The first professional base ball clubs came in two varieties: stock clubs, which paid their players fixed wages, and player cooperatives, in which players shared the proceeds after expenses. We argue that stock clubs were formed with players of known ability, while co-ops were formed with players of unknown ability. Although residual claimancy served to screen out players of inferior ability in co-ops, the process was imperfect due to the team production problem. Based on this argument, we suggest that co-ops functioned as an early minor league system where untried players could seek to prove themselves and eventually move up to wage teams. Empirical analysis of data on player performance and experience in early professional base ball provi...
Baseball emerged as America\u27s first mass popular sport during the period of industrialization. Th...
This dissertation is comprised of three separate papers related to the player labor market and team ...
Most Americans assume that they live under one set of laws which govern everybody. They also think t...
The first professional base ball clubs came in two varieties: stock clubs, which paid their players ...
This inquiry seeks to establish that in the 19th century baseball transitioned from a sport to a bus...
This dissertation claims that from 1879 until the early 1970s organized baseball players labored und...
Baseball has been proudly coined “the national pastime” for nearly its entire existence. The sport e...
Illustration of the members of the Red Stocking Base-Ball Club of Cincinnati, titled "An Old-Time Ba...
As early as the 1880s, baseball owners and sportswriters were decrying the greediness of players as ...
This article examines the creation of the first professional athletic labor market restriction over ...
This paper explores what good organizational strategies baseball teams use to put themselves into th...
The link between team payroll and competitive balance plays a central role in the theory of team spo...
Somewhere in small town America there is a group of young boys with an old tattered ball and a game ...
This article argues that the demise of the Negro Leagues was caused by the confluence of several fac...
The economic literature treating the sports industries has concentrated on a unique institutional re...
Baseball emerged as America\u27s first mass popular sport during the period of industrialization. Th...
This dissertation is comprised of three separate papers related to the player labor market and team ...
Most Americans assume that they live under one set of laws which govern everybody. They also think t...
The first professional base ball clubs came in two varieties: stock clubs, which paid their players ...
This inquiry seeks to establish that in the 19th century baseball transitioned from a sport to a bus...
This dissertation claims that from 1879 until the early 1970s organized baseball players labored und...
Baseball has been proudly coined “the national pastime” for nearly its entire existence. The sport e...
Illustration of the members of the Red Stocking Base-Ball Club of Cincinnati, titled "An Old-Time Ba...
As early as the 1880s, baseball owners and sportswriters were decrying the greediness of players as ...
This article examines the creation of the first professional athletic labor market restriction over ...
This paper explores what good organizational strategies baseball teams use to put themselves into th...
The link between team payroll and competitive balance plays a central role in the theory of team spo...
Somewhere in small town America there is a group of young boys with an old tattered ball and a game ...
This article argues that the demise of the Negro Leagues was caused by the confluence of several fac...
The economic literature treating the sports industries has concentrated on a unique institutional re...
Baseball emerged as America\u27s first mass popular sport during the period of industrialization. Th...
This dissertation is comprised of three separate papers related to the player labor market and team ...
Most Americans assume that they live under one set of laws which govern everybody. They also think t...