Sports

Once Again, It’s Not The Act But the Cover Up

Posted by Neal Lipschutz on August 19, 2010
Entertainment, Ethics & Morality, Government, Law, Sports / 1 Comment

It’s not an economic story, except in the broadest sense that sports and entertainment are big parts of the U.S. economy.

Stilll, the potential lesson in the case of Roger Clemens, the former top-notch major legue baseball pitcher, resonates throughout the business and financial worlds.

That lesson is (assuming the perjury charges filed against Clemens hold up) that the questionable act is usually not what gets people in the biggest trouble, it’s the attempt to cover up that act.

 Clemens was indicted today, charged with making false statements to Congress when he declared under oath he never used performance-enhancing drugs.

“Prosecutors and the FBI have been gathering evidence in the steroids probe since Mr. Clemens testified before a House committee in 2008,” The Wall Street Journal reported. The Journal also reported Clemens’s lawyer wasn’t immediately available to comment.

It wasn’ t a legal matter like this, but allegations of a certain type of cover up are what reportedly prompted the Hewlett-Packard board just recently to push out Chief Executive Mark Hurd. There was the Martha Stewart case, and on and on.

But no one seems to get the message.

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Scrabble Fights To Stay Cool, With Help From Jay-Z and New Boyz

Scrabble may be a simple game to learn to play, but it sure gets complicated as a business. For a start, Hasbro owns the rights in the USA and Canada and its arch-rival Mattel owns them for the rest of the world.
Now, adding further to the confusion are reports (for example here) that the rules are being changed to allow proper nouns. If you’re stuck with hard-to-play tiles you’ve now got Jay-Z, New Boyz and Nhojj to help you out.
The change, as many commentators have pointed out, is proof that the world is becoming a dumber place, where youngsters know the names of soul singers instead of words such as hajj or calx (the residue from burning a metal), which previous generations used to great effect to clear troublesome tiles out of the racks.
Except that it’s not true. The rules of Scrabble aren’t being changed.
What’s happening instead is a smart piece of brand extension by Mattel. Scrabble may be a great and loved brand, but the core game hasn’t changed for decades so most people who want to play have a set.
Mattel UK spokesman Philip Nelkon told Randomly Noted that Mattel in the UK is planning to launch Scrabble Trickster, a souped up version of Scrabble in which players in some circumstances will be able to play proper nouns, steal tiles from rivals and even spell words backwards.
Standard Scrabble will continue to be sold, Nelkon says. “The rules of that are sacrosanct,” he stated.
Over recent years the Scrabble brand has been stretched and applied to games that aren’t standard Scrabble or even anything like it. Going by amazon.com sales rankings, the best-selling Scrabble game in the U.S. at present is Scrabble Slam, a $5.99 card game with no plastic tiles, no double word scores and indeed no board. However the Scrabble brand name gives it instant shelf space in retailers and credibility with buyers. The original board game doesn’t feature in the top 100. However neither Hasbro or Mattel will be pleased to see that Bananagram, a UK-designed wordmaking game that uses tiles but no gameboard, is selling far faster than any Scrabble spin-off. Word games may have been around a long time but Scrabble can’t rest just on its brand.
Based on this writer’s own recent visit to Toys R Us, brand extension in board games is a craft Hasbro has turned into a fine art with Monopoly. Our local toy superstore on the last visit had seven varieties of Monopoly, including Simpsons and Star Wars themes, upmarket versions with lots of electronics, a version where property values have been adjusted for inflation so you’re trying to keep track of huge-denomination bills, and another one with different rules where you don’t need to own all of a color set to start building. Yet Hasbro still make the traditional version available, although they’ve included an optional twist in the rules using an extra die that can make the game quicker to play.
Of course the real money in all these classic games is going electronic. The success of Lexulous online shows that Scrabble has a real edge over many other games in that it’s easy to dip in and out of playing, making it ideal for mobile phones or playing in a 10-minute coffee break in the office. One question yet to be answered is whether spin-offs and electronic versions can survive if the original is deemed to have lost relevance or be played only by the non-digital generation. Mattel is obviously not keen to find out.

Scrabble may be a simple game to learn to play, but it sure gets complicated as a business. For a start, Hasbro owns the rights in the USA and Canada and its arch-rival Mattel owns them for the rest of the world.

Now, adding further to the confusion are reports (for example here and here) that the rules are being changed to allow proper nouns. If you’re stuck with hard-to-play tiles you’ve now got Jay-Z and New Boyz to help you out.

The change, as many commentators have pointed out, is proof that the world is becoming a dumber place, where youngsters know the names of rappers instead of words such as adze (a woodworking tool)  or calx (the residue from burning a metal), which previous generations used to great effect to clear troublesome tiles out of the racks or get a high-scoring tile onto a triple-scoring space on the board.

Except that it’s not true. The rules of Scrabble aren’t being changed.

What’s happening instead is a smart piece of brand extension by Mattel. Scrabble may be a great and loved brand, but the core game hasn’t changed for decades so most people who want to play have a set.

So Mattel UK spokesman Philip Nelkon told Randomly Noted that Mattel in the UK is planning to launch Scrabble Trickster, a souped up version of Scrabble in which players in some circumstances will be able to play proper nouns, steal tiles from rivals and even spell words backwards.

Standard Scrabble will continue to be sold, Nelkon says. “The rules of that are sacrosanct,” he stated. Scrabble Trickster is aimed at a new audience.

It’s not a new idea. Over recent years the Scrabble brand has been stretched and applied to games that aren’t standard Scrabble or even anything like it. Going by amazon.com sales rankings, the best-selling Scrabble game in the U.S. at present is Scrabble Slam, a $5.99 card game with no plastic tiles, no double word scores and indeed no board. However the Scrabble brand name gives it instant shelf space in retailers and credibility with buyers. The original Scrabble board game doesn’t feature in amazon.com’s top 100 games. However neither Hasbro or Mattel will be pleased to see that Bananagram, a US-designed wordmaking game that uses tiles but no gameboard, is selling far faster than any Scrabble spin-off. It shows that word games may have been around a long time but Scrabble can’t rest just on its brand.

Based on this writer’s own recent visits to Toys R Us, to see brand extension turned into a fine art it’s necessary to find the shelves selling Hasboro’s Monopoly. Our local toy superstore on the last visit had seven varieties of Monopoly, including Simpsons and Star Wars themes, upmarket versions with lots of electronics, a version where property values have been adjusted for inflation so you’re trying to keep track of huge-denomination bills, and another one with different rules where you don’t need to own all of a color set to start building. Yet Hasbro still makes the traditional version available – although they’ve included an optional twist in the rules using an extra die that can make the game quicker to play.

Of course the real money in all these classic games is going electronic. The success of Scrabble-alike Lexulous online shows that Scrabble has a real edge over many other games in that it’s easy to dip in and out of playing, making it ideal for mobile phones or playing in a 10-minute coffee break in the office. One question yet to be answered is whether spin-offs and electronic versions can survive if the original is deemed to have lost relevance or be played only by the non-digital generation. Mattel is obviously not keen to find out.

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Score One For Baseball’s Union

Posted by Chaz Repak on January 13, 2010
Compensation, Sports / Comments Off

Marlins reiterate payroll compliance,” reads the headline on MLB.com. That doesn’t sound like a compelling story, but oh, it is. The Major League Baseball Players Association - that is, the ballplayers’ union – blew the whistle on the penurious Florida Marlins for not spending enough on their payroll. The invaluable bizofbaseball.com puts the story in proper perspective: “Precedent-Setting Deal With Marlins Over Revenue-Sharing Has Broad Implications.”

Continue reading…

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Will 3-D TV Do To Sports What Radio Didn’t?

Posted by Chaz Repak on January 08, 2010
Consumer Products, Sports, Technology / 1 Comment

3d glassesIn the 1920s and 1930s, Major League Baseball was slow to embrace the broadcasting of ballgames on the radio, worried that giving the games away for free would keep fans from coming to the ballpark – this at a time when gate receipts were the primary form of revenue for the sport. The opposite turned out to be true – radio broadcasts enabled a much wider audience to follow the game, and helped expand baseball’s popularity exponentially.

That didn’t prevent baseball and other sports from being equally wary of allow television broadcasts of their games, but again, wider availability made for a more dedicated fan base. Not only that, but broadcast rights have become the largest single source of revenue for MLB, the National Football League and the National Basketball Association.

At the same time, the fan experience of attending live sporting events has eroded sharply. Continue reading…

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What Is It With Men? (Yes, Again)

Posted by Gabriella Stern on December 02, 2009
Ethics & Morality, Sports / 1 Comment

My 11-year-old son adores and admires Tiger Woods. Now, what do I tell him? Answer: I’ll most certainly say nothing about today’s admission that Woods cheated on his wife and betrayed his family. I’ll refer you to an Oct. 2 blog, “What Is It With Men”?, which I wrote when David Letterman disclosed his philandering. The first sentence of that blog read like this: “I could fill this blog with the names of prominent philandering men in business, politics, entertainment and big-time sports. David Letterman’s just the latest. There will be more.” Sigh.

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Leaving Baseball (!) For Wall Street

Posted by Chaz Repak on November 13, 2009
Sports, Uncategorized, Wall Street / Comments Off

redsThe financial services industry might be going through a severe recession, but it’s apparently a more desirable place to work than Major League Baseball. The head athletic trainer of the Cincinnati Reds, Mark Mann, has resigned from his position to become a financial adviser for Morgan Stanley Smith Barney.

He’ll be working on the accounts of current and former major league ballplayers, a chance he called a “unique opportunity.” Maybe so, but he’s also leaving a franchise that is struggling, at the gate, on the field and financially.

Continue reading…

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The Power of the New York Yankees

Posted by Chaz Repak on November 03, 2009
Media, Sports / Comments Off

yankeesDrawing power, that is. In the first five games of the World Series, the Philadelphia Phillies have outhomered the Yanks 10-5, though the Yanks lead the series 3-2, and look to close out their 27th title Wednesday night. FOX, which televises the World Series (and which owns Dow Jones & Co., publisher of this blog), though, must be hoping for a seventh game, because the TV ratings of this Series are the best in half a decade, and the reason is the Bronx Bombers.

Last year’s World Series serves as an apt comparison, because the National League entrant was also the Phillies. Their five-game triumph over the Tampa Bay Rays was far and away the lowest rated World Series since 1968, when data are first available.

Continue reading…

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Phils Beat Yanks By One Measure (Or Do They?)

Posted by Chaz Repak on October 28, 2009
Sports, Uncategorized / Comments Off

philliesThe New York Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies square off tonight in Game 1 of the yankees2009 World Series. Past performance does not indicate future results, but on the basis of past performance, it’s no contest. The Yankees won more games (103 to 93), scored more runs (915 to 820) and had a higher run differential (162 to 111). The Yankees have far more league championships (40 to seven) and World Series titles (26 to two). The Yankees have the highest all-time winning percentage (.568), and the Phillies have the most losses of any team in North American professional sports (10,167). According to Forbes, at the start of the season the Yankees franchise was worth more than three times as much as the Phillies ($1.5 billion to $496 million).

In one area, though, the Phillies’ success has to make the Yankees envious: game attendance.

Continue reading…

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How About a Handshake?

Posted by Neal Lipschutz on October 26, 2009
Entertainment, Ethics & Morality, Sports, Uncategorized, United States / Comments Off

As a fan of the New York Yankees, I was quite pleased and relieved last night when the team defeated the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (silly name) in the American League Championship Series to advance to baseball’s World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies.

At the end of the game, baseball rituals took place. The Yankees celebrated together on the field. That was  followed by the ridiculous clubhouse champagne spraying melee that is so studied that most of the players wear high school chemistry goggles to protect themselves. On the losing team just after the game ends, various players typically are captured by television cameras sitting blank faced and drained in their dugout.

It would be a lot nicer if after every hard fought playoff series the teams instead lined up and shook hands. It’s an area where adults could learn from young practioners of the sport. Playoff level Little League games end with team lines and handshakes,. College basketball games and hockey playoff series also close out that way.

Not to make too much of it, but in a country where public discourse already is too often harsh and polarizing, a public display of sportsmanship while millions are watching is not a bad thing.

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Olympics Outcome: Good for Chicago, Not For Rio

Posted by Gabriella Stern on October 02, 2009
Sports / 3 Comments

What were they thinking? “They” being the Obamas and the Chicago business and political establishment. The 2016 Olympics would have turned Chicago into a cost-overrun construction site. Instead, it’ll be Rio, that gorgeous crime-ridden city, which will go through Olympics anguish. The taxpayers will foot the bill for excess costs long after the short-term economic boost from sports-tourism fades from memory . Boa sorte, Rio! I enjoy the Olympics – from the comfort of my couch – and feel sorry for the residents of Olympic cities. “Try telling that to 180 million Brazilians,” says my DJN colleague Claudia Assis, who was born and raised in Rio. “All Brazilians are fierce nationalists in sports and oil, in that order.” Claudia cites a University of Sao Paulo study commissioned by Brazil’s Ministry of Sports saying the $14.4 billion Rio will spend to host the Olympics will – between 2009 and 2027 – have a $51.1 billion ripple-effect on the Brazilian economy. Specifically, each dollar invested in the Olympics will inject $3.26 dollars into supply chains associated with the event.  We shall see.

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