23,603 results on '"National Hockey League"'
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2. "Soul on Ice": Black Commodification, Race, and the National Hockey League.
- Author
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Cummings, Kia and Burroughs, Benjamin
- Subjects
- *
RACE , *RACISM in sports , *RACE relations , *HOCKEY , *COMMODIFICATION - Abstract
The NHL has a long-standing, problematic relationship with race. The North American sporting and racial climate have brought even more attention to this reality. A notable tactic to counter the accusation of reinforcing racism within sports corporations, including the NHL, is publicly associating themselves with minoritized organizations. This often occurs through formal partnerships or the acquisition of minoritized-founded entities, initiatives, and organizations. This paper considers how salient discourses of race and Blackness are articulated by the hosts and contributors of NHL Studio's Soul on Ice: The Podcast (SOIP) as an acquired NHL entity. The NHL aims to reposition itself on issues of race and the portrayal of Black members within hockey through SOIP. The podcast gives a platform to empower Black voices within White hockey culture but also problematically enmeshes the NHL within the commodification of Black culture and hardship. The acquisition of Soul on Ice: The Podcast by the NHL is used to sanitize and shield the league while reinforcing the normative Whiteness of hockey. Further, the consequences of the leagues' commodification of Blackness and the nuanced experiences of Black NHL players and community members shared via the podcast are unpacked. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. ONCE A FIGHTER, ALWAYS A FIGHTER: WHY CONGRESS OUGHT TO MANDATE RETIREMENT PENSION PLANS FOR COMBAT SPORTS ATHLETES.
- Author
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Brandon Li
- Subjects
COMBAT sports ,PENSION trusts - Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Strategic behaviours in a labour market with mobility-restricting contractual provisions: evidence from the National Hockey League.
- Author
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Fumarco, Luca, Longley, Neil, Palermo, Alberto, and Rossi, Giambattista
- Subjects
FREE agents (Sports) ,LABOR market ,HOCKEY players ,HOCKEY ,TOURNAMENTS - Abstract
We follow workers' performance along an unbalanced panel dataset over multiple years and study how performance varies at the end of fixed-term contracts, in a labour market where some people face a mobility-restricting clause (i.e. a noncompete clause). Focusing on the labour market of the National Hockey League, we analyse players' performance data and contracts with a fixed-effects estimator to address empirical limitations in previous studies. We find that, on average, National Hockey League players' performance does not vary. However, our estimations detect substantially heterogeneous behaviours, depending on tenure, perceived expected performance, and mobility. Only younger players (i.e. restricted free agents) with high expected mobility but low expected performance tend to behave strategically and perform better. Differently, older players (i.e. unrestricted free agents) with high expected mobility tend to underperform, as the option of moving back to European tournaments is more appealing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Achilles Tendon Ruptures in National Hockey League Players: Return to Sport and Performance Impact.
- Author
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Hayes, Emmitt, Meulenkamp, Bradley, Matache, Bogdan, and Pickell, Michael
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HOCKEY injuries ,T-test (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SPORTS re-entry ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ACHILLES tendon rupture ,CASE-control method ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,ATHLETIC ability - Abstract
Background: Few studies assess rates of return to play and postinjury performance in National Hockey League (NHL) players who sustain Achilles tendon ruptures. Our objective was to determine the rate of return to play and performance impact among NHL players who undergo surgical repair of Achilles tendon tears. Methods: NHL players who sustained an Achilles tendon rupture between 2001 and 2021 were identified using a publicly available injury database. Demographic and outcome data were collected for the 1-year period preceding and the 2-year period following surgery. Our primary outcome was expected wins above replacement per 60 minutes played. A position, draft year, and index season performance matched cohort was created. Pre- and postinjury outcomes were compared between cases and controls with a paired t test. Results: We identified 15 cases (9 forwards, 5 defencemen, 1 goaltender). Fourteen of 15 (93%) players returned to play. Preinjury, postinjury year 1, and postinjury year 2 expected wins above replacement were 0.05, 0.05, 0.05 respectively (P >.05). There was no significant difference in performance between cases and controls at any time point. Conclusion: Achilles tendon tears are associated with a high rate of return to play in the NHL and are not associated with a significant change in offensive, defensive, or overall performance-based metrics. Level of Evidence: Level III, case-control study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Spatial roles in hockey special teams.
- Author
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Arsenault, Jonathan, Cunniff, Margaret, Tulsky, Eric, and Forbes, James Richard
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FOOTBALL techniques ,MATRIX decomposition ,NONNEGATIVE matrices ,HOCKEY competitions ,HOCKEY ,ASSIGNMENT problems (Programming) - Abstract
Special teams (i.e. power play and penalty kill) situations play an outsized role in determining the outcome of ice hockey games. Yet, quantitative methods for characterizing special teams tactics are limited. This work focuses on team structure and player deployment during in-zone special teams possessions. Leveraging player and puck tracking data from the National Hockey League (NHL), a framework is developed for describing player positioning during 5-on-4 power play and 4-on-5 penalty kill possessions. More specifically, player roles are defined directly from the player tracking data using non-negative matrix factorization, and every player is allocated a unique role at every frame of tracking data by solving a linear assignment problem. Team formations naturally arise through the combination of roles occupied in a frame. Roles that vary on a per-frame basis allow for a fine-grained analysis of team structure. This property of the roles-based representation is used to group together similar power play possessions using latent Dirichlet allocation, a topic modelling technique. The concept of assignments, which remain constant over an entire possession, is also introduced. Assignments provide a more stable measure of player positioning, which may be preferable when assessing deployment over longer periods of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
7. Analogous Forecasting for Predicting Sport Innovation Diffusion: From Business Analytics to Natural Language Processing.
- Author
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Wanless, Liz and Naraine, Michael L.
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- *
NATURAL language processing , *SPORTS forecasting , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *BUSINESS analytics , *DIFFUSION of innovations theory , *HOCKEY players , *FUTUROLOGISTS - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to analyze the diffusion of one sport innovation to forecast a second. Contextualized within the diffusion of innovations theory, this study investigated cumulative business analytics diffusion as an analog for cumulative natural language processing (NLP) diffusion in professional sport. A total of 89 teams of the 123 teams in the Big Four North American men's professional sport leagues contributed: 21 from the National Football League, 23 from the National Basketball Association, 22 from Major League Baseball, and 23 from the National Hockey League. Utilizing an analogous forecasting approach, a discrete derivation of the Bass model was applied to cumulative BA adoption data. Parameters were then extended to predict cumulative NLP adoption. Resulting BA-estimated parameters (p =.0072, q =.3644) determined a close fit to NLP diffusion (root mean square error of approximation = 3.51, mean absolute error = 2.98), thereby validating BA to predict the takeoff and full adoption of NLP. This study illuminates an ongoing and isomorphic process for diffusion of innovations in the professional sport social system and generates a novel application of diffusion of innovations theory to the sport industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. From Imaginative Experiments to Inventive Performances: On the Role of Creativity in the Developmental Experiences of Professional Ice Hockey Players.
- Author
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Rasmussen, Ludvig Johan Torp and Dalsgaard, Simon Hovesen
- Subjects
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HOCKEY players , *EXPERTISE , *CREATIVE ability , *IMAGINATION , *SEMI-structured interviews , *PROFESSIONAL athletes - Abstract
Despite an increasing interest in studying creativity in sport, previous research has primarily focused on in-game creative performance and employed research designs neglecting sport participants' perspectives. Hence, this study explored professional athletes' developmental experiences involving creativity. Semistructured retrospective interviews were conducted with eight ice hockey players performing in or retired from the National Hockey League, Kontinental Hockey League, or Swedish Hockey League. Players described 15 modalities of creative actions emerging when playing, practicing, and performing. Based on the players' experiences, creativity led to augmented levels of enjoyment (i.e., elicited passion), development (i.e., enhanced potential), achievement (i.e., enriched in-game qualification), and fulfillment (i.e., extended career progression). Findings contribute to a more nuanced understanding of creativity in sport and provide novel insights on the role of creativity in the development and maintenance of expertise in sport and the nature and role of deliberate play and deliberate practice in developing creativity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Fist fighting and increased mortality post-retirement among National Hockey League players
- Author
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Gattie, Jordyn, Goldberg, Mark S., and Villeneuve, Paul J.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
10. PUBLIC SERVICE.
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ADVERTISING art directors , *ADVERTISING agencies , *WEB designers - Published
- 2024
11. Analyses of the impact of laterality on performances in the National Hockey League based on players' position and origin.
- Author
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Grondin, Simon, Rioux, Pier-Alexandre, and Fortin-Guichard, Daniel
- Subjects
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LATERAL dominance , *HOCKEY , *HOCKEY players , *SHOT peening - Abstract
This study addresses the question of the lateral preference of the National Hockey League players. The shooting preference, left or right, was analysed as a function of the origin of four groups of players that are from the USA, Canada, Europe, or Russia. The analysis reveals that the players from the USA are more likely to shoot right than players from other countries. Also, compared to defense players from other groups, defense players from the USA have a higher number of shots per game and a higher goal-to-assist ratio. The study also shows that for wingers shooting left, those playing on the right wing have more goals or points per game than those playing on the left wing; and that European forward players have a better differential (+/−) than American and Canadian forward players. The study reveals the influence of the players' origin on the preference in a bimanual asymmetric task and the impact of this preference on ice hockey performances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Framing Expertise: R. Alan Eagleson and the Toronto Globe and Mail, 1967–1994.
- Author
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Barry, Taryn W. and Mason, Daniel S.
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HOCKEY ,HOCKEY players ,SPORTS agents ,ATHLETES - Abstract
R. Alan Eagleson, Executive Director of the National Hockey League Players' Association from 1967 to 1992, had a major impact on the business of hockey. Although he was suspected of conflicts of interest, questioned for unethical behaviour towards athletes and was eventually indicted by the FBI in 1994 on multiple charges, Eagleson remained in his position of power over 20 years. This study used media framing to reveal that Eagleson's expertise was one of the origins of his extensive power and why he was seen as the best candidate to protect and advocate for the rights of NHL players. The expertise frame was the only frame to emerge in newspaper coverage in Toronto's The Globe and Mail consistently throughout Eagleson's tenure, even when his power was challenged. However, there was a noticeable decrease in the use of the expertise frame once the FBI investigation was made public in 1991. This study revealed that a finite number of journalists deployed the framing elements, and the perception of his expertise may have played a role in how he was able to maintain power and influence in the sport for so long, despite allegations of conflicts of interest and criminal activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Work Style Diversity and Diffusion Within and Across Organizations: Evidence from Soviet-Style Hockey.
- Author
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Amodio, Francesco, Hoey, Sam, and Schneider, Jeremy
- Subjects
HOCKEY players ,HOCKEY ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,TEAMS in the workplace - Abstract
Does the arrival of culturally diverse workers affect the work style of incumbent workers? We examine how the large influx of Russian hockey players in the National Hockey League after 1989 affected North American–born players. The Soviet style of hockey was largely based on skilled skating, constant movement, circling, and passing. In contrast, the North American play was more individualistic and linear, with higher emphasis on physical strength and aggressive behavior. Using 50 years of data at the player-game level, we show that (i) the number of penalty minutes per game increases steadily from 1970 to 1989, but decreases thereafter; (ii) although Russian players get systematically fewer penalty minutes in and after 1989, the trend reversal is driven by North American–born players; and (iii) the number of penalty minutes per game of North American–born players decreases systematically with the number of Russian players on their team and on the opposing team. Evidence shows that the hockey style brought about by Russian players was adopted and diffused within and across North American teams and players. This paper was accepted by Lamar Pierce, organizations. Supplemental Material: Data and the online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4808. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. THE UNKNOWN DRUG DEALERS IN THE NHL: NHL PLAYERS, DRUG ADDICTION, AND THE NEED FOR REGULATION OF PRESCRIPTIVE DRUG USE IN THE NHL.
- Author
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O'Brien, Keith
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE bargaining ,DRUG abuse ,ANALGESICS - Abstract
The article examines the pervasive issue of painkiller addiction among NHL (National Hockey League) players, which is exacerbated by a league culture that valorizes playing through injuries. It highlights the shortcomings of the current Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) in managing and regulating prescription drug use, alongside the inadequate oversight and accountability from the NHL and regulatory bodies like OSHA (Occupational Safety & Health Administration).
- Published
- 2024
15. Analysis of Player Performance and Financial Costs Associated With Implementation of an Updated National Hockey League Concussion Protocol: A Retrospective Comparative Study.
- Author
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Gaudiani, Michael A., Castle, Joshua P., Wolterink, Trevor D., Sprys-Tellner, Thomas J., Haan, Jager W., and Lynch, T. Sean
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of athletes ,MEDICAL protocols ,HOCKEY injuries ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,WAGES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,MANN Whitney U Test ,SPORTS re-entry ,STATISTICS ,ATHLETIC ability ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,BRAIN concussion ,ATHLETIC associations ,DISEASE incidence ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: An updated National Hockey League (NHL) concussion protocol (NHLCP) was established in the 2016-2017 season to mitigate the negative outcomes of sport-related concussions. However, few studies on the effects of implementing the NHLCP have been performed. Purpose: To define concussion incidence and investigate differences in NHL player performance after a concussion during periods before and after NHLCP implementation and assess the financial impact on NHL teams associated with NHLCP implementation. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3 Methods: This was a retrospective review of NHL players who sustained a concussion before (2000-2001 to 2015-2016 seasons) and after (2016-2017 to 2020-2021 seasons) implementing the NHLCP (pre-NHLCP and post-NHLCP groups). For each group, multiple performance metrics—including 30 days, 1 season, and 3 seasons before and after concussion—were compared for both groups. Return to play, total concussion cost, and association of return to play with cost were investigated using regression analysis. Results: A total of 452 players (423 skaters, 29 goalies) sustained concussions during the study period, including 331 players (315 skaters, 16 goalies) in the pre-NHLCP group and 121 players (108 skaters, 13 goalies) in the post-NHLCP group. For both groups, no significant differences in standard performance were observed during the 30-day and 1-season periods before and after concussion. The mean return to play was significantly higher in the pre-NHLCP group than in the post-NHLCP group (20.1 vs 15.7 days; P = .022). The mean adjusted player salary was not different between groups; nonetheless, the mean adjusted replacement player salary was significantly higher in the post-NHLCP group ($744,505 vs $896,942; P = .032). The mean cost of time missed did not differ between groups. The mean return to play time significantly decreased over the entire study period (R² = 0.33; P = .005), and the mean return to play time was positively associated with cost R² = 0.215; P = .030). Conclusion: Concussion incidence did not change after implementation of the updated NHLCP; nonetheless, players had significantly less missed time from injury after protocol implementation. Changes in player performance 30 days and 1 year before and after concussion injury were not different before and after NHLCP implementation. No differences were found in the financial cost of concussions between the pre- and post-NHLCP groups, and missed time was significantly correlated with mean cost from missed time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The impact of COVID-19 on national hockey league players' return to play.
- Author
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Lyng, Jasmine, Morissette, Marc, Ogborn, Dan, Leiter, Jeff, MacDonald, Peter, and Longstaffe, Robert
- Subjects
SPORTS re-entry ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,HOCKEY players ,HOCKEY - Abstract
Evaluate the on-ice performance and return to play (RTP) rate following COVID-19 for National Hockey League (NHL) players during the 2020–21 season. Players with COVID-19 during the abbreviated 2020–21 season were identified using publicly accessible online sources. Demographics and on-ice metrics were accessed using the NHL's online statistics website. The length of time, rate of RTP, and games missed due to COVID-19 were analyzed. Primary outcomes included average time on ice (TOI) per game (TOI/G), average TOI per shift (TOI/S), and points per game (PPG) compared at different timepoints including pre- and post-COVID-19. A total of 73 players (47 forwards, 18 defensemen, 8 goalies) had a documented COVID-19 diagnosis during the abbreviated 2020–21 season. Players missed an average of 5.6 games (14.7 days) due to COVID-19. The post-COVID-19 RTP rate was 97.3%, including playoffs. No differences were found in TOI/G between the pre- (15.7 ± 3.9 min) and post-COVID-19 (15.8 ± 3.4 min, p = 0.874) or in the first (15.8 ± 4.0 min) and second week (15.9 ± 3.8 min, p = 0.925) returned. TOI/shift did not change from pre- (45.6 ± 5.3 sec) to post-COVID-19 (46.7 ± 4.6 sec, p = 0.035) or in first (46.2 ± 5.4 sec) and second week post-COVID-19 (46.2 ± 4.8 sec, p =.854). No differences were identified for PPG between career, pre-COVID-19, and post-COVID-19 (0.44 vs 0.38 vs 0.41; p = 0.274). RTP post-COVID was markedly high for NHL players. While the effects of COVID-19 on specific physiological measures remains to be elucidated, this study found NHL players do not have reduced performance following COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A Comprehensive Data Pipeline for Comparing the Effects of Momentum on Sports Leagues.
- Author
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Noel, Jordan Truman Paul, Prado da Fonseca, Vinicius, and Soares, Amilcar
- Subjects
ATHLETIC leagues ,BASKETBALL ,SPORTS sciences ,SOCCER ,MOMENTUM transfer ,HOCKEY ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
Momentum has been a consistently studied aspect of sports science for decades. Among the established literature, there has, at times, been a discrepancy between conclusions. However, if momentum is indeed an actual phenomenon, it would affect all aspects of sports, from player evaluation to pre-game prediction and betting. Therefore, using momentum-based features that quantify a team's linear trend of play, we develop a data pipeline that uses a small sample of recent games to assess teams' quality of play and measure the predictive power of momentum-based features versus the predictive power of more traditional frequency-based features across several leagues using several machine learning techniques. More precisely, we use our pipeline to determine the differences in the predictive power of momentum-based features and standard statistical features for the National Hockey League (NHL), National Basketball Association (NBA), and five major first-division European football leagues. Our findings show little evidence that momentum has superior predictive power in the NBA. Still, we found some instances of the effects of momentum on the NHL that produced better pre-game predictors, whereas we view a similar trend in European football/soccer. Our results indicate that momentum-based features combined with frequency-based features could improve pre-game prediction models and that, in the future, momentum should be studied more from a feature/performance indicator point-of-view and less from the view of the dependence of sequential outcomes, thus attempting to distance momentum from the binary view of winning and losing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Hockey Card Statistics Are Stagnant and Stale.
- Author
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Chernoff, Egan J.
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY cards , *HOCKEY competitions , *TRADING cards , *STATISTICS , *HOCKEY players - Abstract
The purchase of a coffee at a Canadian institution, Tim Hortons, turned into an informal investigation into hockey card statistics. Turns out, hockey card statistics are stagnant and stale. This was disappointing to see because the game of hockey has changed, and the statistics used to keep track of the game have changed. Even the cards have changed. Well, not the back of the cards, which do not well enough paint a statistical picture of the hockey player photographed on the front of the card. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. MISSING THE MARK: HOW LEGISLATIVE ADJUSTMENTS TO THE DISPARAGEMENT CLAUSE COULD PROMOTE THE REVOCATION OF TRADEMARKS FOR PROFESSIONAL SPORTING TEAMS REFERENCING NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURE.
- Author
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Ospina, Laura
- Subjects
TRADEMARK cancellation ,SPORTS teams ,NATIVE Americans ,TRADEMARKS ,SPORTS sponsorship - Published
- 2024
20. "Fuelled by Passion": Obsessive Passion Amplifies Positive and Negative Feelings Throughout a Hockey Playoff Series.
- Author
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Schellenberg, Benjamin J.I. and Verner-Filion, Jérémie
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY playoffs , *SPORTS spectators , *HOCKEY , *MULTILEVEL models - Abstract
Previous research has shown that the highs and lows of sport fandom are more extreme for fans with strong levels of obsessive passion. The authors tested if this amplification effect applied to how hockey fans felt throughout a National Hockey League (NHL) playoff series. Fans of the Winnipeg Jets (N = 57) reported levels of harmonious and obsessive passion prior to the start of the 2019 NHL playoffs and then reported their feelings the day after each game of the first playoff round. The results supported the amplification hypothesis by showing that the impact of game result on both positive and negative feelings the day after a game was more extreme for fans with high obsessive passion. This moderating effect, however, appeared to be driven primarily by responses to losses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Negotiating the New Urban Sporting Territory: Policing, Settler Colonialism, and Edmonton's Ice District.
- Author
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Scherer, Jay, Davidson, Judy, Kafara, Rylan, and Koch, Jordan
- Subjects
- *
COLONIES , *WHITE supremacy , *HOCKEY , *POLICE , *ICE , *HISTORY of sports , *GENTRIFICATION - Abstract
The new urban sporting territory in Edmonton's city center was constructed within the framework of continued settler colonialism. The main catalyst for this development was sport-related gentrification: a new, publicly financed ice hockey arena for the National Hockey League's Edmonton Oilers, and a surrounding sport and entertainment district. This two-year ethnography explores this territory, in particular the changing interactions between preexisting, less affluent city-center residents and police, private security, crisis workers, and hockey fans. It reveals how residents navigate the physical and spatial changes to a downtown that are not only structured by revanchism, but by what Rai Reece calls "carceral redlining," or the continuation of White supremacy through regulation, surveillance, displacement, and dispossession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Honda and National Hockey League Renew Longstanding Partnership
- Subjects
ESPN Inc. ,Transportation equipment industry ,Fuel cells ,Consumer electronics ,Sports associations ,Electronics industry ,Professional hockey ,Fuel cell industry ,Automobiles, Electric ,Electronics industry ,Automobile industry ,National Hockey League - Abstract
Key Highlights: * Honda aims for carbon neutrality for all products and corporate activities by 2050. * Honda plans to have battery-electric and fuel cell electric vehicles represent 100% of [...]
- Published
- 2025
23. The Making of the 1976 Canada Cup: Power Plays, Hockey Diplomacy, and the Rise of Alan Eagleson.
- Author
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Scherer, Jay
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY competitions , *COLD War, 1945-1991 ,CANADA Cup (Hockey) - Abstract
In 1976, amidst a period of détente in the Cold War, the Government of Canada officially hosted an inaugural open-play invitational ice hockey tournament. A detailed narration of these events, pieced together from archival sources, allows scholars to understand the negotiations to prepare the political terrain for the event, including efforts to secure the official endorsement of the International Ice Hockey Federation for a tournament sponsored by the Government of Canada in exchange for Canada's return to international competition in 1977; the participation of various countries and their respective hockey governing bodies, especially the Soviet Union, in an international tournament featuring professional players; and an agreement with the North American professional hockey cartels, especially the National Hockey League, to allow star players to participate in the event. The success of the 1976 Canada Cup accelerated the commodification and commercialization of hockey both in North America and globally—a process that was increasingly driven by the interests and aspirations of the National Hockey League. At the center of this history is one increasingly powerful—and avaricious—character: Alan Eagleson. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Safety versus Compensation for Professional Athletes Who Face the Prospect of Career-Ending Injuries: An Economic Risk Analysis.
- Author
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Rockerbie, Duane
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL athletes ,RISK assessment ,MEDICAL protocols ,WOUNDS & injuries ,RISK aversion ,ECONOMIC models - Abstract
The National Football League and National Hockey League have instituted several rule changes, equipment improvements and medical protocols in response to the frequency of serious career-ending injuries. These two professional leagues and others have litigated lawsuits by former players who have sought financial compensation. This paper constructs a simple economic model of a risk averse athlete who faces the uncertain prospect of a career-ending injury. Improving the athlete's welfare can be accomplished by reducing the probability of a serious injury or providing increased compensation in the event of such an injury. The net marginal preference for safety is high in sports with moderate to high probabilities of serious injury. Compensation plans are favored in sports with moderate to low probabilities. Significant increases in player salaries have little effect on a players net marginal preference for safety. These results are robust to constant or decreasing absolute risk aversion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. And the award goes to...the Matthew Effect: Examining external status as a predictor of productivity and opportunity.
- Author
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Contini, Molly E. and Spence, Jeffrey R.
- Subjects
- *
MATTHEW effect , *AWARDS , *RESEARCH questions , *AWARD winners - Abstract
It has been suggested that increased status that comes from being an award winner can generate enduring advantages that compound over one's career via the Matthew Effect. However, research in this area has yielded conflicting results and has been unable to isolate the unique effect of status on career outcomes from the positive endogenous characteristics of award winners. In the current research, we attempt to address previous research limitations and examine if winning an award is associated with career outcomes (i.e., opportunities and productivity) irrespective of individual productivity levels prior to receiving an award. We examined our research questions using observational data of National Hockey League (NHL) league championship winners and non-winners (N = 427). By using a team award and several different analytic approaches we were able to examine the unique effects of affiliation-based external status, generated from an award win, on career outcomes. Our results generally show support for the Matthew Effect and suggest that affiliation-based external status, achieved by an award win, provides access to increased opportunities, which ultimately results in more productivity. We discuss the importance of incorporating opportunity and investigating its role in the cumulative advantage process and implications of the results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. An Analysis of National Hockey League Playoff Games and City-Level Crime Counts.
- Author
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Block, Kristina and Kaplan, Jacob
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY playoffs , *RIOTS , *OFFENSES against property , *HOCKEY competitions , *CRIME , *PROFESSIONAL sports - Abstract
Past research indicates that when professional sports games are played, crime increases. Yet, little is known about how playoff games affect crime. As many criminal events associated with sports games, such as riots, occur during playoff games, this is an important gap in the literature. Using data from 15 National Hockey League (NHL) teams from 2013 through 2019, we examine how assault, disorder, and property crimes change when playoff games are played at home relative to when they are played away. We find that during home games there are 7% more disorder crimes and 4% more property crimes than during away games which suggests that city responses to playoff hockey games should prioritize crime reduction strategies to improve public safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Fighting in professional ice hockey: it's time for a change.
- Author
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Plassche, Grace C., Fortney, Thomas A., Morrissette, Cole, Korzelius, John F., and Popkin, Charles A.
- Subjects
HOCKEY ,ATHLETES' health ,TICKET sales ,IMPULSE (Physics) ,BRAIN concussion ,HIGH school athletes - Abstract
Ice hockey has long been defined by a level of violence not seen in other sports. The rough-and-tough vigilante nature of the game was often employed as a method of enticing fans. Play in the National Hockey League (NHL) evolved throughout the 20
th century as the rules governing it did. The nuances of what was allowed on the ice was slowly defined, but the league always fell short of an outright ban on fighting. Notably, the NHL allows fighting while international and Olympic leagues do not. Proponents of fighting's continued presence in the NHL argue that it can attract fans, facilitate momentum changes, help win games, and allows for social regulation on the ice. However, analyses of these theories have found little definitive evidence, calling the utility of fighting into question. The economics of fighting in hockey reveal high salary payouts, increased cost of injury, and a lack of correlation with ticket sales. Additionally, there is a concern for concussions sustained during fighting which has the potential for long term, detrimental mental health effects for athletes. In this analysis, we explore the history and evolution of fighting in the NHL, as well as the reasons behind its continued presence in the game, the risks associated with fighting, and the economics behind it all. Based upon these bodies of evidence, we make a proposal regarding the future of fighting in the NHL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. An Analysis of Violence and Performance Factors' Influence on National Hockey League Attendance: A Conceptual Analysis of Hedonic Consumption.
- Author
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Miller, John J. and Davis, Mark A.
- Subjects
- *
CORRUPTION , *ORGANIZATIONAL behavior , *VIOLENCE , *PLEASURE , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *CONSUMER attitudes , *PROFESSIONAL athletes , *HOCKEY , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *PUNISHMENT , *ATHLETIC ability , *DATA analysis software , *ATHLETIC associations , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *PROFESSIONAL sports - Abstract
When evaluating the sport industry, hedonic motives lead individuals to be attracted to the actions of a particular sport or team. When individuals attend sports games, they tend to lose their inhibitions, escape the stresses of everyday life, or find immediate pleasure which are considered forms of hedonic motivation. Previous studies have indicated that fans choose to attend games due to expectations of good offensive and defensive performances. Additional studies have suggested that aggression in sports games may hedonically motivate spectators to attend because they find aggressive acts in sports pleasing and exciting. Thus, the purpose of this inferential study was to analyze whether elements of team offensive performance, defensive performance, or aggressive player actions hedonically motivated fans to attend NHL games between the 2010-2011 and 2019- 2020 seasons. A hierarchal multiple regression analysis was performed to determine if the independent variables of wins, goals, minor and major penalties, game misconduct or fighting major could predict NHL attendance. The first block of the hierarchal analysis revealed that the model explained 7.4% of the variation in NHL attendance. However, only the factors of goals scored, and game misconduct revealed to be a significant influence on attendance. The second block of the hierarchal analysis revealed that the model represented 8.7% of the variation in attendance. The second block showed that only goals scored, and game misconduct directly influenced attendance. The results illustrated that hedonic reasons such as scoring a goal and game misconduct due to fighting motivated spectators to attend NHL games. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
29. CHARLES F. ADAMS: BREAKAWAY SUCCESS.
- Author
-
DANIEL, AL and LERNER, BENJAMIN
- Subjects
SPORTSCASTERS - Published
- 2024
30. The spectacle of settler colonial urbanism, racialized policing, and Indigenous refusal of white possessive logics.
- Author
-
Scherer, Jay, Kafara, Rylan, and Koch, Jordan
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *RACISM , *COLONIES , *POLICE , *FUEL cycle , *PUBLIC spaces , *SPORTS spectators - Abstract
In this article, we explore how the underlying logics of white possession continue to fuel a cycle of state-supported territorial acquisition, enclosure, and expulsion in Edmonton, Alberta's city center through the recent opening of Rogers Place, a publicly financed $613.7-million arena and home of the National Hockey League's (NHL) Edmonton Oilers. Drawing from a two-year ethnography, we examine how men's professional hockey and its related land development projects are powerful mechanisms for bringing a new iteration of settler colonialism to the city, including as hockey fans re-enact a historical racial hierarchy that privileges certain lives over others, and as police enforce this racial project of accumulation and its colonial lines of force with impunity. Our research, moreover, challenges common-sense ideas about the benefits of sports-driven downtown redevelopment, as well as the widespread belief that settler colonialism is an event of the past that occurred outside of cities. Finally, as settlers renew and reproduce lines of power through these processes, we also explore the various ways in which city-center residents refuse white possessive logics in their attempts to transcend the limits of 'settler-colonial city-making' and policing, 'producing urban space in their own right.'1 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Mass gatherings contributed to early COVID‐19 mortality: Evidence from US sports.
- Author
-
Ahammer, Alexander, Halla, Martin, and Lackner, Mario
- Subjects
BASKETBALL ,COVID-19 ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,HOCKEY competitions ,SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
Social distancing is important to slow the community spread of infectious disease, but it creates enormous economic and social cost. Thus, it is important to quantify the benefits of different measures. We study the ban of mass gatherings, an intervention with comparably low cost. We exploit exogenous variation in the number of National Basketball Association and National Hockey League games, which arises due to the leagues' predetermined schedules, and the sudden suspension of the 2019–2020 seasons. We find that, among clusters of counties that are adjacent to sports venues, each additional mass gathering increased the cumulative number of COVID‐19 deaths by 10.3%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. THE PUCK STOPS HERE: A LEGAL ARGUMENT FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A DOMESTIC VIOLENCE POLICY IN THE NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE.
- Author
-
CANNON, SARAH E.
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,COLLECTIVE labor agreements ,HOCKEY players ,MISCONDUCT in sports - Abstract
Nearly a decade after the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, and Major League Baseball established their domestic violence policies, the National Hockey League (NHL) inexplicably remains the only major professional sports league in the United States without a league-specific policy. While the NHL and the NHL Players' Association do incorporate a provision regulating off-ice conduct in their collective bargaining agreement, the current provision is highly discretionary, overly vague, and ultimately insufficient to properly protect both survivors and accused players. Domestic violence and sexual misconduct remain urgent issues in professional sports, and it is essential for the NHL to establish a leaguespecific policy. The NHL must codify a domestic violence policy in its collective bargaining agreement to ensure justice for survivors and fair process for accused players, following the lead of the other major sports leagues. This Comment evaluates the inadequacy of both available judicial remedies for survivors and the league's current regulation of off-ice player conduct. It concludes by providing policy recommendations for drafting an NHL-specific domestic violence policy based on a comparative analysis of existing major professional league policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Estimation of player aging curves using regression and imputation.
- Author
-
Schuckers, Michael, Lopez, Michael, and Macdonald, Brian
- Subjects
- *
STANDARD deviations , *MISSING data (Statistics) - Abstract
The impact of age on performance is a fundamental component to models of player valuation and prediction across sport. Age effects are typically measured using age curves, which reflect the expected average performance at each age among all players that are eligible to participate. Most age curve methods, however, ignore the reality that age likewise influences which players receive opportunities to perform. In this paper we begin by highlighting how selection bias is linked to the ages in which we observe players perform. Next, using underlying distributions of how players move in and out of sport organizations, we assess the performance of various methods for age curve estimation under the selection bias of player entry and issues of small samples at younger and older ages. We propose several methods for player age curve estimation, introduce a missing data framework, and compare these new methods to more familiar approaches including both parametric and semi-parametric modeling. We then use simulations to compare several approaches for estimating aging curves. Imputation-based methods, as well as models that account for individual player skill, tend to generate lower root mean squared error (RMSE) and age curve shapes that better match the truth. We implement our approach using data from the National Hockey League. All of the data and code for this paper are available in a Github repository. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Achievement Despite Adversity: A Qualitative Investigation of Undrafted National Hockey League Players.
- Author
-
Herbison, Jordan D., Martin, Luc J., and Sarkar, Mustafa
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY players , *SEMI-structured interviews , *ELITE athletes , *PROFESSIONAL athletes , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
Adversity is viewed as both an inevitable and an important experience for elite athletes. The purpose of this study was to explore elite athletes' perceptions of the experiences and characteristics that helped them overcome a shared sport-specific adversity. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 12 professional athletes (Mage = 27.25, SD = 3.28 yr) who had progressed to careers in the National Hockey League (NHL) despite not being selected in the annual amateur entry draft. Participants discussed their long-term objectives of playing in the NHL, previous experiences with adversity, certain psychological characteristics that facilitated their progression (e.g., competitiveness, passion, confidence), and the significance of social support as key factors that helped them overcome the initial and subsequent adversities associated with being unselected during the amateur entry draft. Practical implications and proposed avenues for future research are discussed in the context of the study's limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. When Culture Meets Capital: Commercialism, National Identity, and Vancouver's Initial Attempt to Join the NHL.
- Author
-
Wong, John and Jedlicka, Scott R.
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY , *BIDDERS , *MINOR league hockey , *NATIONALISM - Abstract
In 1966, the National Hockey League (NHL) expanded for the first time since the 1920s, doubling its size from six teams to twelve. Although hockey was still perceived as a distinctly Canadian passion, none of the NHL's six new teams were located in Canada. The disappointment across the country was palpable, especially in Canada's third-largest city, Vancouver, which had applied to be one of the expansion locations. A stable presence in minor league hockey on Canada's west coast for decades, it seemed only natural that Vancouver, as the lone bidder from the ostensible birthplace of ice hockey, would be tapped for NHL expansion. This paper examines Vancouver's attempted entry into the NHL and argues that the forces of commercialism and national identity, combined with political maneuvering among NHL owners, not only influenced the content and trajectory of the Vancouver bid, but also contributed to its ultimate failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Beautiful Game Rises in the United States: Interview With Roger Bennett, Cohost of Men in Blazers.
- Author
-
Zimmerman, Matthew and Burch, Lauren
- Subjects
- BENNETT, Roger, MEN in Blazers (TV program), DAVIES, Michael, NATIONAL Football League, NATIONAL Hockey League
- Abstract
The article presents an interview with the Roger Bennett, Cohost of Men in Blazers, a weekly podcast. Topics discussed include information on the popularity of the television program, Men in Blazers in the U.S. market; discussions on the Michael Davies, television producer and Bennett having an understanding of European football and culture; and the explains their love for European football and English football including National Football League and National Hockey League.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. EA SPORTS[TM] NHL[R] 25 Reveals Major Holiday Update Featuring Professional Women's Hockey League, New NHL Arcade Series, and 4 Nations Face-Off
- Subjects
Electronic Arts Inc. ,Businesswomen ,Hockey -- California -- Canada -- United States ,Computer software industry ,Sports associations ,Working women ,Business ,Business, international ,National Hockey League - Abstract
PWHL Update in NHL 25 Continues EA SPORTS Commitment to Grow and Champion Women's Sports Through Its Games REDWOOD CITY, Calif. -- Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ: EA) today announced a [...]
- Published
- 2024
38. Norwegian Cruise Line Named Official Cruise Line of the National Hockey League
- Subjects
ESPN Inc. ,Cable television broadcasting industry ,National Hockey League - Abstract
ENPNewswire-October 9, 2024--Norwegian Cruise Line Named Official Cruise Line of the National Hockey League (C)2024 ENPublishing - http://www.enpublishing.co.uk Release date- 08102024 - Miami -Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL), the innovator in [...]
- Published
- 2024
39. 'ECHL Unfiltered' Docuseries to Release on FloSports
- Subjects
Sports associations ,Professional hockey ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary ,National Hockey League - Abstract
SHREWSBURY, N.J: GameAbove has issued the following news release: The ECHL and GameAbove Entertainment today announced the upcoming streaming release of ECHL Unfiltered, a new sports docuseries that focuses on [...]
- Published
- 2024
40. ECHL and GameAbove Entertainment Partner on 'ECHL Unfiltered' Docuseries
- Subjects
Sports associations ,Professional hockey ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary ,National Hockey League - Abstract
SHREWSBURY, N.J: GameAbove has issued the following news release: The ECHL and GameAbove Entertainment today announced the upcoming release of ECHL Unfiltered, a new sports docuseries that focuses on the [...]
- Published
- 2024
41. ECHL and GameAbove Entertainment Partner on 'ECHL Unfiltered' Docuseries
- Subjects
Sports associations ,Professional hockey ,Business ,News, opinion and commentary ,National Hockey League - Abstract
Set to premiere Sunday, September 29 on NHL Network SHREWSBURY, N.J., Sept. 25, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The ECHL and GameAbove Entertainment today announced the upcoming release of ECHL Unfiltered, a [...]
- Published
- 2024
42. The Stanley Cup Fuels Partnership for Youth Sports and Supports Girls Empowerment Through NHL Foundation's Grant Program
- Subjects
Stanley Cup (Hockey) ,Hockey -- California ,Hockey players ,Teenagers ,Youth ,Charitable foundations ,Business ,Business, international ,National Hockey League - Abstract
PLEASANTON, Calif. -- NHL Foundation U.S., Inc. (NHL Foundation[TM]) and the Medea Charitable Foundation (MCF) joined forces to showcase the iconic Stanley Cup[R] in a powerful fundraising initiative in support [...]
- Published
- 2024
43. On the Clock: Calgary Flames : Behind the Scenes with the Calgary Flames at the NHL Draft
- Subjects
- Calgary Flames (Hockey team), National Hockey League, Hockey players--Alberta--Calgary, SPORTS & RECREATION / Winter Sports / Hockey, SPORTS & RECREATION / Business Aspects
- Abstract
Go behind the scenes with the Calgary Flames at the NHL draft A singular, transcendent talent can change the fortunes of a hockey team instantly. Each year, NHL teams approach the draft with this knowledge, hoping that luck will be on their side and that their extensive scouting and analysis will pay off.In On the Clock: Calgary Flames, Ryan Pike explores the fascinating, rollercoaster history of the Flames at the draft, including tales of legends like Al MacInnis and Gary Suter, plus newer faces like Andrew Mangiapane. Readers will go behind the scenes with top decision-makers as they evaluate, deliberate, and ultimately make the picks they hope will tip the fate of their franchise toward success.From seemingly surefire first-rounders to surprising late selections and the ones that got away, this is a must-read for Calgary faithful and hockey fans eager for a glimpse at how teams are built.
- Published
- 2024
44. TIME FOR THE NFL TO BECOME A TEAM PLAYER: How CHANGES IN THE COLLEGE SPORTS LANDSCAPE MAY REQUIRE THE LEAGUE TO FINALLY CONTRIBUTE FINANCIALLY TO PLAYER DEVELOPMENT.
- Author
-
Kutzner, Grifin
- Subjects
COLLEGE sports - Published
- 2023
45. "EIGHTEEN MILLION OVER": THE NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE'S LONG TERM INJURED RESERVE PARITY CHALLENGE.
- Author
-
HOROWITZ, BERNARD and LUTHER, ROBERT
- Subjects
SALARY caps in sports ,SPORTS teams ,HOCKEY players ,LONG-term athlete development - Abstract
The article focuses on the National Hockey League's (NHL) Long-Term Injured Reserve (LTIR) rules and their impact on salary cap management and competitive parity among teams. It explores the liability that the NHL faces due to the appearance of LTIR rule exploitation and unequal outcomes among teams. It further suggests possible remedies to address the issue, such as reducing LTIR cap benefits for teams that designate players in their mid-thirties or older.
- Published
- 2023
46. FAMOUS BLACK CANADIANS.
- Author
-
Raheli
- Subjects
BLACK Canadians ,AFRICAN American women ,AFRICAN American hockey players ,RACIAL differences - Abstract
The article focuses on famous Black Canadians and highlights the stories of Viola Desmond, the first Black woman to be displayed on Canadian currency, and Willie O'Ree, the first Black hockey player in the National Hockey League (NHL). Topics include Viola Desmond's fight against racial segregation and Willie O'Ree's perseverance despite vision loss.
- Published
- 2023
47. The specialization of informal social control in a selective community: Fighting in the National Hockey League from 1947 to 2019.
- Author
-
Sirianni, Antonio D
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL control , *PROSOCIAL behavior , *ELITE (Social sciences) , *HOCKEY , *COLLECTIVE action , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Decentralized sanctioning arises from a demand for governance that is not adequately provided by the state or another strong and centralized institution. While the dynamics of collective action and sanctioning have been well-examined theoretically, experimentally, and empirically, this work typically assumes community membership is a given. In selective or elite communities, pro-social behavior of one kind or another may be a prerequisite of community membership, which may create perverse incentives for the implementation of peer-sanctions. This article quantitatively examines this phenomenon in the case of professional ice hockey, a highly selective community where fist-fighting between players has long existed as a form of self-help for players to address rule infractions or violent play otherwise unaddressed by officials. An empirical examination of over 70 years of player statistics and play-by-play data from the National Hockey League shows not only the evolution of this system from one of peer-sanctioning to one of specialized-sanctioning, as might be predicted from experimental results showing the favorability and efficacy of more centralized punishment regimes, but also reveals how specialization has led to self-serving sanctions. Less-skilled players who are presumably hired to fight are disproportionately likely to participate in fights that appear to occur for non-retaliatory reasons, and more likely to fight one another in a bid to maintain their status and reputation as sanctioners, and consequently their membership in an elite community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Consumption determinants in the National Hockey League: the influence of violence in the USA and Canada.
- Author
-
Traugutt, Alexander, Greenhalgh, Gregory P., Goebert, Chad, Broda, Michael D., and Havard, Cody T.
- Subjects
HOCKEY ,VIOLENCE ,CONSUMER behavior ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,REGRESSION analysis ,VIOLENCE in the workplace - Abstract
The National Hockey League is aligned in such a way that it must present its product to large audiences in two countries. Given the difficulty of such a marketing effort, this study sought to determine the impact that violence, as measured by fighting, has on consumption. Separate demand models were estimated for attendance and viewership in the USA and Canada via Tobit and OLS regression models. Results from the various models indicated that the promotion of violence should not be considered a viable strategy for increasing consumption. More specifically, while fighting was found to be a positive predictor of attendance in all models, its impact was minimal. From a viewership perspective, fighting was not found to be a significant predictor in either market. Given the evolving nature of consumer preferences, these results are particularly salient to marketers seeking to develop strategies that are relevant to the current marketplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ecological Modernization and the 2014 NHL Sustainability Report.
- Author
-
Johnson, Jay and Ali, Adam Ehsan
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL modernization , *SPORTS & the environment , *SUSTAINABLE development , *SOCIAL responsibility of business - Abstract
In December 2015, the National Hockey League (NHL) was invited to present on a special sport panel showcasing the green leaders of the sport industry, which was hosted as part of the COP 21 United Nations climate change talks in Paris. The NHL has won numerous awards for its environmental initiatives over the last number of years, arguably the most important of which was the release of its 2014 Sustainability Report (SR), where it highlighted its carbon footprint, water and energy use, as well as its numerous environmental projects. Utilizing the concept of ecological modernization (EM), this paper presents a detailed analysis of the NHL SR in order to explore how environmental advocacy, citizenship, and initiative is produced and shaped by the professional sporting industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Role of the Hand Surgery Consultant in the Care of the Hockey Athlete.
- Author
-
French, Rodney J.
- Subjects
- *
HOCKEY , *HAND injuries , *ATHLETES , *CONSULTANTS , *MEDICAL care , *ORTHOPEDISTS - Abstract
Ice hockey is a high-speed sport played on a slippery ice surface, using sharp skate blades, rigid sticks with a hard rubber puck, and allowing full-force physical contact that includes body checking and fighting. Although many of the same injuries to the hand and wrist occur that are seen in other sports, there is a higher frequency of certain injuries in the hockey athlete due to the forces involved, the way the hockey stick is gripped, torqued, and used, and the fact that players can slash one another with their sticks. Beyond timely and accurate management of the injury itself, the role of the consultant hand surgeon in hockey encompasses mastery of the intangible skills in the art and humanity of medical care. Injury to the hockey athlete sets in motion a dynamic process that involves many stakeholders who each require your knowledge of how this will affect the hockey athlete's immediate and long-term health, how long they may be out of competition, and the kind of treatments, splints and equipment modifications that could help foster the earliest return-to-play in a safe manner. The consultant hand surgeon needs the ability to communicate information at a high level to team physicians and trainers while remaining nimble enough to simplify that information for general managers, coaches, agents, and athletes. The role demands commitment in time and flexibility, remaining open to gray areas in treatment options, possessing a creative mindset for problem-solving, and the ability to quickly assimilate vast amounts of information to provide a risk assessment of short and long-term implications the injury presents to both the player and the team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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