|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
Applying concepts, data, and other information from various sources
in the literature when and where appropriate, the book reveals and
examines the behavior, contribution, and impact of student athletes
(SAs) on campuses of American colleges and universities. It
highlights, in part, SAs' progress academically while they devoted
time and resources to participate in one or more of their schools'
individual and/or team sports in Division I, II, and/or III of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association, or in the National
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and/or National Junior
College Athletic Association.
The book focuses on, identifies, and analyzes various divisions and
conferences of four professional sports leagues and their teams'
historical regular season and postseason performances, and also
provides a recent financial profile of them while being
competitive, profitable or unprofitable, and well-known
enterprises. The parent sports organizations are the American
League and National League in Major League Baseball, American
Football Conference and National Football Conference in the
National Football League, and the Eastern and Western Conference
each in the National Basketball Association and National Hockey
League.
The National Basketball Association (NBA) is widely recognized as
an entertaining and innovative league whose teams play regular
season and postseason games in packed arenas at home and away sites
in the United States and Canada. This book discusses the
development, growth, and success of the 61-year-old NBA from a
business perspective. Covering the late 1940s to 2009, it focuses
on the league's expansions and mergers, team territories and
relocations, franchise organizations and operations, basketball
arenas and markets, and NBA domestic and international affairs.
Readers will gain an insight into when, how, and why the NBA
emerged, reformed, and gradually matured to become one of the
world's most dominant, prosperous, and popular professional sports
organizations today.
This interesting book discusses the emergence and development of
five extremely popular team sports ??? baseball, basketball,
football-soccer, ice hockey and cricket ??? since the 1800s in 15
different countries. It addresses some of the most provocative,
recent and unique economic and business issues associated with team
sports in the various nations. For example, to what extent has each
of these spectator sports prospered as industries, and will they
expand into other regions of the world during the early to
mid-2000s? This book answers these questions, and compares the
performances of each country's amateur, semiprofessional and/or
professional sports leagues and their respective teams by providing
detailed statistics and other relevant historical information.
This brief analyzes each of the Major League Baseball (MLB)
franchises in the American League, their past regular-season and
postseason records and financial performances while operating as
competitive, popular, and profitable or unprofitable enterprises.
Using sport-specific information and relevant demographic,
economic, and financial data, this brief will highlight when and
how well these MLB teams performed and the financial status and
significance of their organization as a member of an elite
professional baseball league. The brief also investigates the
success of teams in terms of wins and losses based on home
attendance at their ballparks, market value, and revenue.
Furthermore, it compares the history, productivity, and prosperity
of the franchises among rivals in their division like the Boston
Red Sox and New York Yankees in the American League East Division,
Chicago White Sox and Detroit Tigers in the Central Division, and
Oakland Athletics and Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the West
Division. This brief will be of interest to practitioners and
scholars who research the sports industry, college and university
professors who teach undergraduate and graduate students majoring
in sports administration, business, economics and management, and
fans of the sport.
This Brief identifies and contrasts the groups of National
Basketball Association (NBA) expansion franchises and of any teams
that relocated from one metropolitan area or city to another from
1950 to 2013. It discusses historical differences and similarities
in the teams' markets and performances and then as members of
divisions and conferences. It measures and compares the emergence,
development, and success of the teams by analyzing demographic,
economic and sport-specific data. It also discusses the respective
mergers of the Basketball Association of America and National
Basketball League in 1949, and the American Basketball Association
and National Basketball Association in 1976. National Basketball
Association Strategies makes an important, relevant, and useful
contribution to the literature regarding professional sports
operations and to the NBA's short and long run business strategies
in American culture. Besides numerous sports fans within
metropolitan areas and extended markets of these NBA teams, the
book's audiences are sports historians and researchers, college and
public libraries, and current and potential NBA franchise owners
and team executives. This Brief may also be used as a reference or
supplemental text for college and university students enrolled in
such applied undergraduate and graduate courses and seminars as
sports administration, sports business, and sports management.
This Brief identifies and contrasts the groups of expansion
franchises and any teams that relocated from one metropolitan area
or city to another within the National Football League (NFL) during
three distinct periods from 1920 to 2013. It discusses historical
differences and similarities between the teams' markets and
performances before 1933 and then as members of the NFL's divisions
and conferences. It measures and compares the emergence,
development and success of the teams by analyzing demographic,
economic and sport-specific data. It also discusses the NFL's
mergers with the All American Football Conference (1950) and
American Football League (1970), outlining the reasons for and
consequences of these mergers as well as their significance for
sports fans and markets. The book makes an important, relevant and
useful contribution to the literature regarding professional sports
operations and to the NFL's short and long run business strategies
in American culture. Besides numerous sports fans within
metropolitan areas and extended markets of these NFL teams, the
book's audiences are sports historians and researchers, college and
public libraries and current and potential NFL franchise owners and
team executives. The book may also be used as a reference or
supplemental text for college and university students enrolled in
such applied undergraduate and graduate courses and seminars as
sports administration, sports business and sports management.
For several decades in America, athletic programs in colleges and
universities received financial support and resources primarily
from their respective schools and such sources as alumni and the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). More recently,
however, college coaches assigned to athletic departments and the
presidents and marketing or public relations officials of schools
organize, initiate, and participate in fund-raising campaigns and
thus obtain a portion of revenue for their sports programs from
local, regional and national businesses, and from other private
donors, groups, and organizations. Because of this inflow of assets
and financial capital, intercollegiate athletic budgets and types
of sports expanded and in turn, these programs became increasingly
important, popular, and reputable as revenue and cost centers
within American schools of higher education. "
It should surprise no one that the National Football League is a
business - how else to account for the stratospheric salaries of
the players and coaches? Yet most people are unaware of how that
business developed. This book details the growth of an industry
that generates billions of dollars in revenue, as it explains the
intricacies of the league's expansions and mergers, territories and
relocations, the operation and organization of franchises, the role
of stadiums and markets, as well as the effect of the NFL on
domestic and foreign affairs.
|
|