Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management
During the last century, we have witnessed the birth and evolution of sport as an economic activity, which has created jobs on the one hand, but also problems of management on the other. This process has not been immune from the parti- lar characteristics associated with sport, typically united here more than in other activities: technique, physical effort, entertainment and passion. And all this within a framework of ever-increasing consumption of financial resources. It is not s- prising, therefore, that commonly-used economic models, based on mechanistic approaches, do not provide a viable solution to increasingly complex and incre- ingly frequent problems. Any attempt to apply such an approach in this technical, economic and financial context can only result in failure. The high degree of subj- tivity inherent in sporting activity requires new tools, in which remodeled conc- tual, theoretical and technical elements should play an important role. Complexity, uncertainty and subjectivity are therefore basic to understand, and deal with, the phenomenon of sport. The necessity of resorting to these elements was identified over a quarter of a century ago by a small group of professors and researchers at the University of Barcelona. Together we started the first postgraduate courses and organized se- nars to alert sports centre managers, as well as to make private and public organi- tions aware of the increasing importance of a proper, specific management for sports organizations.
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Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management
During the last century, we have witnessed the birth and evolution of sport as an economic activity, which has created jobs on the one hand, but also problems of management on the other. This process has not been immune from the parti- lar characteristics associated with sport, typically united here more than in other activities: technique, physical effort, entertainment and passion. And all this within a framework of ever-increasing consumption of financial resources. It is not s- prising, therefore, that commonly-used economic models, based on mechanistic approaches, do not provide a viable solution to increasingly complex and incre- ingly frequent problems. Any attempt to apply such an approach in this technical, economic and financial context can only result in failure. The high degree of subj- tivity inherent in sporting activity requires new tools, in which remodeled conc- tual, theoretical and technical elements should play an important role. Complexity, uncertainty and subjectivity are therefore basic to understand, and deal with, the phenomenon of sport. The necessity of resorting to these elements was identified over a quarter of a century ago by a small group of professors and researchers at the University of Barcelona. Together we started the first postgraduate courses and organized se- nars to alert sports centre managers, as well as to make private and public organi- tions aware of the increasing importance of a proper, specific management for sports organizations.
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Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management

Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management

Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management

Optimal Strategies in Sports Economics and Management

Paperback(2010)

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Overview

During the last century, we have witnessed the birth and evolution of sport as an economic activity, which has created jobs on the one hand, but also problems of management on the other. This process has not been immune from the parti- lar characteristics associated with sport, typically united here more than in other activities: technique, physical effort, entertainment and passion. And all this within a framework of ever-increasing consumption of financial resources. It is not s- prising, therefore, that commonly-used economic models, based on mechanistic approaches, do not provide a viable solution to increasingly complex and incre- ingly frequent problems. Any attempt to apply such an approach in this technical, economic and financial context can only result in failure. The high degree of subj- tivity inherent in sporting activity requires new tools, in which remodeled conc- tual, theoretical and technical elements should play an important role. Complexity, uncertainty and subjectivity are therefore basic to understand, and deal with, the phenomenon of sport. The necessity of resorting to these elements was identified over a quarter of a century ago by a small group of professors and researchers at the University of Barcelona. Together we started the first postgraduate courses and organized se- nars to alert sports centre managers, as well as to make private and public organi- tions aware of the increasing importance of a proper, specific management for sports organizations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642441202
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 11/13/2014
Edition description: 2010
Pages: 215
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

Affinity in the Selection of a Player.- Game Systems in Team Sports.- The Impact of the Global Financial Crisis on Sport in North America.- Managing and Modeling the Combination of Resources in Professional Sporting Events.- Governance and Sporting Success of Top 20 Football Clubs After Economic Crisis.- The Stadium Game in an Uncertain Environment: A Preliminary Look at Arena Discourse in Edmonton, Canada.- A Complex Network Approach to Crisis Recovering in Sport Applications.- A Study of Fairness in Fourball Golf Competition.- Can Subsidies Help Buy Success? Revenue Sharing in English Football.- Commercial Football and the Economic Cycle.- Economics of Gambling on Sports: A Multistage Shastic Programming Approach to American Jai Alai Gambling Strategies.
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