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Neil Longley

    A Whole New Game
    An Absence of Competition
    • An Absence of Competition

      The Sustained Competitive Advantage of the Monopoly Sports Leagues

      • 136 páginas
      • 5 horas de lectura

      The book offers a multidisciplinary analysis of the four major professional sports leagues in the USA—football, basketball, ice hockey, and baseball. It explores their long-term competitive advantages through various lenses, including economic factors, political influences, and strategic management practices. This comprehensive examination aims to provide insights into the dynamics that contribute to the success and sustainability of these leagues in the competitive sports landscape.

      An Absence of Competition
    • Hockey used to be Canada's game. What happened? A renowned sports expert details the sellout of a sport Canada once dominated to big-money U.S. corporatization and enumerates the effects, including declining amateur participation and audience size. Hockey is still Canada's most popular spectator sport. Yet, many fans question how organized hockey serves the country of its origin as they watch the NHL expand ever deeper into an indifferent American south, taking the best young Canadian talent and leaving major Canadian markets in Québec, the Maritimes and the Prairies in the cold. Minor hockey, once the pride of smaller communities, now serves as a brutal corporate feeder system for the NHL, treating underpaid teenagers like chattel, often shipping players as young as fourteen far away from their homes and families on short notice. Neil Longley contrasts the current state of the game with the way it was before the expansion era, when hockey teams were nurtured and supported at the community level, a system still practiced in much of Europe. In one of the most perceptive and authoritative analyses yet written on modern hockey history, Professor Longley finds no magic formula for putting heart and local pride back in Canada's game, but makes a strong case for placing today's corporate system "in a more realistic, less-Disneyfied, less sanitized, context."

      A Whole New Game