Title: NCAA History
1NCAA History
- NCAA National Collegiate Athletic Association
(named in 1910) was formed in response to the
rise in injury and death in college football. - The promotion of safety expanded in the years
that followed to include - The elimination of professional athletes in
college sports. - Review the Sanity Code of 1948 and the Committee
of Infractions (1954) - Control over broadcast of NCAA games
- Broadcast revenue from college football rose from
1.15 million in 1962 to 59 million in 1992. - The larger schools, though, protested the
distribution of revenues. - Hence the move to multiple divisions in 1973.
- What model fits the NCAA? The Cartel
2Cartels, in general
- Joint Profit Maximization Charge the same price
and earn the same profit as a monopolist. This
profit is then divided among the firms. - Elements of the Standard Cartel Model
- Supply and Demand for the Market
- Supply and Demand for the Perfectly Competitive
Firm - Output and Price for the Market and Firm if the
market is competitive. - Output and Price for the Market and Firm if the
market is controlled by a cartel - KEY IDEA A cartel is inherently unstable. The
individual firm always has an incentive to cheat
on the cartel agreement.
3The NCAA Cartel
- Cartel stability is undermined by the following
- Heterogeneity in revenue generation
- Monitoring and enforcing rules
- Cartel is maintained via barriers to entry
- To be a Division I-A football program you must
have - a minimum number of male and female varsity
sports - a stadium with 30,000 seats
- average more than 17,000 paid attendance
- Both the College Football Association and
Collegiate Professional Basketball League are
efforts to undermine the NCAA cartel
4NCAA and Television
- The NCAA Television Plan for 1983 allowed two
networks (ABC and CBS) to air 14 telecasts
annually. Each network could show national and
regional games, but over a two year period 82
different teams must be shown. Each team could
not appear nationally more than four times, with
six total appearances allowed. - Why these restrictions? NCAA argued competitive
balance - In 1984 the Supreme Court ruled that the NCAA
Television Plan, which restricted appearances on
television, was a violation of the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act. - Impact of removing NCAA control over television
- Number of televised games increased.
- Improvement in competitive balance? Review Berri
(forthcoming) - The rise and fall of the College Football
Association (1977-1997)
5NCAA and the Amateur Athlete
- College athletes are not paid. Why?
- The NCAA argues competitive balance.
- Economists argue for the increased profits from
lowering the price paid for inputs. - How does the NCAA lower the price of labor?
- Recruiting controls
- Limiting athletic scholarships
- Freshman eligibility increases the potential
number of years available - The National Letter of Intent ends the
expenditure on recruitment by imposing a two year
penalty on athletes who change their minds. - Most importantly, compensation to athletes are
limited to the cost of attending the school.
6Impact of Paying College Players
- The Competitive Balance Argument
- The Amateur Athlete Argument
- Are college athletes viewed as amateurs?
- The Temporary Underpayment Argument
- Are athletes only temporarily underpaid?
- Less than 1 of college athletes ever become
professionals. - The majority of college athletes come from the
lower levels of the income distribution. Hence,
the nature of the labor market results in a
transfer of income from the poor (the athlete) to
the wealthy (the University). - How could athletes gain adequate compensation?
- Unionization
- Compensation funds
- Impact of paying players?
- Fewer non-revenue generating sports
- Declines in the salaries paid to coaches.
- Fewer players leaving college early or avoiding
college entirely
7College Football Playoffs
- The Bowl System 1902-1994
- The Bowl Championship Series 1995-present
- A Division I-A Playoff System
- A playoff system would clearly enhance NCAA
revenues - Problems
- Playoffs lengthen the football season
- Playoffs may eliminate the bowl system, or at
least, limit post-season participation for many
teams. Currently 40 teams play in bowl games. A
16 team playoff would eliminate post-season
participation for 24 teams. - How will the revenue be distributed? 93 of NCAA
revenue comes from the post-season basketball
tournament. Will a football playoff be a cash
cow for the NCAA, but not as lucrative for the
major programs?
8Does the NCAA Earn Profits?
- Most college sports lose money. The evidence,
though, suggests otherwise. - How much do athletes cost?
- Review the stated cost per athlete
- Review the NCAA rule that payments should not
exceed the cost of attending the school. - What is the marginal cost of admitting an
athlete? - Sports also serve to promote the school. Such
promotions enhance both admissions and the
ability of the school to gain financial
contributions. This impact tends to be ignored
by schools in assessing the profitability of
athletic programs.
9An Alternative View of CartelsGame Theory
- Game Theory the study of how individuals make
decisions when they are aware that their actions
affect each other and when each individual takes
this into account. - History Introduced in 1944 by John von Neumann
and Oskar Morgenstern in The Theory of Games and
Economic Behavior. - The work of von Neuman and Morgenstern was
expanded upon by John Nash.
10Introduction to Game Theory
- A game is a situation in which a decision-maker
must take into account the actions of other
decision-makers. Interdependency between
decision-makers is the essence of a game. - In games people must make strategic decisions.
Strategic decisions are decision that have
implications for other people. - Nash Equilibrium - a collection of strategies one
for each player, such that every player's
strategy is optimal given that the other players
use their equilibrium strategy.
11Games to Be Examined
- Prisoner Dilemma Games
- Iterated Strategy Games Not in Book
- Mixed Strategy Games
12Dominant and Dominated Strategies
- Payoff matrix a matrix that displays the
payoffs to each player for every possible
combination of strategies the players could
choose. - Dominant Strategy a strategy that is always
strictly better than every other strategy for
that player regardless of the strategies chosen
by the other players. - Dominated Strategy a strategy that is always
strictly worse than some other strategy for that
player regardless of the strategies chosen by the
other players.
13Weakly Dominate Strategies
- Weakly dominant strategy - a strategy that is
always equal to or better than every other
strategy for that player regardless of the
strategies chosen by the other players. - Weakly Dominated Strategy a strategy that is
always equal to or worse than some other strategy
for that player regardless of the strategies
chosen by the other players.
14Prisoners Dilemma
- Scenario Two people are arrested for a crime
- The elements of the game
- The players Prisoner One, Prisoner Two
- The strategies Confess, Dont Confess
- The payoffs
- Are on the following slide (payoffs read 1,2)
15Prisoners Dilemma, cont.
- Prisoner 2
- Confess Dont Confess
- Confess 4 years, 4 years 0 years, 7 years
- Prisoner 1
- Dont Confess 7 year, 0 years 2 years, 2 years
- Dominant strategy equilibrium In this game, the
dominant strategy for each prisoner is to
confess. So the outcome of the game is that they
each get two years. - This illustrates the prisoners dilemma games in
which the equilibrium of the game is not the
outcome the players would choose if they could
perfectly cooperate.
16The NCAA and TelevisionRevisiting the Cartel
- Scenario Two teams need to determine how many
games to have televised. - The elements of the game
- The players Florida, Miami
- The strategies
- Televise Many Games, Televise Few Games
17Miami vs. Florida State
- The payoffs Payoffs read Miami, Florida State
- Florida State
- Many Few
- Many 5, 5 20, 3
- Miami
- Few 3, 20 8, 8
- Dominant strategy equilibrium In this game, the
dominant strategy for Miami and Florida State is
Many. So the outcome of the game is 5, 5. - This is alternative method to illustrate the
instability of a cartel. Each school has an
incentive to cheat on any cartel agreement,
producing a result neither school desires.
18Iterated Dominant Strategies
- What if a dominant strategy does not exist?
- We can still solve the game by iterating towards
a solution. - The solution is reached by eliminating all
strategies that are strictly dominated.
19Example of Iterated Dominance
- Across is Michigan, Down is Michigan State
20Alternative Solution Strategies
- Nash Equilibrium - a strategy combination in
which no player has an incentive to change his
strategy, holding constant the strategies of the
other players. - Joint Profit Maximization This is the objective
of a cartel. - Cut-Throat A strategy where one seeks to
minimize the return to her/his opponent. - How does the previous game change when we change
the objectives of the players? - This is one of the advantages of game theory. We
do not have to assume profit maximization. We
still need to be able to identify the objectives
of the players.
21Mixed Strategy
- Pure Strategy is a rule that tells the player
what action to take at each information set in
the game. - Mixed strategy allows players to choose randomly
between the actions available to the player at
every information set. Thus a player consists of
a probability distribution over the set of pure
strategies. - Lesson to be learned from Mixed Strategy games A
player must occasionally play to her/his
opponents strength.
22The Football Game
- Scenario A game has come down to a final play.
The 49ers are on the 2 yard line with 5 seconds
to go. The current score is 20-16, with the
Raiders in the lead. The 49ers have two choices,
run or pass. The Raiders have two choices, defend
against the run or defend against the passes. - Players 49ers, Raiders
- Strategy Play Pass or Run, Defend Pass or Run
- Payoffs Probability of success given choices
23The Football Game, cont.
- There is no dominant strategy, or iterated
dominant strategy. - There is also no clear Nash Equilibrium. In
other words, no combination of actions makes both
sides happy given what the other side has chosen. - Hence this is a mixed strategy game.
- Remember, a person is indifferent when the
expected return from action A equals the expected
return form action B.
24Solving the Football Game
- Should the 49ers run or pass?
- E(D run) 70p 20(1-p) 2050p
- E(D pass) 30p 80(1-p) 8050p
- 20 50p 80 50p
- 100p 60
- p .60
- The Raiders are indifferent when the 49ers run
60 and pass 40 of the time. - Should the Raiders defend the run or pass?
- E(run) 30p 70(1-p) 70 40p
- E(pass) 80p 20(1-p) 60p 20
- 70 40p 60p 20
- 50 100p
- p .5
- The 49ers are indifferent when the Raiders defend
the run 50 of the time.
25Who will win the game?
- The probability that the 49ers will win the game
the Nash Equilibrium strategies are adopted
equals - 0.6 0.5 30 0.6 0.5 70 0.4 0.5 80
0.4 0.5 20 50 - The 49ers have a 50 chance of winning this game
when each team adopts their equilibrium
strategies.
26The Football Game, new payoffs.
- How does changing the expected payoffs alter the
probabilities that each team will take each
action? - The 49ers have a very good chance of scoring if
they pass, and the Raiders play run defense. - Outcome of the game
- 49ers will run with a probability of 4/7
- Raiders will play the run with a probability of
2/7
27Who will win the game now?
- The probability that the 49ers will win the game
the Nash Equilibrium strategies are adopted
equals - 4/7 2/7 40 3/7 2/7 90 4/7 5/7 70
3/7 5/7 50 61.4 - The 49ers have a 61.4 chance of winning this
game when each team adopts their equilibrium
strategies.