Professional sports league organization
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Professional sports leagues are organized in numerous ways. The most common are those in the North American mode and those in the European mode. Generally, the North American structure is characterized by its use of franchises and closed membership; the European structure is characterized by its use of promotion and relegation.
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[edit] The system developed in baseball
- See also: Major professional sports league
Professional sports leagues in North America are 'closed corporations' limited to a fixed number of teams[1], known as "franchises". Only a vote of the existing constituent franchises can admit more teams; when this is done, a new franchise place is put up to bid among would-be owners. With a few exceptions, these franchises enjoy a geographical monopoly in a particular location. This system started with the formation of the National League in 1876, in reaction to the instability of its predecessor organizations.
Although league members generally operate as independent entities, separate from the league itself, they are largely creations of the league. Only the few oldest teams in the National Hockey League, for example, existed before becoming part of the NHL or its former rival, the World Hockey Association. The rest of the teams were created ex novo as expansion teams or as charter members of the WHA, which merged into the NHL in 1979.
Exceptions to the ownership structure described above do exist. Major League Soccer is technically not an association of franchises but a single business entity. The team owners are actually shareholders in the league. The league, not the individual teams, contracts with the players. The short-lived XFL football league did not have independently owned teams; all teams were owned by the league.
Because North American pro teams are so closely tied to their leagues, they almost never play games outside of the league (and these generally are exhibitions rather than competitive contests). The best teams in a given season reach a playoff tournament, and the winner of the playoffs is crowned champion of the league (and, in the case of the four major professional sports leagues, "world champion"). The league develops its own rule book and sets the conditions under which players join and change teams.
Major League Baseball has an associated minor-league system used to develop young talent. Although most minor league teams are independently owned, each contracts with a major-league team, which hires and pays the players and assigns them to a given level in its minor-league hierarchy. The teams as a whole cannot move up or down levels. Professional ice hockey has a system somewhat similar to baseball's, while the National Basketball Association and National Football League each operate one small developmental league.
The system of league organization described above developed in Major League Baseball in the 19th century and was later adopted by other North American sports leagues.
Outside of North America, the American system of organizing sports leagues is sometimes referred to as "franchising." North Americans themselves refer to major-league teams as "franchises," but have no need for a name for their system of league ownership, since all major leagues operate on the same principles.
A number of leagues outside of the United States now use this system. These include the Super League, which is the top level of rugby league in the United Kingdom and France. This will run on a franchise basis from 2009.[2] In rugby union, the Southern Hemisphere Super 14 competition operates on a franchise system. In 2006, a promotion/relegation system was introduced affecting only the South African teams, but as of November of that year, it was confirmed that it will never actually be employed.[3] Professional sport leagues in Australia are based on this model as well, with the most notable examples being the Australian Football League (Aussie rules) and National Rugby League (rugby league). The German Bundesliga also initially ran under a similar 'licence' system, though this was relaxed in 1965.
[edit] The system developed in Association Football (soccer)
English football (soccer) developed a very different system from the North American one, and it has been adopted for soccer in most other countries. The system is marked by:
- The existence of an elected governing body to which clubs at all levels of the sport belong;
- Games played both inside and outside of leagues; and
- The promotion of well-performing teams to higher-level leagues or divisions and the relegation of poorly performing teams to lower-level leagues or divisions.
European soccer clubs are members both of a league and of a governing body. In the case of England, all competitive soccer clubs are members of The Football Association, while the top 20 teams are members of the FA Premier League, a separate organization. The FA operates the national soccer team and tournaments that involve teams from different leagues. In conjunction with other countries' governing bodies, it also sets the playing rules and the rules under which teams can sell players' contracts to other clubs.
The Premier League negotiates television contracts for its games. However, the "league" is only one of several competitions in which a club might participate in a given year; only some of the games a league member plays are league games. A Premier League team might play a league game one week and an FA Cup game against a team from a lower-level league the next. The third game might be against a Danish team in the UEFA Champions League (operated by the Union of European Football Associations).
In any given year, a country could have several champions. In 2004-05, Chelsea won the Premier League championship, Arsenal won the FA Cup and Liverpool won the UEFA Champions League. Usually the national league winners are considered the national champions (a notion also used in franchise-based leagues), and the disparities may be settled by means of a Super Cup, although this is considered a special event and has not been mandatory in any league anywhere in the world.
The promotion and relegation system is generally used to determine membership of leagues. A pre-determined number of teams at the bottom of a league or divsion are relegated down to a lower level, being replaced by the same number of teams gaining promotion from that lower tier. The following season, these teams compete at their new levels. In England in 2006, Birmingham City, Sunderland and West Bromwich Albion were relegated from the Premier League to the Football League Championship, the second level of English soccer. Relegation has devastating financial consequences for club owners who not only lose TV, sponsorship and gate income but also see the asset value of their shares in the club collapse. There is of course a corresponding bonanza for owners of promoted clubs.
Clubs may be sold privately to new owners at any time. However, relocation of clubs to other cities is very rare. If a millionaire wishes to have a top club in his native city, he usually must buy the local club as it stands and work it up through the divisions, usually by hiring better talent. He would be unlikely to buy an existing top-flight club and move it to his city. (There have been a number of cases where existing owners have chosen to relocate out of a crowded market, to better facilities, and/or simply to realise the market value of the land that the current stadium is built upon. As in the U.S., team relocations have been controversial, but for different reasons).
The league does not choose which cities are to have teams in the top division. For example, Leeds, the fourth-biggest city in England, saw their team relegated in 2004. Leeds will remain without a Premiership team as long as it takes for Leeds United (or in theory any other local club) to do well enough in the second-tier division to win the right to play in the Premiership. Famously, the French Ligue 1 lacked a team from Paris for some years.
Territorial rights are not recognised, and new teams in a geographical location can overtake older ones; in Munich, for example, TSV 1860 München were initially more successful than the city's current biggest team Bayern München [4]. Major cities such as London may have many teams in the professional leagues: for example, it has six teams in the 2006-07 FA Premier League alone.
This system originated in England in 1888 when twelve clubs decided to create a professional Football League. The "closed shop" aspect of baseball's National League was not deemed to be necessary to ensure stability in England because a national English football league did not require the sort of travel commitments that were necessary in the U.S. A secretariat was created to organise and run the Football League. Later lower tiers (divisions) were added.
This system is widely used in football (soccer) around the world, notably in Africa and Latin America as well as Europe. The most notable variation has developed in Latin America where many countries have two league seasons per year. It has historically been used in other team sports to have expanded out of the United Kingdom, such as rugby union and cricket. Even "American" sports such as basketball and ice hockey use the system in European countries where their influence is strong, such as Spain or Lithuania in basketball or Russia in ice hockey.
East Asian countries (Japan, China, South Korea, Taiwan) have a particular differentiation among leagues: "European" sports (soccer, rugby, etc.) use promotion and relegation, while "American" sports (baseball, basketball, etc.) use franchising, with a few differences varying from country to country.
[edit] References
- ^ [Rader, Benjamin G.; 2002; Baseball:A History of America's Game; Second Edition; University of Illinois Press]
- ^ Article discussing the potentially negative affects of franchising on Rugby League
- ^ Spears abandon their Super conquest. Planet Rugby (2006-11-16). Retrieved on 2006-11-22.
- ^ [Bundesliga history http://www.the-shot.com/bundesliga-faq/history-faq/]
[edit] Further reading
- Cain, Louis P. and Haddock, David D.; 2005; 'Similar Economic Histories, Different Industrial Structures: Transatlantic Contrasts in the Evolution of Professional Sports Leagues'; Journal of Economic History 65 (4); pp1116-1147