is a highly
readable book about owners, commissioners, agents, the media,
manager-player relations, player pressures including drug and
alcohol problems, race and ethnic issues, and player mobility and
salaries. The book discusses the history of collective bargaining
action in baseball from 1869 to 1966; the year Marvin Miller became
president of the MLBPA, through the 1970s and Miller's successful
bargaining efforts, into the 1980s and the opening of the 1990
season. "Balls and StrikeS" discusses key participants in the
collective bargaining process--owners, agents, the media, managers,
and players--and concludes with a look at contemporary industrial
relations issues in professional baseball: drug and alcohol abuse;
racial discrimination; and the relationship between pay and
performance.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!