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El. knyga: Run to the Pennant: A Multiple Equilibria Approach to Professional Sports Leagues

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A number of clubs in professional sports leagues exhibit winning streaks over a number of consecutive seasons that do not conform to the standard economic model of a professional sports league developed by El Hodiri and Quirk (1994) and Fort and Quirk (1995). These clubs appear to display what we term "unsustainable runs", defined as a period of two to four seasons where the club acquires expensive talent and attempts to win a league championship despite not having the market size to sustain such a competitive position in the long run. The standard model predicts that clubs that locate in large economic markets will tend to acquire more talent, achieve more success on the field and at the box office than clubs that are located in small markets. This book builds a model that can allow unsustainable runs yet retains most of the features of the standard model. The model is then subjected to empirical verification. The new model we develop in the book has as its central feature the possibility of generating two equilibria for a club. In the empirical sections of the book, we use time-series analysis to attempt to test for the presence of unsustainable runs using historical data from National Football League (NFL), National Basketball Association (NBA), National Hockey League (NHL) and Major League Baseball (MLB). The multiple equilibria model retains all of the features of the standard model of a professional sports league that is accepted quite universally by economists, yet it offers a much richer approach by including an exploration of the effects of revenues that are earned at the league level (television, apparel, naming rights, etc.) that are then shared by all of the member clubs, making this book unique and of great interest to scholars in a variety of fields in economics.

This book employs sound empirical work using time-series methods not commonly used in the economics of sports . It develops new models that can generate multiple equilibria and unsustainable runs.
1 Introducing Unsustainable Runs
1(8)
1.1 Introduction
1(1)
1.2 Unsustainable Runs in Sports Leagues: Some Examples
2(6)
1.2.1 The 2008--2011 Tampa Bay Rays (MLB)
3(1)
1.2.2 The 1997 and 2003 Florida Marlins (MLB)
4(1)
1.2.3 The 1992--1993 Toronto Blue Jays (MLB)
5(1)
1.2.4 Leeds United 1999--2004, Portsmouth FC 2002--2009 (English Premier League)
6(2)
1.3 The Rest of the Book
8(1)
2 Casual Evidence of Unsustainable Runs
9(12)
2.1 Cyclical Winning Percentages
9(5)
2.2 Time-Series Evidence
14(7)
3 A Model of a Professional Sports League
21(8)
3.1 The Standard Model: A Profit Maximizer
21(2)
3.2 The Impossibility of Multiple Equilibria in the Standard Model
23(2)
3.3 The Standard Model: A Win Maximizer
25(2)
3.4 The Standard Model: A Utility Maximizer
27(2)
4 A Professional League Model with Unsustainable Runs
29(14)
4.1 Introduction
29(1)
4.2 Setup of the Model
30(2)
4.3 Solving the Model
32(2)
4.4 Moving Between Equilibria
34(2)
4.5 Simulating the Model
36(7)
5 Unsustainable Runs with Revenue Sharing and Salary Caps
43(10)
5.1 Introduction
43(1)
5.2 Revenue Sharing Mechanics
44(1)
5.3 Revenue Sharing and Unsustainable Runs in Theory
45(2)
5.4 Salary Cap Mechanics
47(3)
5.5 Salary Caps and Unsustainable Runs in Theory
50(3)
6 Some Empirical Testing
53(14)
6.1 Introduction
53(1)
6.2 Tests for Speculative Bubbles
53(2)
6.3 Estimating Structural Parameters in the Presence of Multiple Equilibria
55(1)
6.4 Looking for Excess Unpredictability
55(5)
6.5 Examining Payrolls
60(3)
6.6 Non-linear Effects in Revenues
63(2)
6.7 Summing Up
65(2)
7 Concluding Remarks
67(4)
References 71(4)
Index 75