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Home Team: Professional Sports and the American Metropolis
 
 
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Home Team: Professional Sports and the American Metropolis [Paperback]

Michael N. Danielson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 15, 2001 0691070644 978-0691070643

Most books that study professional sports concentrate on teams and leagues. In contrast, Home Team studies the connections between professional team sports in North America and the places where teams play. It examines the relationships between the four major professional team sports--baseball, basketball, football, and hockey--and the cities that attach their names, their hearts, and their increasing amount of tax dollars to big league teams. From the names on their uniforms to the loyalties of their fans, teams are tied to the places in which they play. Nonetheless, teams, like other urban businesses, are affected by changes in their environments--like the flight of their customers to suburbs and changes in local political climates. In Home Team, professional sports are scrutinized in the larger context of the metropolitan areas that surround and support them.

Michael Danielson is particularly interested in the political aspects of the connections between professional sports teams and cities. He points out that local and state governments are now major players in the competition for franchises, providing increasingly lavish publicly funded facilities for what are, in fact, private business ventures. As a result, professional sports enterprises, which have insisted that private leagues rather than public laws be the proper means of regulating games, have become powerful political players, seeking additional benefits from government, often playing off one city against another. The wide variety of governmental responses reflects the enormous diversity of urban and state politics in the United States and in the Canadian cities and provinces that host professional teams.

Home Team collects a vast amount of data, much of it difficult to find elsewhere, including information on the relocation of franchises, expansion teams, new leagues, stadium development, and the political influence of the rich cast of characters involved in the ongoing contests over where teams will play and who will pay. Everyone who is interested in the present condition and future prospects of professional sports will be captivated by this informative and provocative new book.



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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

When the Carolina Panthers and Jacksonville Jaguars each came within a game of Super Bowl XXXI earlier this year, observers of the National Football League speculated that the two-year-old clubs benefited from an overly generous draft system. Not coincidentally, both teams also faced an all-out support blitz from local fans and political leaders. The relationship between professional baseball, basketball, football and hockey and the cities in which those sports are played is the focus of this academic and only occasionally intriguing book. Danielson's source material often is dated, but the professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton University redeems himself by offering details of Major League baseball's projected 1998 expansion and stories behind other sports' recent expansion teams. Danielson makes some mistakes that color the book, like persistently calling the Carolina's Panthers the Cougars, the name of that state's American Basketball Association team?defunct for 25 years. Don't look here for juicy insider info that will make die-hard fans sit still for several hundred pages of textbook-like writing, detailed source notes and an appendix of every home-team city in the United States and Canada since 1871. Danielson (Profits and Politics in Paradise: The Development of Hilton Head Island) fails to offer more than a handful of compelling arguments and takes a hands-off approach to reporting such business of sport as shared revenues, salary caps, competition for teams, relocation strategies and television rights. The athletes themselves don't even matter here. But despite its faults, Home Team has the power to agitate thinking sports fans with its overwhelming message that dollars and cents mean more to professional sports today than do home runs, touchdowns, goals and free throws.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review


It will be the authority on the subject for a long time coming. -- Frank Deford, Newsweek



In America, a professional sports team tends to play a big part in the emotional life of its host city; it nearly broke New York's heart when the city's beloved Brooklyn Dodgers threw it over for L.A. Michael Danielson knows all about home-team loyalty; growing up in Brooklyn in the '50s, the Dodgers were his first love. In this book, he combines that personal interest with a professional one in urban politics. -- Washington Post Book World



Danielson examines every side of the business of sport, from ceilings on player salaries to leases on grounds, to cable TV rights. . . . [His] account . . . could not be more timely or relevant. -- Albert Scardino, New Statesman



Fascinating historical evidence presented in a fluid writing style. -- John R. Thelin, Philadelpia Inquirer



Danielson has ingested an enormous amount of information and come up with some interesting observations. -- Allen Barra, Chicago Tribune

Product Details

  • Paperback: 424 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (January 15, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691070644
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691070643
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #482,008 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars The best overview of the sports industry and the politics of stadiums, December 29, 2006
This review is from: Home Team: Professional Sports and the American Metropolis (Paperback)
"Michael Danielson has produced the most thorough and evenhanded analysis yet of the politics of sports and cities. He focuses on the way that sports teams foster and exploit a sense of 'place,' particularly in cities were dynamic economic growth or decline undermines a more organic and abiding civic identity." -- Charles Euchner, author of "Playing the Field," writing in The American Political Science Review, March 1998, p. 227.
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0 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Home Team, February 8, 2000
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John Kernaghan (Hamilton, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Home Team (Hardcover)
Actually, I'd like to review the book in my newspaper, which is published in Ontario, Canada. Is it possible to have it and Field of Schemes couriered to me. You can reach me by email or at (905) 526-3422. Thanks, JK
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
ON November 6, 1995, Arthur Modell, the owner of the Cleveland Browns, announced that he was moving his football team to Baltimore. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
places without teams, sports proposals, unshared revenues, franchise stability, places with teams, national broadcasting revenues, major league team sports, professional sports facilities, major league facilities, private sports facilities, relocated teams, sports projects, professional team sports, luxury seating, public sports facilities, premium seating, big league sports, franchise shifts, national television revenues, playing facilities, monopoly sports, local telecasts, franchise moves, stadium development, sports agencies
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Los Angeles, United States, San Francisco, National League, Kansas City, American League, New Jersey, White Sox, San Diego, New Orleans, National Football League, World War, Continental League, Super Bowl, Pete Rozelle, Bowie Kuhn, Dallas Cowboys, Green Bay, Sherman Act, World Series, American Football League, Bay Area, Washington Redskins, American Association
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