SPORTS

September 30, 2006

Irish Selling Football Tickets

by @ 2:32 pm. Filed under GENERAL

For the first time in more than thirty years, Notre Dame is putting 5,000 season tickets on sale. The tickets are being made available first to donors, alumni and others affiliated with ND before going on sale to the general public. The proceeds will be used to fund repairs and improvements to Notre Dame Stadium. Within hours of the announcement , more than 750 of the tickets had been sold, so you had better make your call soon.

Irish Selling Football Tickets

by @ 2:32 pm. Filed under GENERAL

For the first time in more than thirty years, Notre Dame is putting 5,000 season tickets on sale. The tickets are being made available first to donors, alumni and others affiliated with ND before going on sale to the general public. The proceeds will be used to fund repairs and improvements to Notre Dame Stadium. Within hours of the announcement , more than 750 of the tickets had been sold, so you had better make your call soon.

The Mouse Rings Off

by @ 2:30 pm. Filed under GENERAL

Despite incessant promotion throughout the ESPN family of networks, Mobile ESPN never caught on with the general public. As a consequence, Bristol finally threw in the towel and announced this week that it would shut the service down at the end of the year. Even after investing $150 million in launching and promoting the service, generating an estimated $25 million in losses, ESPN could never establish a value proposition for the general sports fans. The market never progressed beyond gamblers and bookies who craved the in-depth information that was the key to the service. The casual sports fan was content to get scores through the regular cell phone service.

So, where did ESPN go wrong? After all, the WWLS had the marketing juggernaut that is the Disney empire to throw behind Disney Mobile. Was it the concept or the execution? Apparently, the folks in Bristol underestimated the difficulty in convincing people to change cellular phone subscriptions, especially when they couldn't promise or deliver better service, only more features. People only seem to switch cellular companies as a result of dissatisfaction with their current carriers or as a result of cheaper service plans. ESPN offered neither of these and, as a MVNO (mobile virtual network operator), that is, someone who leased space on an operator's network, ESPN was stuck with Sprint Nextel's service. There was simply no compelling value proposition being offered by ESPN and it was plain to see from the beginning that this project was doomed to failure.

The smart move was to offer this as a licensing service in the same manner as ESPN intends to move forward. This provides the existing cellular companies with additional content, something which they are all seeking and something which ESPN is good at and is known to deliver. It can be offered for a small additional fee to the consumer or as an advertiser driven product for free. Either way is likely to be far more attractive to the consumer than a $40 product which offered no discernible additional value. So, as we've learned, even the Mouse can screw up when it arrogantly assumes it can dominate a market on the strength of brand name alone, but while, expensive, it need not be fatal to its efforts in the cell phone space. It can retool and still remain a player - just in a different direction.

Update: Interesting take on this from Fast Company blog, similarly suggesting that ESPN forgot that it is all about creating destinations and it failed to create Mobile ESPN as a destination. Instead, without it being sufficiently distinctive in its own right, it became just another content delivery device and its customers already had one of those, only cheaper.

September 29, 2006

Basketball Summit

by @ 8:29 pm. Filed under GENERAL
As you may have heard by now, there was a so-called basketball summit meeting held earlier this week in Indianapolis to discuss how to fix youth basketball in the US. the good news, perhaps the only good news, is that the people involved actually recognized that there was a problem that needed to be fixed. When you look at the roster of attendees, you will see what I mean. The attendees included such luminaries as NCAA president Myles Brand, NBA Commissioner David Stern, Nike CEO Phil Knight, C.M.Newton of USA Basketball as well as representatives from AAU Basketball, the National Association of Basketball Coaches, and the National Federation of High School Coaches. Listening to this group talk about the problems of youth basketball must have been like being George Bush sitting in the General Assembly of the United Nations. At least you know they sure what they were talking about.

Of course, nothing truly substantive came out of the meeting. There is talk about a basketball academy similar to IMG Academy now being run in Florida. However, Sonny Vacaro, the dark prince of youth basketball has been pushing this idea for some time now. That can't be good. It may sound good on paper, but if Sonny has his fingers around it, then surely dirt will follow as night follows day.

Apparently, there is some bit of light at the end of the tunnel. According to Andy Katz of ESPN, Adidas announced at the summit that it would end it elite summer in Atlanta and Nike may soon follow suit. Chances are good that corporate pressure may end Reebok's camp as well, which is run by the aforementioned dark prince, Sonny Vacarro. Vacarro has intimated on many occasions that should Reebok end his camp, he would just pick it up and move it somewhere else under the sponsorship of some other entity. However, if all three shoe companies get out of the camp business, the landscape may not be so friendly.

Restoration of some control over the summer to high school and college coaches can only be a good thing. Too much influence by the shoe companies and the AAU coaches is good for neither skill development nor the development of the academics and character of the kids. The more that the schools are involved, the more likely there will be an academic component. As for skill development, the summer camps are all about individual performance and making a name for yourself, not exactly what is needed to develop a complete basketball player. Anything that shifts the emphasis to team play even slightly is bound to be better.

Basketball Summit

by @ 8:29 pm. Filed under GENERAL
As you may have heard by now, there was a so-called basketball summit meeting held earlier this week in Indianapolis to discuss how to fix youth basketball in the US. the good news, perhaps the only good news, is that the people involved actually recognized that there was a problem that needed to be fixed. When you look at the roster of attendees, you will see what I mean. The attendees included such luminaries as NCAA president Myles Brand, NBA Commissioner David Stern, Nike CEO Phil Knight, C.M.Newton of USA Basketball as well as representatives from AAU Basketball, the National Association of Basketball Coaches, and the National Federation of High School Coaches. Listening to this group talk about the problems of youth basketball must have been like being George Bush sitting in the General Assembly of the United Nations. At least you know they sure what they were talking about.

Of course, nothing truly substantive came out of the meeting. There is talk about a basketball academy similar to IMG Academy now being run in Florida. However, Sonny Vacaro, the dark prince of youth basketball has been pushing this idea for some time now. That can't be good. It may sound good on paper, but if Sonny has his fingers around it, then surely dirt will follow as night follows day.

Apparently, there is some bit of light at the end of the tunnel. According to Andy Katz of ESPN, Adidas announced at the summit that it would end it elite summer in Atlanta and Nike may soon follow suit. Chances are good that corporate pressure may end Reebok's camp as well, which is run by the aforementioned dark prince, Sonny Vacarro. Vacarro has intimated on many occasions that should Reebok end his camp, he would just pick it up and move it somewhere else under the sponsorship of some other entity. However, if all three shoe companies get out of the camp business, the landscape may not be so friendly.

Restoration of some control over the summer to high school and college coaches can only be a good thing. Too much influence by the shoe companies and the AAU coaches is good for neither skill development nor the development of the academics and character of the kids. The more that the schools are involved, the more likely there will be an academic component. As for skill development, the summer camps are all about individual performance and making a name for yourself, not exactly what is needed to develop a complete basketball player. Anything that shifts the emphasis to team play even slightly is bound to be better.

Moneyball and the market correction

by @ 2:53 pm. Filed under GENERAL
One interesting sideshow tied to Moneyball's publication is the vociferous negative reaction to it by baseball insiders with thin skins. This rhetoric took place at the same time that the actions of baseball insiders were correcting the mis-pricing!

But I don't believe that the actual publication of the book altered prices so much. Rather, when other teams raided the A's front office for talent, those guys, and others who had figured out what was going on, did the bidding. What motivated Lewis to write had also motivated teams to copy the A's, and that occurred (shortly) before the book hit the stores.

Now, as for EE's comment (#3 below Dave's post). This comment, (echoed by Rod & Dave) poses the big question that Jahn Hakes and I left unanswered. Let me re-phrase it: how long was a winning strategy lying dormant? If indeed it was dormant for decades, and obvious enough to alt.rec.baseball types, and as cheap as the A's found it, why? It is not enough to say that the people running sports teams are stupid, or ignorant, or lack computational skill. Branch Rickey was not stupid, and as EE says, he and his people knew the importance of on-base percentage a long time ago.

Suicide, It?s A Suicide?

by @ 8:58 am. Filed under GENERAL

Over at The Fanhouse, I attempted to guess which NFL personality will be the next to attempt suicide. I’ve got the odds-on favorite as Ben Roethlisberger.

I also address the cops who demand an apology from Terrell Owens, and insist that they’re superior people.

Oh, and if you know anything at all about Ed Orgeron, the head coach at Ole Miss… you’ll enjoy this (many thanks for the heads-up here). If you’re not familiar, let me catch you up a little bit before you click that link.

Ed Orgeron is a crazy motherfucker. He was an assistant coach at Miami in the early ’90s. In 1991, a woman got a restraining order against him, and he was ordered into a domestic violence counseling program. In 1992, he was arrested in a bar fight and brought up on felony battery chargers. They were eventually dropped, but Orgeron was accused of head-butting a bouncer. And shortly after he took over at Ole Miss, he… well, I’ll just quote from Every Day Should Be Saturday.

Ed Orgeron appears to be settling in just fine at Ole Miss by allegedly calling players with earrings “fucking pussy girls” (is that a Chinese translation for lesbian?), labeling the Cotton Bowl “bullshit,” and taking off his shirt and challenging every “motherfucker” in the room to a fight…all in the course of a single team meeting.

And one more thing, before you follow that link, there’s one more necessary step… enjoy this Ed Orgeron Hummer ad and get a feel for his voice.


NOW you’re prepared to enjoy this little work of genius.

Blogpoll Is Now Out

by @ 12:02 am. Filed under GENERAL
This week's Blogpoll has now been released and is available here

Blogpoll Is Now Out

by @ 12:02 am. Filed under GENERAL
This week's Blogpoll has now been released and is available here

September 28, 2006

Freakonomics vs. Moneyball

by @ 9:09 pm. Filed under GENERAL
On page 10 of the October 2nd issue of Business Week is a brief article by Peter Coy (not available online) entitled “Freakonomics vs. Moneyball.” Coy addresses an exchange between Steven Levitt – co-author of Freakonomics – and Raymond Sauer – Clemson economics professor and resident chief scholar at The Sports Economist. At issue is an article written by Sauer and Jahn Hakes-- and published this summer in the Journal of Economic Perspectives -- entitled “An Economic Evaluation of the Moneyball Hypothesis.”



Although it is hard to believe that one could be reading my words in this location and not know the Moneyball story, I will still offer a quick summary. The Oakland A’s consistently field a team towards the top in baseball in winning percentage. This very same team also consistently places towards the bottom in baseball’s payroll rankings. How is this possible? Michael Lewis – author of Moneyball – argued that Oakland was able to purchase cheap players with a high on-base-percentage because patience at the plate was a skill undervalued by other teams in Major League Baseball.



Steven Levitt disputed this claim, arguing that great pitching is the simple secret to Oakland’s success. Sauer and Hakes turned to the data and asked if on-base-percentage was truly undervalued in baseball’s labor market. Their paper reports that before Moneyball appeared, on-base-percentage was indeed undervalued. After this story became known, though, this advantage disappeared. In sum, baseball executives were able to adjust behavior in light of new information, a result standard economic theory would predict. Of course, why it took baseball more than a century to learn the lesson of plate discipline is still not quite as clear.



That point, though, is not the subject of Coy’s article in Business Week. Coy focuses solely on the debate between Levitt and Sauer. The Sauer-Hakes paper was originally submitted to the Journal of Political Economy where it was rejected by Levitt – who is a co-editor of JPE. This summer, as noted, it appeared in the Journal of Economic Perspectives, a journal Coy very erroneously refers to as a “not-quite-so-serious” journal. I would emphasize the “very erroneously” part of the last sentence. JEP is indeed a very good journal and appearing in such a forum is a feather in anyone’s cap.



Now one should note, as Coy mentions, that the Journal of Political Economy rejects 94% of papers submitted. So Levitt rejecting this paper does not indicate that the paper is necessarily flawed. In fact, after reading the paper I think the paper is clearly well-written and quite important.



Why is this paper important? The important issue is not why Oakland is successful. No, the bigger issue is that Sauer and Hakes found on-base-percentage – or the ability to draw a walk – was undervalued in baseball’s labor market. These stats have existed for decades and it is surprising that it took the publication of a best-seller to correct the market imperfection. Economic theory teaches us that decision-makers learn about their environment. Typically, though, we expect people in a highly competitive environment with abundant information to learn on their own. It should not be the case that learning only takes place after a best selling author highlights the problem.



The ability of decision-makers to understand the vast data collected in professional sports is one of the more important stories we can tell in sports economics. In essence, we are faced with the classic Watergate question: What do decision-makers know and when did they know it? In the sports of baseball, basketball, and football this question is being asked. And I think the answers – provided in papers like the recently published work of Sauer and Hakes -- not only inform our understanding of sports, but also of economics as well.

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