Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats

Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats

How Baseball Outlasted the Great Depression

    • 29,99 €
    • 29,99 €

Publisher Description

Organized baseball has survived its share of difficult times, and never was the state of the game more imperiled than during the Great Depression. Or was it? Remarkably, during the economic upheavals of the Depression none of the sixteen Major League Baseball teams folded or moved. In this economist’s look at the sport as a business between 1929 and 1941, David George Surdam argues that although it was a very tough decade for baseball, the downturn didn’t happen immediately. The 1930 season, after the stock market crash, had record attendance. But by 1931 attendance began to fall rapidly, plummeting 40 percent by 1933.

GENRE
Sports & Outdoors
RELEASED
2011
1 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
445
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Nebraska Press
SIZE
8
MB

More Books by David George Surdam

The Postwar Yankees The Postwar Yankees
2008
Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats
2011
Run to Glory and Profits Run to Glory and Profits
2013
Business Ethics from the 19th Century to Today Business Ethics from the 19th Century to Today
2020
Business Ethics from Antiquity to the 19th Century Business Ethics from Antiquity to the 19th Century
2020
The Age of Ruth and Landis The Age of Ruth and Landis
2018