Research Paper Topics



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Research Paper Topics

Paul M. Sommers Spring, 2017


Economics 485
Economics of Sports


Suggested Research Paper Topics


1. Do teams (in the NHL, NFL, or NBA) raise ticket prices after successful seasons? Does fan interest rise after teams win division, conference, or league championships? Define a binary variable for each type of win: division, conference, and league. Does the fan’s taste for attending games rise, shifting the demand curve to the right?

[See R. M. Keohane and P. M. Sommers, “Win a World Series, Raise Ticket Prices.

But, Excessively?” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 36 (September 2008), pp. 381-

382.]
2. Who benefits from the presence of professional sports teams? Having a

professional franchise gives the city a higher profile which in turn attracts business

that would otherwise not locate there. But, real differences might not emerge unless

the city has a league-winning franchise. That is, there may be no noticeable improvement after the construction of a stadium or the addition of a team. How then does the business climate change in a city the year after one (or more) of its professional franchises wins a championship? [See Sports Illustrated, v. 108, no. 2,

January 21, 2008, p. 23 for a metric on a city’s championship(s).]
3. Historically, employers who integrated their baseball teams more quickly have

generally won more games than those who were slower to integrate. Gwartney and

Haworth (1974) underscored this result for Major League Baseball teams between

1952 and 1956. Can the same be said of baseball talent in Latin American or East

Asian countries? Or hockey teams that signed top players from former Eastern

Bloc countries?


4. Analyze the graduation success rates for schools that were ranked in the Top 25 in the 2010 football season and the 2009-10 men’s and women’s basketball seasons. How do black student-athletes fare against their white counterparts in football and men’s and women’s basketball? How do female athletes fare against their male counterparts in basketball? See the data sources in Leeds and von Allmen,

pages 366-368.


5. Was average attendance significantly higher for Major League Baseball when team

standings were closer within a league over a season than when they were not? Use

the Gini coefficient or some other measure of competitive balance to measure the dispersion of team playing strengths.
6. Test the hypothesis that there is a positive relationship between NHL team violence (proxied by penalty minutes per game) and game attendance and, second, test the sub-hypothesis that violence is positively associated with American, not Canadian, spectators.
7. Is there ingroup favoritism in the NFL? Apostolatos and Sommers (2007) found

that there was evidence of ingroup favoritism in the NBA in the 2005-2006 season.

That is, in the NBA, teams with relatively more black players tend to win more

games if their head coach is also black. Two teams with black coaches represented

their respective conferences in the 2007 Super Bowl. So, one might (now) be

inclined to believe that there is a similar effect of the interaction between the racial

composition of a team and the race of the team’s coach on team performance in the

NFL. In summary, are predominantly non-white football teams more likely to win if their head coach is also nonwhite than if their head coach is white? More generally, are minorities in particular more likely to engage in behavior that furthers

organizational objectives if members of their minority group are represented in the

organization’s leadership? [See, for example, A.J. Apostolatos and P.M. Sommers,

“Is There Ingroup Favoritism in the NBA?” International Advances in Economic

Research, vol. 13 (February 2007), pp. 118-119.]
8. Do unequal salary distributions create morale problems severe enough to adversely

affect worker productivity? To determine whether or not the structure of

compensation in the NFL (or in the NBA) has any effect on worker shirking, regress winning percentage against the team’s Gini coefficient (for the team’s salary distribution) and average team salary. [See, for example, B.M. Avrutin and

P.M. Sommers, “Work Incentives and Salary Distributions in Major League Baseball,” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 35 (December 2007), pp. 509-510 and P.M. Sommers, “Work Incentives and Salary Distributions in the National Hockey League,” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 26, March 1998, p. 119. ]


9. Are the largest racial card price premia found in the upper end of the card price

distribution for a particular set of Topps baseball cards? That is, excluding all

common price cards, does there appear to be a premium for the cards of white

superstars (after controlling for player and team characteristics)? [See Hamilton

(1997) for a discussion of quantile regressions.]
10. If labor market opportunities in professional sports influence athletes’ graduation

rates, we would expect that the effect should be more dramatic in women’s

basketball after the emergence of the WNBA than it was before when there were

fewer professional opportunities in women’s basketball. [See DeBrock et al.,

1996 and E.R. Knopman and P.M. Sommers, “The WNBA and Graduation Rates of Women Basketball Players,” discussion paper.]
11. What has happened to the average length of job tenure in the NBA or NFL? Is it shorter now than it was ten or twenty years ago? In your paper, come up with a quantifiable measure of “team allegiance.” Compare “team allegiance” for athletes elected to that sport’s Hall of Fame in the 1990s to those elected in earlier decades.

[See P.M. Sommers, “Measuring Player Loyalty Among Baseball’s Hall of Famers,” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 35 (March 2007), pp. 125-126.]

12. For all pitchers (with a minimum number of IPs), regress their lifetime earned run average (ERA) against their years of experience in the majors. For a quadratic equation, there will be some point beyond which the ERA increases with additional years of experience. Has this point increased over time? That is, when you run this regression for data in (i) 1970, (ii) 1980, (iii) 1990, and (iv) 2000, you just might find that the point where d(ERA)/d(years) = 0 is rising over time. Still, in other words, the point where the ERA begins to rise with age/years of experience may

now be (much) higher than it was in the past. Why? Better conditioning? The use

of the DH? Steroids? [See P.M. Sommers, “The Changing Hitting Performance Profile in Major League Baseball, 1966-2006,” Journal of Sports Economics, vol. 9,

no. 4 (August 2008), pp. 435-440. In other words, I examined hitters in selected years across five decades. What are the results for pitchers?]


13. Take a set of Topps baseball cards issued in your birth year. For all hitters, record

each card’s current price (see, for example, Beckett’s Baseball Card Monthly price guide, which tracks card values). Record each card’s price ten years ago. Regress the average annual rate of change in the card’s price against: (i) the player’s career batting and slugging average, (ii) a 0-1 variable denoting whether the ballplayer is nonwhite, (iii) a 0-1 variable denoting whether the card was a rookie card, and

(iv) a 0-1 variable denoting whether the ballplayer has been inducted into the Hall of Fame. [See C. Nardinelli and C. Simon, “Customer Racial Discrimination in the Market for Memorabilia: The Case of Baseball,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 105, no. 3 (August 1990), pp. 575-595.]
14. Do new ballparks mean higher ticket prices? For each new stadium you decide to study, regress the club’s average ticket price (beginning five or ten years before the stadium opened) against a time trend variable; the club’s winning percentage the season before; a 0-1 variable that is zero before the stadium opened and “1” thereafter; and a 0-1 variable that is “1” if the new stadium was prompted by the arrival of a team from another city (and zero, otherwise). [See The Sporting News, April 4, 2000 at http://tsn.sportingnews.com/baseball/articles/2000404/228259.html and http://rodneyfort.com/PHSportsEcon/SportsEcon.htm for data on average ticket prices.]

15. Does a professional franchise give a metropolitan area a higher profile, which in turn attracts business that would otherwise not locate there? For metropolitan areas with more than 750,000 persons (see Table 661 in the Statistical Abstract of the United States 2008), regress the annual percent change in personal income against the population of the metropolitan area, the unemployment rate, and three dummy (0-1) variables to denote the presence of a football team, baseball team, and basketball team in the metropolitan area.


16. An uncertain outcome creates much of a contest’s appeal. Fans seem to lose interest in a perennial loser or even in a team that always wins. Hence fan interest wanes in a league that is dominated by one or two teams. For the last 40 or 50 years, regress league attendance in Major League Baseball against a time trend, a measure of the league’s competitive balance (the Gini ratio based on games won), this same measure of competitive balance squared, a 0-1 dummy variable for expansion years, and a 0-1dummy variable to denote league affiliation (National League = 1; AL = 0).
17. Is there discrimination against French-speaking hockey players (Francophones)? If there is evidence of salary discrimination, does this discrimination depend in part on the players’ position – whether they are forwards or defensemen – and where the team is located? For a sample of players, regress the player’s salary against career goals, career assists, years of experience, years of experience squared, and three 0-1 dummy variables, one to denote the player’s position, a second to denote where the team is located, and a third to denote whether the player is French Canadian.
18. The Bill James Baseball Abstract argues that a baseball player’s batting average is not an adequate measure of his offensive productivity. Batting averages treat singles just the same as extra base hits. Furthermore, they do not give credit for “walks,” although a walk is almost as good as a single. James argues that a double in two at-bats is better than a single, but not as good as two singles. To reflect these considerations, James proposes the following index which he calls “runs created”. Let A be the number of hits plus the number of walks that a batter gets in a game. Let B be the number of total bases that the batter gets in a game. (Thus, if a batter has S singles, W walks, D doubles, T triples, and H home runs, then A = S + D + T + H + W and B = S + W + 2D + 3T + 4H.) Let N be the number of times the batter bats. Then his index of runs created in a game is defined to be A·B/N and will be called his RC.
Compare the average RC of notable players traded in 2009, in the seasons before

and after their trades.


19. With all the attention given to performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball, has there been less offense in the 2009 and 2010 seasons than in either the 2008 or 2007 seasons? Ronald Blum (in his article “Baseball sees a power outage”, The Burlington Free Press, May 10, 2005, p. 5B) believes that toughened steroid testing might be the cause for the lower averages in recent years, not better pitching. Compare team-by-team the number of home runs per at bat (i) between 2009 and 2008, (ii) between 2008 and 2007, (iii) between 2009 and 2007, (iv) between 2010 and 2009, (v) between 2010 and 2008, (vi) between 2010 and 2007. Also, for each of the last three seasons run a two-sample t-test on the difference between the average number of home runs per at bat for the Top 50 home run hitters each season.
20. Richard Thaler (U. of Chicago) and Cade Massey (Duke) believe that NFL GMs consistently overvalue early-round draft picks. Compare the pro performance of first rounders to second rounders over the past decade. Early-round picks typically receive higher salaries than lower round selections. A comparison of “the bang for the buck” would require you to factor in salary. Do first-round picks get more “bang for the buck” than second-round picks?
21. Jannett Highfill and Kevin O’Brien (Bradley U.) examined “eBay Prices vs. Book Prices: The Market for Baseball Cards” [see Atlantic Economic Journal, December 2004, 32(4): p. 359]. Their sample size was 472 unrelated baseball cards whose final selling price ranged from 50 cents to $750. Compare the Beckett book price of the card sold to the final selling price on eBay for cards of particular players, notably players in the 1970s or ‘80s who were later inducted into the Hall of Fame.
22. QuesTec is a digital media company whose camera system has been used by Major League Baseball to monitor umpires’ accuracy in calling balls and strikes. If you can locate the data, you could compare one umpire against another or how well (or poorly) umpires in general fare during day games v. night games. The analysis could be done at a particular ballpark which uses QuesTec’s camera system.
23. While conventional wisdom held that hitters (in Major League Baseball) reached their primes between the ages of 28 and 32 before falling off toward retirement, Bill James believes that pitchers’ best years come considerably sooner, from 25 to 29. Regress pitchers’ ERAs (or some other measure of a pitcher’s performance) against AGE, AGE squared, and Innings Pitched for all major league pitchers (with a minimum of, say, 100 innings pitched last season). Is the coefficient on the quadratic term positive and statistically significant? If so, for what age does the

U-shape fit reach a minimum? Is this value for an age between 25 and 29?


24. For each college basketball game, records are kept for each player’s points, rebounds, assists, steals, blocks, missed field goals, missed free throws, and turnovers. Information on these elements can be used to find each player’s “Efficiency” rating. [The NBA defines “Efficiency” as: Points + Rebounds + Assists + Steals + Blocks – Missed Field Goals – Missed Free Throws – Turnovers”.] For a sample of players, compare their average “Efficiency” in their junior year on the Middlebury College varsity basketball team to their corresponding average “Efficiency” in their senior and sophomore years.
25. Tennis magazine’s August 2008 article on “Big Guns?” (pp. 33-34) is the inspiration for this paper topic. Use a series of chi-squared tests on every set of every match in each grand slam tournament in 2010 to test whether or not there was a relationship between winning the set and winning the higher percentage of points returning first serves. So, for each player in each set of each match in each grand slam tournament, answer two questions: “Did he (or she) win the set?” (Yes or No.) “Did he (or she) win the higher percentage of points returning first serves?” (Yes or No.) Tabulate the results and run a chi-squared test. In lieu of the second question, respond to: “Did he (or she) serve more aces than his (or her) opponent?” For each grand slam tournament, there will be two contingency tables (one for men, one for women) for the question on returning first serves and two more contingency tables for the question on serving aces.
26. SI’s “Why Good Teams Fight” (October 13, 2008, pp. 56-62) suggests that fighting is up in the NHL in the post-lockout era. Compare penalty minutes per game (or fighting majors per game) for each team one year before the lockout (2003-04) to one year after the lockout (2005-06), two years after, and three years after. Use a series of paired t-tests. For individual teams, find the number of penalty minutes for each home game one season before the lockout and one, two and three seasons after the lockout. Here, for each team run a series of two-sample t-tests comparing the average number of penalty minutes per game one season before the lockout to the comparable average one, two or three seasons after the lockout. For each year in the post-lockout era, regress a team’s penalty minutes per game against the number of team points (two for a win, one for a tie, no points for a loss).
27. Compare the Fan Cost Index in cities with at least one team in one of the four major sports leagues (MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL) to the city’s cost-of-living index. (That is, form a ratio of the Fan Cost Index to the cost-of-living index.) Then compare average ratios between leagues. Compare averages (within the same league) to different (census) regions of the country. See, for example, Sports Illustrated, vol. 109, no. 2, July 14-21, 2008, pp. 48-49 (for an analysis of some of the figures in 2008).
28. A sports analyst on the radio reported that over the last 10 years, there has been no correlation between the way a team ended the regular season (after it clinched a playoff berth) and its “success rate” in the post-season. Empirically test the claim for teams in the AL and NL. How would you define “success” in the post-season?
29. Have larger-revenue market teams dominated the playoffs in the NBA in each decade since the 1940s?
30. Has competitive balance changed in interleague play in Major League Baseball?
31. Do teams in MLB that make the playoffs have more pitcher (or roster) stability

than teams that do not make the playoffs? If possible, examine every year since

free agency, since one could argue that it was impossible for players to exercise

loyalty prior to free agency. [See P.M. Sommers, “Measuring Player Loyalty Among Baseball’s Hall of Famers,” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 35 (March 2007), pp. 125-126.]


32. Since 1982, have MLB teams with new stadiums enjoyed an attendance increase

relative to the remaining teams in their league? Have MLB teams with new stadiums won more games per season than teams without new stadiums? Take 1-, 3-, and 5-year averages before and after. What is the experience in other sports leagues? Include and then exclude expansion teams. Is the attendance and winning percent increment a function of the public’s support funding the new stadium? [See Rodney Fort, Sports Economics, 2nd edition, Tables 10.1 and 11.1, pages 340 and 388.]


33. Analyze BCS bowl payouts (in real terms) over the last 15 years. Which conferences have benefitted the most? For each year, what was the average bowl revenue per conference (for the following D-IA conferences: SEC, Big 12, Big Ten, ACC, Pac-10, Big East, Mountain West, CUSA, MAC, WAC, Sun Belt)? [See ESPN.com and Sports Business Journal, Dec. 29, 2003, p. 150.]
34. Has a luxury tax improved competitive balance in Major League Baseball?

35. How badly has Tiger’s departure from the PGA Tour affected viewership of PGA

golf tournaments he has missed in 2009-2010? Assuming that you can get information on the number of viewers from The Nielsen Company, compare (in a paired t-test) the number of viewers at PGA tournaments he missed relative to the year before. What has been the average percentage change in viewership at these tournaments? Has viewership been less adversely affected by his departure now than it was when he missed part of the 2008-09 Tour due to injury?

36. The WNBA was founded in 1996 and their inaugural season was 1997.  The NCAA has published online the graduation success rates (GSRs) by sport and by gender for all D-I schools for the last five years.  The first year of data (2005) actually includes students who entered college in the years 1995 through 1998 (most of which are pre-WNBA).  The last year of data (2009) includes students who entered in the years 1999 through 2002 (all of which follow the WNBA's inaugural season in 1997).  For the term paper, I would like you to: (i) run a series of paired t-tests on GSR rates between 2005 and 2009 for all D-I schools by major conference and

(ii) run a series of paired t-tests for the women's "Sweet 16" teams in 2006 (compared to their average GSRs in 2005), the "Sweet 16" teams in 2007 (compared to their average GSRs in 2006), and so forth.  

 

My hunch is that you will find (with few exceptions) that GSRs are, on average, no lower (or higher) after the inception of the WNBA than before.  But, there may be a few conferences (in relatively poor parts of the country) where the women could not resist the temptation to leave college early.


37. When in April 2006 Johnny Damon (formerly of the Boston Red Sox) appeared in Yankee pinstripes, sportswriter Mike Lopresti lamented: “It’s as if the mongoose went over to the rattlesnakes’ side.” The extent to which workers in general (and baseball’s Hall of Famers in particular) remain loyal to their original employer was the empirical question that motivated Sommers’ “Measuring Player Loyalty Among Baseball’s Hall of Famers” (Atlantic Economic Journal, Vol . 35, March 2007, pages 125-126). Use the Herfindahl index to assess player loyalty among Hall of

Famers before and after free agency in any of the three other major professional team sports.


38. Is there any evidence that success in football or basketball (men’s or women’s) or

lacrosse (men’s or women’s) or a national championship in any varsity sport

(i) increases the percentage of alumni that give to Middlebury College,

(ii) increases the size of the gift per donation, or (iii) increases the average

SAT scores of entering freshmen? Divide alumni into men and women. If you

use dollar amounts, remember to express changes in real terms.

39. What matters more to franchise values – population or income? Or, are there

regional differences in franchise values that have nothing to do with either the

size of the market (as measured by the population) or income? For this topic,

use the most recent Forbes estimates of franchise values in the NFL, MLB,

the NBA, and the NHL. For each league, are franchise values higher the greater

the population/income in the area? For which sport is the relationship most (least) pronounced? For each league, compute the compound annual rate of appreciation for each team using data for 2005 as the base year. Determine whether those rates of appreciation are correlated with the annual population growth rates in the franchise’s hometown over the same seven-year (2005 to 2012) period.


40. Look at the Nielsen ratings for the World Series since 1984 (see, for example,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Series_television_ratings). Are ratings

significantly higher in games at the beginning of a home stand? Are they

significantly higher if the series goes to a game 7? Are they significantly higher

if there’s at least one large market team in the series? Do ratings depend on the

population of the NL/AL team’s hometown? On the combined population of the two teams?
41. In the aftermath of Lance Armstrong’s admission to doping, first develop an economic model of deterrence that focuses on the economic incentives and

economic consequences of cheating. (See, for example, Roger Blair’s discussion

of “Cheating in Sports,” chapter 11 in his Sports Economics, Cambridge University Press, 2012.) Apply the model to the sport of cycling, indicating what the benefits

are as well as the punishment if the cyclist is caught. Provide several numerical estimates of expected wealth under various assumptions about the probability of detection and different penalties for cheating.


42. In 2006, there were 49 early entrants in the NFL draft, twelve of whom were selected in the first round and eight who went in the second round. (Here, an

“early entrant” is an NCAA player with remaining eligibility or any player who has been out of high school for at least three years.) Pro-Football-Reference.com uses a comprehensive metric, created by mathematician Doug Drinen, called Approximate Value (AV) to assess player worth at any position in any year. Compare the average AV in their rookie year of early entrants to all other players drafted early, say, in (i) the first two rounds and (ii) all subsequent rounds. Repeat for the 2008, 2010, and 2012 NFL drafts.


43. Leagues (or conferences) are required to establish schedules. In the case of NESCAC’s men’s ice hockey team, there are 18 conference games, two games apiece against each opponent, one home and one away. NESCAC is obviously

interested in minimizing travel cost, both time spent on the road and gasoline

cost. For the given constraint that one game must be played on the road and one game must be played at home against each opponent, find the “ideal” schedule for all ten teams which minimizes their collective (that is, NESCAC’s) travel cost.

How does the “ideal” schedule depart from each school’s 2012-13 actual schedule

against other conference teams?
44. In Major League Baseball, the Baseball Almanac reports that as of May 2012, there

have been 30 suspensions (issued to fewer than 30 ballplayers due to repeat

offenders) since the performance-enhancing drug policy was put into place in 2005

(see “Steroid Suspensions,” Baseball Almanac at http://ww.baseball-almanac.com/legendary/steroids_baseball.shtml ). For these ballplayers, compare

their average stats before and after the suspension. In most cases, did the player

actually perform significantly worse after the suspension?

45. Has the distribution of prize money in tennis become more highly skewed for men than for women? Find the Gini coefficient for the total winnings of the top

100 men and women players for each of the last twenty years. Regress the Gini

coefficient against a time trend variable, a separate regression for men and for

women. Is the slope coefficient in each case discernible from zero? That is,

has inequality on the women’s (or men’s) tour changed over time?
46. Some researchers have concluded that conference standings and national rankings in college football have become increasingly predictable. (See, for example,

E. Woodrow Eckard, “The NCAA Cartel and Competitive Balance in College

Football,” Southern Economic Journal, vol. 72, no. 4, pp. 826-845.) For each

of the six largest conferences – Southeastern Conference, Big Ten, Atlantic Coast Conference, Pac-12, Big 12, and Big East – regress σw against a time trend

to assess this claim over (at least) the last ten years.
47. Are unrestricted free agents (UFAs) in the NHL more likely to perform worse after

signing a multi-year contract with their same team than are UFAs who sign (a multi-year contract) with another team? Or, is their average number of points per game about the same in both their contract year and the year thereafter? Examine

UFAs in each of the last five years.
48. Will the Sochi Olympics be the last Games featuring NHL players? NHL owners claim that when the NHL league schedule is suspended for the Olympics attendance is strongest and that, according to Kevin Allen of USA Today, “some markets have had trouble re-acquiring their fan base after the shutdown.” For each NHL team, was their a discernible difference in average home attendance two (or three) weeks before and after the Sochi Games? Was this also the case following the Vancouver Games? How might you use regression analysis to test this claim?
49. Use http://geomidpoint.com/calculation.html to find the geographic midpoint of the men’s

and women’s “Sweet 16” basketball teams for each of the last twenty years. Use the same

methodology in Sommers’ “Mathematics and Geography: The Changing Geographic Midpoint of Baseball’s All-Stars” to gauge movement in the midpoint

over time.


50. Is the career length of NFL teams’ player reps significantly less than the average

career length of other NFL players at their position? Examine players (and player reps) from the year 2000.


51. In their paper, “Productivity, Wages, and Marriage: The Case of Major League

Baseball” (Institute for the Study of Labor, IZA, Discussion Paper No. 5695, May 2011), authors Francesca Cornaglia and Naomi Feldman argue that married

ballplayers receive, on average, higher wages than single ballplayers. Is there a

marriage premium for athletes in any of the other three major sports leagues?

Is there a fatherhood premium?
52. Which teams have been most successful (over, say, the last ten years) in the NFL

Draft? For each season, one could look up each team’s draft history, that is, the

players drafted and their career approximate value (CarAV). See, for example

the Minnesota Vikings, www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/min/darft.htm.

Is the average CarAV for one team equal to the average CarAV for another?

A series of two-sample t-tests would indicate if one team has been more successful

than another (in each of the last ten seasons). A table listing the accumulated CarAV for each team each season alone would be of interest, as would be a table

that lists the average CarAV for all picks by round over the last ten years.


53. Find the average CarAV for all picks by round (1 through 224) based on all

NFL players drafted between 2002 and 2014. For all 224 picks, regress CarAV

against the pick number. Now, use the estimated CarAV of all 224 picks to

evaluate actual trades of draft picks made by NFL teams over the last five or ten years. Do you find that teams that typically play in the postseason have made

“better” trades than teams that typically do not play in the postseason?
54. There were 182 reported concussions from 2015 regular-season games, a 58 percent

over the corresponding number in 2014. Is there any pattern to the number? Were

there more reported in the second half of the season than in the first half? In the

second half of the game than in the first half? More from AFC games than NFC

games? Disproportionately more these last two seasons from some teams than from

others? More from rushing plays than from passing plays? More in games played

in southern states than from northern states? Was the game (in which at least one

concussion occurred) decided by eight points or less?






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