This paper develops a contest model of a professional sports league in which clubs maximize a weighted sum of profits and wins (utility maximization). The model analyzes how more win-orientated behavior of certain clubs affects talent investments, competitive balance and club profits. Moreover, in contrast to traditional models, we show that revenue sharing does not always reduce investment incentives due to the dulling effect. We identify a new effect of revenue sharing called the "sharpening effect". In the presence of the sharpening effect (dulling effect), revenue sharing enhances (reduces) investment incentives and improves (deteriorates
This paper outlines a simple profit-maximization model for a sports league with n teams which explai...
Abstract: This paper investigates revenue sharing in an asymmetric two team contest model of a sport...
National audienceRecent papers have enriched the conventional modeling of teams’ behavior through a ...
This paper develops a contest model of a professional sports league in which clubs maximize a weight...
This paper develops a contest model of a professional sports league in which clubs maximize a weight...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
This short paper, challenging the so-called invariance proposition, argues that, for a general n-tea...
The aim of this article is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a...
The aim of this paper is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a r...
This paper contributes to the debate on revenue sharing by considering the effect of an increase in ...
This paper contributes to the debate on revenue sharing by considering the effect of an increase in ...
This paper investigates revenue sharing in an asymmetric two team contest model of a sports league w...
The aim of this article is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a...
This paper outlines a simple profit-maximization model for a sports league with n teams which explai...
Abstract: This paper investigates revenue sharing in an asymmetric two team contest model of a sport...
National audienceRecent papers have enriched the conventional modeling of teams’ behavior through a ...
This paper develops a contest model of a professional sports league in which clubs maximize a weight...
This paper develops a contest model of a professional sports league in which clubs maximize a weight...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
We employ a model of n heterogenous profit-maximizing clubs to analyze the impact of revenue sharing...
This short paper, challenging the so-called invariance proposition, argues that, for a general n-tea...
The aim of this article is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a...
The aim of this paper is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a r...
This paper contributes to the debate on revenue sharing by considering the effect of an increase in ...
This paper contributes to the debate on revenue sharing by considering the effect of an increase in ...
This paper investigates revenue sharing in an asymmetric two team contest model of a sports league w...
The aim of this article is to clarify the apparent confusion in the literature about the impact of a...
This paper outlines a simple profit-maximization model for a sports league with n teams which explai...
Abstract: This paper investigates revenue sharing in an asymmetric two team contest model of a sport...
National audienceRecent papers have enriched the conventional modeling of teams’ behavior through a ...