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Economic Rockstar

Connecting Brilliant Minds in Economics and Finance

103: Brian Mills on the Labor Market in Baseball, the Umpire Strikes Back and R

September 15, 2016 by Frank

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103: Brian Mills on the Labor Market in Baseball, the Umpire Strikes Back and R

Brian Mills is an Assistant Professor at the University of Florida within the Department of Tourism, brian-mills-economic-rockstarRecreation, and Sport Management specializing in Managerial Sports Economics.

Professor Mills is also Associate Research Faculty within the Eric Friedheim Tourism Institute (EFTI).

Brian’s research interests encompass topics such as the sports labor market, industrial organization and sports league policy, public policy and economic development related to sport, and advanced analytics in the sports business. He is especially interested in applying economic lessons and quantitative analysis to problems that sport managers face in their everyday decision making.

Dr. Mills has also worked on consulting projects for professional sports teams and municipalities both in the U.S. and Canada.

Before arriving at Florida, Brian received his PhD and MA in Sport Management from the University of Michigan.  During that time, he also completed MA degrees in Statistics and in Applied Economics.  Brian earned his BA in Psychology in 2006 from St. Mary’s College of Maryland where he played NCAA Division III baseball.

Brian’s work and research interests can be found at brianmmills.com and at princeofslides.blogspot

Brian is now offering a new course called Exploring Pitch Data with R over at www.datacamp.com.

Check it out. You’ll have lots of fun learning basic data manipulation, summarization, and visualization in R using Statcast data.

Economics:

In this episode, Brian discusses and mentions: sports economics, labor market, externalities, incentives, wages, allocation of time, R, population, GDP and incomes.

Economists:

In this episode, Brian discusses and mentions: Rodney Fort, Stefan Szymanski, Lawrence Kahn and Bill Gerrard.

Links:

  • 090: Stefan Szymanski on Soccernomics and How Sabermetrics, Inequality and Finance Rules the Sport
  • 096: Cameron Murray on the Robinson Crusoe Economy and Blogging toward your PhD
  • 099: Rodney Fort on Sport Economics, Big Data in Baseball and the Value of Hosting an Olympic Games
  • Freakonomics
  • Fastball Movie
  • Trackman Baseball
  • Trackman Golf

Brian Mills’ Writing Tips:

  1. Always be reading and writing.
  2. Give or receive feedback and re-write.
  3. Develop a habit of note-taking.
  4. Turn your idea into a good story.

Resources:

  • Sabermetrics, Scouting, and the Science of Baseball
  • Data Camp
  • Exploring Pitch Data with R
  • A Guide to Sabermetric Research: How to Find Raw Data by the Society for American Baseball Research
  • Number Munchers game

Artilces:

Scoring in Baseball Is Down. Blame the Umpires: A Study Found That Umpires Have Expanded Their Strike Zone in Recent Years in The Wall Street Journal

Books:

  • Pay Dirt by Rodeny Fort
http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/103_Brian_Mills_Final.mp3

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099: Rodney Fort on Sport Economics, Big Data in Baseball and the Value of Hosting an Olympic Games

August 18, 2016 by Frank

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099: Rodney Fort on Sport Economics, Big Data in Baseball and the Value of Hosting an Olympic Games

Rodney Fort is Professor of Sport Management at the University of Michigan after spending 23 years in an economics Rodney Fort Economic Rockstardepartment at various universities.

Professor Fort teaches Sports Economics and Research Methods for Sport Management and research interests include sport economics, regulation and microeconomics.

Rodney is a recognized authority on sports economics and business, both in the U.S. and internationally. 

He has written 7 books including the best seller Sports Economics, 63 refereed journal articles, and 56 other publications that cover sports topics as diverse as cross-subsidies in U.S. sports leagues to comparative analysis of North American and world sports leagues.

Rodney also serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Sports Economics, the International Journal of Sport Finance, and Managerial and Decision Economics.  He also currently serves as a vice-president of the International Association of Sports Economists.

Rodney’s work includes being a sports economics consultant, writes for numerous blogs including his own rodsportseconomics and holds the most complete data on the economics and business of U.S. pro sports leagues in existence at Sports Business Data Pages.

Resources:

  • Patricia’s Various Basketball Stuff
  • USA Today
  • Baseball Prospectus
  • Baseball Reference

Links:

  • http://rodsportseconomics.blogspot.ie/
  • Rodney Fort’s Sports Business Data
  • Scully, G. (1974). Pay and Performance in Major League Baseball. American Economic Review. Vol. 64, No. 6 (Dec.), pp. 915-930.

Where to Find Professor Fort

  • Twitter: @RodneyFort
  • Website: Rod Sports Economics

Books

  • The Hustler’s Handbook by Bill Veeck
  • The Lords of the Realm by John Helyar
  • The Sports Business in the Pacific Rim by Young Hoon Lee and Rodney Fort.
  • 15 Sports Myths and Why They’re Wrong by Rodney Fort and Jason Winfree.
  •  Sports Economics by  Rodney Fort.
  • International Sports Economics Comparisons by Rodney Fort and John Fizel (eds.).
  • Economics of College Sports by John Fizel and Rodney Fort (eds.).
  • Hardball: The Abuse of Power in Pro Team Sports by James Quirk and Rodney Fort.
  • Pay Dirt: The Business of Professional Team Sports by James Quirk and Rodney Fort.
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008: Robbie Butler on Using Sports to Teach Entry-Level Economics

November 26, 2014 by Frank

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008: Robbie Butler on Using Sports to Teach Entry-Level Economics

Robbie Butler is a lecturer of economics at University College Cork in Ireland. He combines his love of sports with economics to explain many economic concepts. He lectures on a multitude of modules, such as Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, Growth Economics and Corporate Strategy.  Robbie received his PhD from University of Hertfordshire in England, is published in a number of internationally renowned academic journals and is a regular economics contributor on media. Robbie’s primary passion is in sports, namely football (soccer) and he has a Junior International cap for Ireland. Robbie managed to bridge his passion for sports with his career in economics and, along with his brother David and other colleagues, created and runs the popular website www.sportseconomics.org.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Robbie mentions and discusses: economic growth, institutional economics, the logic of collective action in society, the rise and decline of nations, sports economics, theory of Multiple Intelligence, incentives, game theory, the volunteers dilemma, decision-making, competition, government funding, laissez-faire and sabermetrics.

Economists and Economic Schools:

In this interview, Robbie mentions: Professor Geoffrey Hodgeson, Mancur Olson, David Kahneman, Stefan Szymanski, Ignacio Palacios-Huerta, Jadrian Wooten, Rodney Fort, Brad Humphreys, Seamus Coffey, John Considine, David, Butler, Declan Jordan and John Eakins.

Robbie’s Influencers:

His PhD supervisor/mentor Professor Geoffrey Hodgeson who recently established the World Institutional Network for Interdisciplinary Research (WINIR), the works of Mancur Olson, Stefan Szymanski, Rodney Fort and Brad Humphreys.

Find Out:

  • who lectured Robbie as an undergrad. Hint: He’s the host of this show!
  • how Robbie’s use of sports in explaining economics grew from fun and a personal interest into something that has grown and evolved into something quite serious.
  • how playing football at a highly competitive level has allowed Robbie view economics in quite a unique way.
  • how this unique view has given Robbie an ability to delve into economics with many sports analogies and examples in which students can relate.
  • how having played sports competitively has given Robbie a level of respect and credibility when using sports-related themes in economics.
  • the importance of working with like-minded people and how it makes life so much easier.
  • why a coffee break with colleagues can have the most intellectually-stimulating conversations bursting with ideas.
  • a great tip before publishing a blog post when working with others who share the same website – it cuts out the use of Google Docs, Dropbox, etc.
  • how working with a sibling makes the feedback on your work more critical and raw – something that could help with perfecting the right article.
  • about the Theory of Multiple Intelligence by  Harvard educationalist Howard Gardner – we have 8 ways of learning.
  • how sports can be used as “a lens to the economic world” that empowers the student when learning and understanding economic theory.
  • how a change to the rules of a football/soccer game in the Caribbean between Barbados and Granada created incentives that reflects the behaviour of rational economic agent.
  • how a penalty shoot-out between Manchester United and Chelsea in the Champions League Final showcases the Volunteers Dilemma in economic game theory (Chelsea are instructed to take all penalties to Manchester United keeper’s left but he finds out Chelsea’s strategy when faced with the last penalty-taker by pointing to his own left – game theory demonstrated in football).
  • how watching the Simpsons can expose us to economic theory with its many parodies.
  • why Robbie believes that the English Premier League is in trouble and has all the hallmarks of a bubble.
  • how the different economic structures of the US (free market) and Europe (socialist) are reversed when it comes to the economic model of sports.
  • how the debt/GDP ratio imposed on EU countries is similar to the debt/income rules imposed on football clubs.
  • why big clubs may be willing to break the spending rules of the game despite the imposition of monetary fines.
  • about the use of metrics by Billy Bean’s Oakland A’s and how a ‘mediocre’ team could beat the cash-rich New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.

Advice:

On Learning and Teaching Economics:

“We all have to develop ourselves and our understanding”.

If you work hard, you get the returns – there are no shortcuts @RobbieButlerUCC

Click To Tweet

On Research:

“Try and keep the material as current as you possibly can”.

Personal Habits:

  • Robbie, like all great educators, is always learning about the most optimal ways to teaching economics.
  • When working with a group who share the same website, it is best to leave each post unpublished as a draft so that your colleagues can give some critical advice or recommendations before being published.
  • Constantly updating the teaching material.

Takeaway:

On Hard Work:

“Hard work is everything. Nobody is born with an innate ability to do something. The harder you work, the easier things become. Thant applies to college, studying, sports and life in general” – Robbie Butler, UCC.

On the Value of Informal Meet-ups:

Some of our coffee meetings can be quite vicious, but it’s a good sounding board for ideas @RobbieButlerUCC

Click To Tweet

On Ways of Learning:

“People develop their understanding of different concepts in different ways. Some people have very good spatial recognition and may not be good at logical reasoning. Other people are fantastic musicians or artists. some people are very good numerically. So, because we all learn in very different ways, we need to teach in such a way that tries to capture as many forms of multiple intelligence theory as we can. We use sports as a lens to the economic world”.

On Sports in Economics:

We use sport as a lens to the economic world – @RobbieButlerUCC

Click To Tweet

On the Use of Data:

“When you’re teaching economics or doing research, data is key and lots of data in sport is collected for us. There are so many things we can analyse from an economic perspective using the lens of sport”.

Recommended Books:

  • Soccernomics by Simon Kuper and Stefan Szymanski
  • Homer Economicus: The Simpsons and Economics by Joshua Hall
  • The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Nations Are So Rich and Some So Poor by David Landes
  • Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel KahnemanAudible
  • Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Michael Lewis

Favorite Internet Resources:

  • Sports Economics
  • Economic Incentives

Where To Find Robbie Butler:

  • Website: www.sportseconomics.org
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Frank Conway

Frank Conway is founder of Economic Rockstar and lecturer of economics, finance and statistics. Read More…

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