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Stee-Rike Four!: What's Wrong with the Business of Baseball

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Stee-Rike Four!: What's Wrong with the Business of Baseball

Contributors:

By (Author) Daniel Marburger

ISBN:

9780275957063

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

25th June 1997

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Baseball

Dewey:

338.47796357640973

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

232

Description

When major league baseball cancelled its 1994 season following a player strike, fans were shocked that the national pastime could be brought to a standstill by a collective bargaining dispute. The strike was largely responsible for bringing the economics of the game into sports discussions and raising questions about the business of baseball. Will players' rising salaries destroy baseball How will revenue-sharing and luxury taxes affect competitive balance Should taxpayers subsidize their local team This volume answers the basic questions about the economics of the sport, from salary arbitration to baseball's antitrust exemption, in a clear style geared for readers with no formal background in economics.

Reviews

"[E]xcellent economic analyses of aspects of America's favorite professional sporting pastime...written in language that makes them understandable even to readers without formal training in economics. They exhibit, in this context, the power of the discipline of economics as a predictor of behavior. Regular and persistent readers of newspaper sports pages will find their understanding enlarged by the reading of this book."-Simon Rottenberg Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
[An] informative layman's guide to the issues which have come to dominate the Hot Stove League over the past quarter century. Stee-rike Four! should be required reading for the economic illiterates who dominate the newspaper, radio, and TV discussion of the business of baseball....As the first layman's guide to baseball economics written after the 1994-95 cataclysm, Stee-rike Four! deserves a larger audience.-Outside the Lines
These days a baseball fan would also do well to have a fairly strong background in economics, as luxury taxes, salary arbitration and revenue-sharing have become the new buzzwords of the bleachers. In keeping with that spirit, today's fans should consider Stee-rike Four! required reading. Subtitled What's Wrong with the Business of Baseball this collection of essays by well-respected economists discusses topics such as free agency, baseball's antitrust exemption and the issue of rising salaries.-Dispute Resolution Journal
"An informative layman's guide to the issues which have come to dominate the Hot Stove League over the past quarter century. Stee-rike Four! should be required reading for the economic illiterates who dominate the newspaper, radio, and TV discussion of the business of baseball....As the first layman's guide to baseball economics written after the 1994-95 cataclysm, Stee-rike Four! deserves a larger audience."-Outside the Lines
"[An] informative layman's guide to the issues which have come to dominate the Hot Stove League over the past quarter century. Stee-rike Four! should be required reading for the economic illiterates who dominate the newspaper, radio, and TV discussion of the business of baseball....As the first layman's guide to baseball economics written after the 1994-95 cataclysm, Stee-rike Four! deserves a larger audience."-Outside the Lines
"These days a baseball fan would also do well to have a fairly strong background in economics, as luxury taxes, salary arbitration and revenue-sharing have become the new buzzwords of the bleachers. In keeping with that spirit, today's fans should consider Stee-rike Four! required reading. Subtitled What's Wrong with the Business of Baseball this collection of essays by well-respected economists discusses topics such as free agency, baseball's antitrust exemption and the issue of rising salaries."-Dispute Resolution Journal

Author Bio

DANIEL R. MARBURGER is Associate Professor of Economics at Arkansas State University. He has published several articles on the economics of baseball.

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