Exploiting sport events: Towards a breaking point?
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference abstract in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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Exploiting sport events: Towards a breaking point? / Sterchele, Davide; Velija, Philippa; Wheaton, Belinda; Donnelly, Peter; Doidge, Mark; Evans, Adam B.; Roderick, Martin.
Why Does Sociology Matter? : The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport, 2022. p. 230-230 288.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference abstract in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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TY - ABST
T1 - Exploiting sport events: Towards a breaking point?
AU - Sterchele, Davide
AU - Velija, Philippa
AU - Wheaton, Belinda
AU - Donnelly, Peter
AU - Doidge, Mark
AU - Evans, Adam B.
AU - Roderick, Martin
N1 - (Abstract)
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - What would FIFA be without the World Cup, UEFA without the Champions League, or the IOC without the Olympics?Creating and selling high-demand sport events (with related broadcasting and sponsorship deals) has become the main financial asset for the organisations that control the most popular sports. This has turned sport event ownership, management and marketing into a battlefield for increasingly competing actors. International Governing Bodies, National Leagues and private organisations try to maximise their revenues by multiplying fixtures, introducing new events, and diversifying their formats. Football/soccer has recently offered a range of blatant examples of this trend, such as: the failed attempt by a small group of wealthy clubs to break away from the UEFA Champions League and create a European Super League (Brannagan et al. 2022); European top leagues’ refusal to postpone scheduled fixtures despite many teams being decimated by Covid-19 breakdowns; FIFA’s plans to run the World Cup every two years; UEFA and CONMEBOL’s improvised ‘Finalissima’ between the Copa America winners and Euro 2020 winners.Many other sports follow similar trajectories, e.g.: the introduction and rapid success of the Twenty20 format in cricket, with the Indian Premier League’s events overshadowing traditional Test matches (Gupta 2014); the takeover of the Davis Cup by Gerard Pique’s private company Kosmos Tennis; the creation of the International Swimming League by the Russian-Ukrainian billionaire Konstantin Grigorishin; the emergence of competing events and organisations in the field of lifestyle/action sports (Strittmatter et al 2019) and the subcultural tensions related to the co-optation/incorporation of these once alternative practices within mainstream events such as the Olympics (Thorpe & Wheaton 2019).While competing for (media) audiences and calendar slots, these conflicting sport events become contested political arenas for broader power struggles around the governance and ownership of sports at large, including its private or public nature goods (Donnelly 2015; Gammelsæter 2021).As a result, ever growing numbers of fixtures and events are scattered across increasingly congested calendars to cater for the supposedly unlimited ‘hunger’ of sport fans/viewers. This negatively affects the athletes’ wellbeing and performance, and consequently the spectators’ experience, ultimately eroding and deteriorating the ‘product’ on offer.This scenario raises several questions:• How sustainable is this hyper-exploitation of sport events, before the system reaches a breaking point? (e.g. Can athletes maintain high-standard performance within increasingly frequent events, and with what consequences? Which forms of resistance are they displaying/developing? Will fans’ desire for additional events reach saturation? Which forms of resistance are fans displaying, and will those include viewing/attendance boycotts?)
AB - What would FIFA be without the World Cup, UEFA without the Champions League, or the IOC without the Olympics?Creating and selling high-demand sport events (with related broadcasting and sponsorship deals) has become the main financial asset for the organisations that control the most popular sports. This has turned sport event ownership, management and marketing into a battlefield for increasingly competing actors. International Governing Bodies, National Leagues and private organisations try to maximise their revenues by multiplying fixtures, introducing new events, and diversifying their formats. Football/soccer has recently offered a range of blatant examples of this trend, such as: the failed attempt by a small group of wealthy clubs to break away from the UEFA Champions League and create a European Super League (Brannagan et al. 2022); European top leagues’ refusal to postpone scheduled fixtures despite many teams being decimated by Covid-19 breakdowns; FIFA’s plans to run the World Cup every two years; UEFA and CONMEBOL’s improvised ‘Finalissima’ between the Copa America winners and Euro 2020 winners.Many other sports follow similar trajectories, e.g.: the introduction and rapid success of the Twenty20 format in cricket, with the Indian Premier League’s events overshadowing traditional Test matches (Gupta 2014); the takeover of the Davis Cup by Gerard Pique’s private company Kosmos Tennis; the creation of the International Swimming League by the Russian-Ukrainian billionaire Konstantin Grigorishin; the emergence of competing events and organisations in the field of lifestyle/action sports (Strittmatter et al 2019) and the subcultural tensions related to the co-optation/incorporation of these once alternative practices within mainstream events such as the Olympics (Thorpe & Wheaton 2019).While competing for (media) audiences and calendar slots, these conflicting sport events become contested political arenas for broader power struggles around the governance and ownership of sports at large, including its private or public nature goods (Donnelly 2015; Gammelsæter 2021).As a result, ever growing numbers of fixtures and events are scattered across increasingly congested calendars to cater for the supposedly unlimited ‘hunger’ of sport fans/viewers. This negatively affects the athletes’ wellbeing and performance, and consequently the spectators’ experience, ultimately eroding and deteriorating the ‘product’ on offer.This scenario raises several questions:• How sustainable is this hyper-exploitation of sport events, before the system reaches a breaking point? (e.g. Can athletes maintain high-standard performance within increasingly frequent events, and with what consequences? Which forms of resistance are they displaying/developing? Will fans’ desire for additional events reach saturation? Which forms of resistance are fans displaying, and will those include viewing/attendance boycotts?)
M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings
SP - 230
EP - 230
BT - Why Does Sociology Matter?
PB - European Association for the Sociology of Sport
T2 - EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport
Y2 - 7 June 2022 through 10 June 2022
ER -
ID: 320869492