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Paperback Rethinking Fandom: How to Beat the Sports-Industrial Complex at Its Own Game Book

ISBN: 1953368239

ISBN13: 9781953368232

Rethinking Fandom: How to Beat the Sports-Industrial Complex at Its Own Game

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

A fundamental reevaluation of how to be a sports fan by an acclaimed baseball writer.

Sports fandom isn't what it used to be. Owners and executives increasingly count on the blind loyalty of their fans and too often act against the team's best interest. Sports fans are left deliberating not only mismanagement, but also political, health, and ethical issues.

In Rethinking Fandom: How To Beat The Sports Industrial Complex at Its Own Game, sportswriter (and lifelong sports fan) Craig Calcaterra outlines endemic problems with what he calls the Sports-Industrial Complex, such as intentionally tanking a season to get a high draft pick, scamming local governments to build cushy new stadiums, actively subverting the players, bad stadium deals, racism, concussions, and more. But he doesn't give up on professional sports. In the second half of the book, he proposes strategies to reclaim joy in fandom: rooting for players instead of teams, being a fair-weather fan, becoming an activist, and other clever solutions.

With his characteristic wit and piercing commentary, Calcaterra argues that fans have more power than they realize to change how their teams behave.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Root for humans, not for laundry.

Calcaterra does a nice job exposing the follies of modern fandom without making the reader feel bad about themselves. His critique of the so-called 'sports-industrial complex' is really a jab at the modern, professional sports leagues that have been absorbed by corporate interests. Calcaterra, a baseball journalist, hones in on Major League Baseball in particular, presenting several anecdotes to demonstrate that the league's goal is financial profit over anything else. He contends that professional sports leagues, and the teams within them, often exaggerate the positive spillover economic benefits associated with, for example, stadium construction, to the city councils and general public that yearn for growth in their communities. Calcaterra champions critical thinking on the part of fans and local government decision-makers. Much to the chagrin of die-hard fanbases around the country, Calcaterra asserts that one can indeed change or shift their team allegiances, for whatever reasons they want to, whenever they want to. He demonstrates that public investment in private sports franchises are typically very one-sided arrangements, benefitting the teams and leagues, and the wealthy owners and operators of those teams and leagues, at the expense of the taxpayers. A nice, short read that is worth your time.
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