Playbooks and Checkbooks: An Introduction to the Economics of Modern Sports
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What economic rules govern sports? How does the sports business differ from other businesses? Playbooks and Checkbooks takes a fascinating step-by-step look at the fundamental economic relationships shaping modern sports. Focusing on the ways that the sports business does and does not overlap with economics, the book uncovers the core paradox at the heart of the sports industry. Unlike other businesses, the sports industry would not survive if competitors obliterated each other to extinction, financially or otherwise--without rivals there is nothing to sell. Playbooks and Checkbooks examines how this unique economic truth plays out in the sports world, both on and off the field.
Noted economist Stefan Szymanski explains how modern sporting contests have evolved; how sports competitions are organized; and how economics has guided antitrust, monopoly, and cartel issues in the sporting world. Szymanski considers the motivation provided by prize money, uncovers discrepancies in players' salaries, and shows why the incentive structure for professional athletes encourages them to cheat through performance-enhancing drugs and match fixing. He also explores how changes in media broadcasting allow owners and athletes to play to a global audience, and why governments continue to publicly fund sporting events such as the Olympics, despite almost certain financial loss.
Using economic tools to reveal the complex arrangements of an industry, Playbooks and Checkbooks illuminates the world of sports through economics, and the world of economics through sports.
Stefan Szymanski
Stefan Szymanski is Professor of Economics and MBA Dean at Cass Business School in London. Stefan has a global reputation and has acted as a consultant to government and to major sports organisations such as the FIA (motor sport), UEFA (football) and the ICC (cricket).
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Playbooks and Checkbooks - Stefan Szymanski
Playbooks
and Checkbooks
Playbooks
and Checkbooks
An Introduction to the
Economics of Modern Sports
Stefan Szymanski
Princeton University Press
Princeton and Oxford
To my family
for their unstinting support
Copyright © 2009 By Princeton University Press
Published By Princeton University Press, 41 William Street,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In The United Kingdom: Princeton University Press,
6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire Ox20 1Tr
All Rights Reserved
First Paperback Printing, 2020
Paperback Isbn 978-0-691-20276-1
The Library Of Congress Has Cataloged
The Cloth Edition As Follows:
Szymanski, Stefan, 1960-
Playbooks And Checkbooks : An Introduction To The
Economics Of Modern Sports / Stefan Szymanski.
P. Cm.
Includes Index.
Isbn 978-0-691-12750-7 (Cloth : Alk. Paper) 1. Professional
Sports—Economic Aspects. 2. Sports—Economic Aspects.
3. Sports Administration. I. Title.
Gv716.S993 2009
338.49779604—Dc22 2008041117
British Library Cataloging-In-Publication Data Is Available
This Book Has Been Composed In Janson Text
Printed On Acid-Free Paper. ∞
Press.Princeton.edu
Printed In The United States Of America
Contents
Preface
One
Sports and Business
Two
Organizing Competition
Three
Sports and Antitrust
Four
Sporting Incentives
Five
Sports and Broadcasting
Six
Sports and the Public Purse
Epilogue
A Beginner’s Guide to the Sports Economics Literature
Acknowledgments
Index
Preface
An old joke told in Boston:
On the first day of school a first-grade teacher explains to her class that she is a Yankees fan. She asks her students to raise their hands if they, too, are Yankees fans. Wanting to impress their teacher, everyone in the class raises a hand except one little girl.
The teacher looked at the girl with surprise and said, Janie, why didn’t you raise your hand?
Because I’m not a Yankees fan,
she replied.
The teacher, shocked, asked, Well, if you are not a Yankees fan, then who are you a fan of?
I am a Red Sox fan, and proud of it,
Janie replied.
The teacher could not believe her ears. Janie, why, pray tell, are you a Red Sox fan?
Because my mom is a Red Sox fan, and my dad is Red Sox fan, so I’m a Red Sox fan too!
Well,
said the teacher in an annoyed tone, that is no reason for you to be a Red Sox fan. You don’t have to be just like your parents all of the time. What if your mom were an idiot and your dad were a moron, what would you be then?
Then,
Janie smiled, I’d be a Yankees fan.
No doubt a similar joke is told in New York with the teams reversed. There are websites constructed by Red Sox fans devoted to their hatred of the Yankees. As the winningest team in the history of baseball, the Yankees have many enemies (hence the popularity of the T-shirt slogan "I support [your team’s name here] and anyone who beats the Yankees"). However, the rivalry between the Yankees and the Red Sox is something special. It dates back over one hundred years and stems from the antagonism between two of America’s greatest and oldest cities. According to USA Today, There’s no rivalry in sports that comes close.
The stories have been retold many times. Both teams were formed in the first years of the twentieth century as part of the recently created American League. In 1903 the AL achieved major league status, persuading the older National League to agree to an annual championship between the best team in each league. Boston won the first World Series in 1903 and four more by 1918, becoming the first dominant team of the twentieth century. The New York Yankees by contrast languished as poorer neighbors of the National League’s New York Giants, and failed to win an AL pennant in the first twenty years of their existence. The moment that changed the fortunes of these two teams is the greatest legend in baseball.
Harry Frazee, the owner of the Red Sox, was short of cash in 1919, needing money to finance his other interest, which was producing Broadway shows. So he sold a number of players who were causing him problems to his much weaker New York rival, including a young pitcher turned outfielder—Babe Ruth. The Red Sox and the Yankees continued to trade like this for several years, but the influx of players into New York turned the tide of success. Ruth, called the Bambino for his baby-faced looks, transformed baseball with his big hitting and his box-office persona. Soon after Yankee Stadium was opened in 1923, it came to be known as the House That Ruth Built,
because of his drawing power. The team also boasted the talents of Lou Gehrig, arguably the greatest first baseman of all time. With a supporting cast whose power hitting earned them the sobriquet Murderers’ Row,
Ruth’s Yankees won six pennants and four World Series before his departure in 1934. Meanwhile, the Curse of the Bambino,
as it came to be known, settled over the Red Sox, who failed even to win another pennant until after World War II.
For most of the postwar era the Yankees were successful when the Red Sox struggled and vice versa, but it was the Yankees that took all the honors. In the sixteen seasons from 1947 to 1962, the Yankees took ten World Series, led by Hall of Famers like Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Yogi Berra, and Roger Maris. In this period the Red Sox managed only one World Series appearance, thanks largely to their batting hero, Ted Williams. Sox fans even came to resent what they see as the baseball public’s undervaluation of their hero, which they attribute to the machinations of the Yankee publicity machine.
Starting in 1962 the Yankees suffered under the ownership of the broadcaster CBS, and fared little better when a syndicate led by shipbuilder George Steinbrenner took over in 1973. Meanwhile the Sox produced competitive teams led by Carl Yastrzemski, but still failed to lay the curse to rest. Worst of all was giving up a fourteen-game lead in the 1978 season to the Yankees, including a series of defeats at the hands of the Yankees known as the Boston massacre,
and losing to them in the play-off for the pennant. Of course, the Yankees went on to win another World Series. The Red Sox were the better team in the 1980s, while the Yankees returned to dominance in the 1990s, winning four out of five World Series between 1996 and 2000 (prompting much soul-searching about the decline of competitive balance in baseball).
By the end of 2003 many Red Sox fans must have considered giving up baseball all together. In that season the two teams met in the American League Championship Series once again. In the seventh game the Sox were 5–2 up in the eighth inning, just five outs from winning the series. But with the pitcher tiring and with some poor fielding by the Sox, the Yankees scored three runs, tied the game, and won in extra innings.
The Curse of the Bambino was finally erased in 2004, in the most dramatic fashion possible. This time the Yankees won the first three games in the ALCS, a deficit no team had ever survived in the history of baseball. In game 4 the Yankees were ahead 4–3 in the bottom of the ninth, just three outs from a clean sweep. Amazingly, the Red Sox scored to tie the game, win in extra innings, and then win the series, for the greatest comeback in baseball history. Then the Red Sox swept the World Series, and after a wait of eighty-six years Boston once again had absolute baseball bragging rights over the Big Apple.
Without doubt this rivalry has produced some of the greatest moments in the history of sports, as well as some of the greatest highs for the fans when their team wins. It’s not just the skill of the players, but the rivalry itself that produces high drama, remarkable athletic feats but also exceptional errors brought on by pressure. If it were scripted, no one would think it believable. If you could sell it, it would be worth millions. . . .
But imagine for a moment that a Red Sox fan could press a button that would expel the Yankees forever from Major League Baseball. Would he press it? Anyone capable of wearing a T-shirt proclaiming themselves a Yankee Hater
($14.99 on the Internet) would be tempted. But in a moment of clarity this fan might realize that without the Yankees to loathe, the pleasure of supporting the Red Sox would be a little bit smaller. Here is the fundamental truth of modern sports—rivalries make for excitement. However much you loathe your rivals, you cannot play without them, and the bigger the rival, the better the game. Now, fans have been known to drink the odd beer, and after a few beers the typical fan might not think twice about pressing the button. Our heads and our hearts, in other words, are not entirely in agreement about this proposition. We follow sports at an emotional level, and feelings dictate what we say and think about sports. But sports competition is the product of rational design. In the modern era an astonishing array of sporting competitions have been created to entertain us, and this book is about how they are designed. This is necessarily a matter of economics, since a sporting competition needs economic resources in the form of skilled labor, equipment, land, and buildings.
That sporting competitions succeed when they create exciting rivalries is the central proposition of the economics of sports. It is not hard to find other examples in baseball (Cubs and Cardinals, Giants and Dodgers), football (Bears and Packers, Texas and Oklahoma) or basketball (Sixers and Celtics, Knicks and Nets). Outside of the United States, the major soccer rivalries dominate the landscape. At the club level the rivalries of Manchester United and Liverpool in England, Barcelona and Real Madrid in Spain, or AC Milan and Internazionale in Italy are as storied as the Red Sox and Yankees, while soccer played at international level fuels nationalistic jealousies (Brazil and Argentina, Netherlands and Germany, Japan and Korea). Outside of team sports, rivalries between star players also fuel interest in sport. For example, men’s tennis has enjoyed a renaissance thanks to the rivalry between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal; many commentators argue that without it, the sport would still be struggling to retain the interest of fans, which had lagged since the end of the Borg-McEnroe rivalry of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Women’s tennis has benefited over the years from the rivalry between Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova, between Steffi Graf and Monica Seles, and in more recent years between the sisters Serena and Venus Williams. In the case of NASCAR it was the fistfight between Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison after they crashed into each other on the final lap at the Daytona 500 in 1979 that catapulted stock car racing to national prominence. Formula One motor racing has also benefited from great rivalries, between Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna or Michael Schumacher and Damon Hill.
For any organizer of a sporting competition, the most important issue is how to maintain and develop rivalry. In 1999, the Italian Competition Authority ruled that the sale of broadcast rights by Lega Calcio, the Italian soccer league, could no longer be permitted. The authority ruled that collective selling amounted to a restriction of competition, since there were few, if any, sports rights in Italy of similar importance or that were reasonable substitutes. Before this date the league had sold the rights on behalf of the clubs and distributed the money between the teams, a system which is used by most other sports leagues around the world. In the eyes of the Italian Competition Authority, collective selling served only to raise the price at which these rights were sold. The arrangement was deemed similar to a cartel that negotiates monopoly prices on behalf of its members. After the ruling, each team had to make its own arrangements for broadcasting, which reduced the price at which the rights were sold. That benefited those who bought them, and protecting the interests of consumers is, of course, the primary purpose of competition law.
How you felt about this ruling depended largely on what team you supported. Fans of the three biggest clubs—AC Milan, Juventus, and Inter—could now buy a subscription to a channel devoted exclusively to broadcasting the games of their own team. The value of these rights is substantial, in the region of €50 million per year (worth about $55 million at the time) for each club. No other club in Italian soccer enjoys this level of support, and the payments to the big three are about ten times the value of the TV rights of the other clubs competing in Serie A, the top division. The law therefore handed a competitive advantage to the big three clubs, which already enjoyed a longstanding dominance—in the previous fifty years one of these teams had won the scudetto (league championship) on thirty-nine occasions. If you supported a team outside the top three, then the likelihood of your team winning the scudetto fell, as teams struggled to compete with their financial muscle. During the 1980s the market for soccer talent had become increasingly international, and Italy, as one of the most successful leagues in the world, attracted a galaxy of the top stars. But with individual selling of broadcast rights, it seemed likely that only the big three would be able to afford the investment needed to attract a Brazilian or Argentinian star.
In order to limit the impact of the ruling, the top three teams agreed to share 18 percent of their revenue with the remaining teams. In no other business would such a transaction be contemplated. Indeed, those who object to the commercialization of sport (and this may constitute a majority of sports fans) might argue that this is precisely why sport should not be treated as business. If Italian football clubs were business rivals in the same sense that car manufacturers or movie studios are, the offer to share revenue would make no sense. All businesses have an incentive to collude, since collusion makes for bigger profits than competition, and so in this sense collusion among competing clubs in a league is no different than in the rest of business. However, in the business world the bankruptcy of your rivals is even better than collusion (in other words, working with the competition is better than fighting it, but not having any competition is best). What makes the sports business different is that you cannot have a business without your rivals. What the sports business sells is sporting rivalry—and without rivals there is nothing to sell.
One can even go further than this. Sport requires not only competitors, but competitors who are reasonably well matched. There are thousands of soccer teams around the world that would give anything to play AC Milan, but there is only a handful of competitors good enough to make it worthwhile paying to watch the contest. As a result, dominant teams in sports leagues are willing to give up some of their revenue to fund their competitors.
A successful sports competition in the modern era is a complex set of arrangements between organizers and sporting competitors whose employees will do everything to win on the field but whose owners and managers seldom see themselves as economic competitors with their rivals. This book unlocks these relationships step by step to reveal the underlying economic logic of sporting competition, as a contest and as a business.
Sports themselves are as old as civilization, and while modern sports often resemble the sports of olden days, they are based on different organizing principles. Chapter 1 presents an analysis of the evolution of modern sports, primarily in Great Britain and the United States, based around voluntary associations. This chapter explores how amateur sports were transformed into commercial sports, and contrasts the American model, where amateurs and professionals went their separate ways, with British sports, most notably soccer, where amateur and professional have submitted to a common governance structure. These choices have had a big impact on the way that sports have evolved in nations that have adopted the American system and those that have adopted the British system, and in particular the objectives pursued by sports administrators.
The historical background helps to explain how sporting institutions came to take their present form, but any contest has certain common features that can be analyzed in economic terms. Chapter 2 explores the logic behind the organization of a successful competition, and in particular the role of incentives provided by the organizer to ensure the most interesting contest possible. One of the most striking features of modern team sports is that the teams that compete often decide how the championship will be organized, something one would never dream of permitting in individualistic
sports (imagine if participating athletes were allowed to decide how the Olympic 100 meters was to be run). Not surprisingly, this structure has an impact on the way that team sports operate.
Until recently the world’s major leagues have been rather small in financial terms—economists have compared them to manufacturers of cardboard boxes or contact lens supplies. As recently as 1980 the average NFL team had annual revenue of only $20 million (today the figure is ten times larger). While sports might have been small in financial terms, they grabbed the attention in other ways. For example, there has always been a great deal more litigation about sports than about cardboard boxes and contact lens fluids. This observation points us to an interesting fact—given how much we care about sports, we pay remarkably little to watch them. Many fans would disagree, perhaps because whatever it costs now, it was cheaper in the past. Ticket prices have gone up, but more important for sports businesses has been the ability to sell broadcast rights—first on radio, then on TV, and now on the Internet and cell phones. Small amounts of money extracted from tens of millions of fans are worth much more than expensive tickets bought by a few thousand fans in the stadium. All this does not stop fans from feeling exploited by the owners and the players, who are frequently accused of forming cartels—conspiracies to raise prices and exploit fans. Just as often, the players and the owners fight over how much of the profit they should get. Much of the evolution of sports in the last hundred years has been governed by the legal debate over the proper economic treatment of sports. Chapter 3 examines the basis for these disputes, and relates the law on competitive processes (antitrust) to the special case of sports.
In chapter 4 we turn to the incentives of the players themselves, the athletes who make the contest and the entertainment. After all, without the star athletes the sports business itself would be a sorry affair. Yet it is only in the context of the rules of the game and the setup of the contest, that one can understand the incentives of the athletes. For example, it is common for fans to bewail the absence of pay for performance in team sports, especially when an athlete plays badly. However, the ways players are paid is a consequence of the market for playing talent. Teams that offer to employ stars on performance contracts that expose the player to significant risk will find they have to offer far more in total salaries than teams that offer a fixed amount, regardless of how well the player performs. Thus wages often include an element of insurance
against the risk of poor performance (as indeed do the wages that most of the rest of us earn). Likewise, the incentives to cheat, through match fixing or taking banned substances, are usually a function