Growing the game : the globalization of major league baseball
(2006)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Yale University Press, 2006
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9780300135121 MWT13555891, 0300135122 13555891
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

A sociologist and anthropologist scientifically examines the worldwide growth of MLB and America's favorite pastime. Baseball fans understand the game has become increasingly international. Major league rosters include players from no fewer than fourteen countries, and more than one-fourth of all players are foreign born. Here, Alan Klein offers the first full-length study of a sport in the process of globalizing. Looking at the international activities of big-market and small-market baseball teams, as well as the Commissioner's Office, he examines the ways in which Major League Baseball operates on a world stage that reaches from the Dominican Republic to South Africa to Japan. The origins of baseball's efforts to globalize are complex, stemming as much from decreasing opportunities at home as from promise abroad. Klein chronicles attempts to develop the game outside the United States, the strategies that teams such as the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Kansas City Royals have devised to recruit international talent, and the ways baseball has been growing in other countries. He concludes with an assessment of the obstacles that may inhibit or promote baseball's progress toward globalization, offering thoughtful proposals to ensure the health and growth of the game in the United States and abroad

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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