Academic literature on the topic 'Finance in Football'

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Journal articles on the topic "Finance in Football"

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Moorhouse, Herbert F. "It’s Goals That Count? Football Finance and Football Subcultures." Sociology of Sport Journal 3, no. 3 (September 1986): 245–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ssj.3.3.245.

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In Britain, professional football (soccer) is the major sport and has been the focus of considerable sociological study. This paper argues that previous studies, which have concentrated on football’s relation to class relations and class cultures, have erred by ignoring the role of football finance. Evidence is provided about the relation in Britain between two professional leagues, the English and the Scottish; and the financial situation of four major clubs, two from each side of the border, is traced to reveal significant differences between them. These variations are then used to show how particular patterns of football finance feed into the symbols and images that surround the game in Scotland and that feed into the popular culture of that country in a way which preempts class as the most fruitful line of analysis.
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Minquet, Jean Paul-Louis. "Sports, football et finance." Revue française de gestion 30, no. 150 (June 1, 2004): 141–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3166/rfg.150.141-160.

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David, Matthew. "Music lessons: football finance and live streaming." Journal of Policy Research in Tourism, Leisure and Events 3, no. 1 (March 2011): 95–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19407963.2011.539384.

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Williams, John. "Going down? Football finance in the global era." Criminal Justice Matters 88, no. 1 (June 2012): 26–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09627251.2012.695504.

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Möller, Sebastian. "Kieran Maguire (2020): The Price of Football. Understanding Football Club Finance, Newcastle: Agenda Publishing." FuG – Zeitschrift für Fußball und Gesellschaft 2, no. 2-2020 (June 24, 2021): 257–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.3224/fug.v2i2.08.

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Kesenne, Stefan. "Belgian Football." Journal of Sports Economics 8, no. 6 (April 18, 2007): 670–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527002506297023.

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LeFeuvre, Allie D., E. Frank Stephenson, and Sara M. Walcott. "Football Frenzy." Journal of Sports Economics 14, no. 4 (July 18, 2013): 440–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527002513496012.

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Webb, B. J., and J. M. Broadbent. "Finance and Football Clubs : What Cash Flow Analysis Reveals." Managerial Finance 12, no. 1 (January 1986): 6–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb013556.

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Manoli, Argyro Elisavet, Georgios A. Antonopoulos, and Michael Levi. "Football clubs and financial crimes in Greece." Journal of Financial Crime 23, no. 3 (July 4, 2016): 559–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jfc-06-2015-0030.

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Purpose The purpose of the current article is to provide an account of the financial crimes that are committed within the football clubs in Greece. Design/methodology/approach First, ethnographic research with two football clubs in Greece was conducted. Additional information on the issues at stake was obtained through interviews with informed actors from the realm of Greek football. Moreover, the telephone conversations that were available as the result of wiretapping by the Greek National Intelligence Agency, in relation to the latest football match-fixing scandal (2011) were used. Finally, published media sources were used. These provided information not only on the process behind financial crimes within football clubs but also on the key actors involved. Findings A number of financial (and finance-related) crimes committed within football clubs were identified in the study. These include: ticket “tricks”, fake tax certificates, crimes related to the players’ salary payments, owing money, money laundering and match-fixing. Issues around financial crimes within football clubs must be located within the overall football-related context in the country, which is, of course, an extension of the general financial, entrepreneurial and political landscape in the country. Originality/value This is the first article on football clubs and financial crimes in Greece. Although this is a case study from Greece, it constitutes a potential template for research on an international level. By using the case of football and football clubs in Greece, this article adds to understandings of the complexity of the broader motivational context of financial crime.
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Segura, Jerome, and Jonathan Willner. "The Game Is Good at the Top." Journal of Sports Economics 19, no. 5 (October 13, 2016): 645–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527002516673407.

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Collegiate football may provide advertising for universities, attracting larger pools of applicants and leading to more academically qualified student bodies. Football may also build school spirit, reducing attrition and improving long-run graduation rates. This analysis uses data from 2001 to 2004 for available National Collegiate Athletic Association Division-1 institutions to examine the advertising and effectiveness effects of football. Using both general linear model and linear-in-means model estimation procedures, we find strong advertising and effectiveness effects for football in the full sample. Among schools fielding a football team, the impact of Football Bowl Subdivision and winning percentage is muddy; however, the advertising effect of bowl appearances is strong.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Finance in Football"

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Contreras, Anthony. "An Exploration into the Influence on Share Prices for Publicly Traded Football Clubs." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2015. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1157.

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The present paper explores the effects player transfers have on share price for publicly traded football clubs in Europe. The study utilizes two samples: one English sample from 1997—2004, and another more contemporary European sample from 2007—2014. Preliminary analysis assesses share price links with team performance, financial variables, and two STOXX indices. Further analysis includes 12 event studies testing for abnormal returns resulting from player transfers. Of these 12 event studies, half of the transfers yield abnormal returns. Though results varied, there remains ample evidence from this paper for academics to further study the topic of player news and share prices for publicly traded football clubs.
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Rowbottom, Nick. "Intangible asset accounting and accounting policy selection in the football industry." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 1999. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/899/.

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The main aim of this thesis is to evaluate the feasibility of intangible asset accounting in financial reporting with particular reference to the football industry. It also examines related accounting policies. Lack of reliable measurement is the major obstacle to the recognition of intangible assets. The measurement of intangible assets is problematic due to a lack of verification through reference to an active market. However, drawing on Human Resource Accounting, the thesis argues that identifying and measuring human resource assets may be possible in the football industry. The human resource asset, the player registration, is subject to sufficient control through unique industry structures to justify recognition as an intangible asset. The existence of an active market for player registrations facilitates reliable measurement. In the football industry, a wide variety of accounting policies are employed in accounting for player registrations and other material transactions. Hypotheses regarding the reasons for selecting particular accounting policies are developed and tested. Findings suggest that institutional pressure which influences perceptions of legitimacy and credibility can affect the selection of accounting policies. The thesis also develops and tests a model to value player registrations as intangible assets where they are not subject to market transactions. The ability to reliably measure intangible assets is regarded as crucial to their recognition in financial reporting. In addition, it will lead to the acceptance of intangible asset policies as legitimate and credible, despite the market orientated bias of traditional financial reporting.
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Kolyperas, Dimitrios. "Corporate and social responsibility in professional football club organizations." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/9207.

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While professional football clubs are facing increasing pressures to balance their business with social goals, an important unanswered question is whether these rather stakeholder-oriented organizations understand the nature and impact of corporate and social responsibility (CSR). Research has yet provided little information on how football clubs perceive and react to CSR. This thesis examines how three important aspects of CSR (communication, development and integration with other strategies) evolve across different football clubs and cultures. Because specific clubs may have unique social responsibilities attributed to them, the current study is not limited to one industry and one particular club / segment. It rather contains three complementary case studies and explores CSR activities associated with an overall 38 professional football clubs residing in a pan-European, national (league), and organizational context respectively. Specifically, the primary international analysis reveals that while most football clubs communicate various CSR efforts, these activities primarily refer to ten distinct areas. These areas, as well as prior literature, served as the framework for the development of an international football CSR typology. In addition, qualitative results gathered from a second study across football clubs from the same national context sought to determine the moderating role of national business system characteristics (i.e. legislations, socio-political drivers, internal and external barriers, and phases of CSR development). The results of a third study generally supported the aforementioned contentions providing additional information on the strategic benefits more integrative CSR can offer. Synthesizing outcomes and findings from three complementary studies, this thesis develops a conceptual model that brings together the two different views of the modern CSR debate. This conception theorises CSR as being a legally, socially and organizationally constructed umbrella positioned over the corporate organization. On one hand, CSR is an umbrella protection to cover up corporate irresponsibility, window-dress illegitimate actions, and distract public attention from sensitive business issues. On the other hand, more collaborative, planned, participative and long-term involvement to CSR activity can turn the umbrella model upside down and provide a collector of public support, or a battery where public benevolence can be stored and reused for future purposes. These findings are discussed in the context of contributions to the field of sport management and marketing, practitioners within the football industry, and scholars pursuing a research agenda in the area of CSR and sports. Future research suggestions are forwarded.
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Ezzeddine, Moussa. "Pricing football transfers : determinants, inflation, sustainability, and market impact : finance, economics, and machine learning approaches." Thesis, Paris 1, 2020. https://ecm.univ-paris1.fr/nuxeo/site/esupversions/04b54a9e-f462-42c1-b567-4864dbaae12f.

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Chaque année, le marché des transferts fait la une des journaux à cause des prix astronomiques payés par les grands clubs de football pour s'acheter des stars. Le montant payé par le club est supposé être une estimation de la valeur du joueur sur le marché. L'objectif de cette thèse est donc de déterminer les facteurs significatifs impactant le modèle de valorisation des joueurs. Pour ce faire, nous exploitons une base de données contenant 87 000 transferts et plus de 200 000 salaires avec deux types de variables ; une variable contenant des données statistiques sur chaque joueur pour les deux saisons précédentes, l'autre contenant une synthèse de notes données par les experts. Ce travail a été réalisé à partir d'un modèle de valorisation hédonique et de trois algorithmes de Machine Learning pour estimer les facteurs les plus importants dans la détermination de la valeur d'un joueur. Bien que perfectible, ces modèles sont capables de prédire les fonctions de prix des transferts et des salaires associés. Enfin, un modèle de marché a été implémenté pour déterminer l'effet des transferts, des résultats inattendus de matchs et de la Covid-19 dans la valeur d'un club de football. Ces recherches ont permis de fournir des explications prometteuses à propos des différentes segmentations sur le marché des transferts et l'impact de ces derniers sur la fluctuation de la valeur de certains clubs
Each year new transfer market news tops headlines due to the astronomical prices paid to recruit a superstar by top football clubs. The money paid by the buying club is assumed to be an estimate of the market value of the transferred player. Thus, the challenge is to determine the significant factors that affect the pricing function of a football player. In this research, a large data set has been extracted containing more than 87,000 transfers and more than 200,000 wage observation alongside two sets of variables; one contains real statistics of each player from the previous two seasons, while the other contains synthetic scores given by experts. This work has made use of one hedonic pricing function and three machine learning algorithms to estimate the most important factors affecting the financial value of the player. Albeit imperfect, but the models can predict the pricing functions of the transfer fees and wages with different promising precisions. Finally, a market model has been carried out to determine the effect of transfers, surprising match results, and COVID-19 on the market value of a football club. The overall findings were promising as they have provided interesting explanations about the different segmentations in the transfer market and the effectivity of transfers on the fluctuations of the share values of certain clubs
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Baah-Nuakoh, Kwame A. "Financial regulation of professional football in Ghana." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/19278.

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Football clubs have multiple stakeholders sometimes with different and conflicting objectives. If a club concentrates solely on achieving sporting success at the expense of its financial objectives, it risks jeopardizing its long-term stability, which may affect the sporting integrity of the league as a whole. The behaviour of one club potentially has externality implications for other stakeholders which cannot always be internalised. There is therefore the need for regulation of the pre-emptive type to avert such negative consequences for clubs. FIFA has requested all member associations to implement club licensing to improve upon professionalism in management and to ensure long-term stability of club football. This thesis picks up on this theme to review the financial regulatory system in Ghana, obtain lessons from other jurisdictions and develop an incentive-based context-specific Football Financial Clearinghouse framework that is applicable in Ghana. The thesis employs a mixed-method research approach to evaluate the financial disclosure, position and performance of professional football clubs in Ghana, utilising critical reviews, interviews, focus group discussions and questionnaires to answer specific research questions. The empirical analysis in this thesis shows that financial licensing and monitoring needs to be complemented by the provision of incentives and support services to clubs to achieve optimal regulatory compliance. The key incentive in the specific case of Ghana is to ensure regulated access to credit. This thesis makes four significant contributions to knowledge by showing that: Ghanaian football clubs are in a difficult financial situation; there is an appetite for change amongst Ghanaian football’s stakeholders for a new financial regulatory framework; the existing financial regulatory frameworks, especially in Europe, are not applicable in the Ghanaian context as they were made for a different jurisdiction; and that the FFC framework would be an appropriate context-specific framework to deal with the financial regulation of Ghanaian football clubs.
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Cox, Adam John. "An economic analysis of spectator demand, club performance, and revenue sharing in English Premier League football." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2016. https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/an-economic-analysis-of-spectator-demand-club-performance-and-revenue-sharing-in-english-premier-league-football(be4c9045-e4cb-4d75-96b7-2ebe80c160b8).html.

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Since its creation in 1992, the Premier League has sold exclusive media rights for live football matches to broadcasters on behalf of member clubs. The collective selling method removes any price competition between the clubs, whom would otherwise compete against each other to sell rights to their matches (commonly seen in other European Leagues). A key issue with monopoly power is that the Premier League could distort the market for its product or abuse its dominant position in the market as the sole seller of the rights (contrary to Article 101 and 102 of the Treaty of the European Union). In defence, the Premier League argued that matches broadcast live on television can be considered as a substitute for watching at the stadium. A Competition Commission investigation concluded that the potential benefits of collective selling arrangements are for the redistribution of revenue to promote solidarity at all levels of football. After some amendments to the auction process, collective selling continues. Contributing to the applied industrial economics literature, this thesis examines the key arguments for using collective selling methods in the Premier League. Results from empirical economic analysis find firstly, that there is no evidence to suggest a negative impact on match day revenue from live broadcasting and the revenues from rights sales heavily outweigh such an impact. Secondly, that sharing revenue between clubs will only enhance solidarity (competitive balance) if the amount shared is much larger than at present, however, a greater uncertainty of match outcome reduces demand for spectating at the stadium whilst increasing demand for television viewing. Finally, the impact of investment in talent is far greater for weaker teams whilst participating in the Champions League and Europa League has no impact on domestic league performance. This thesis concludes that the Premier League should offer a greater number of rights to broadcast matches and should increase the amount of revenue shared (including revenues from European Competitions) in order to increase competitive balance. This would increase the number of television viewers for live football broadcasts but would likely reduce the numbers of fans spectating at the stadium.
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Acker, Enrico. "The personal financial management attitudes and practices of South African rugby players." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/11363.

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When rugby became professional in 1995, both the game and the social and financial position of the players changed (Basson, 2003). Players started to train full-time and earned annual salaries (Goldman& Johns, 2009). Due to the transition from amateur to professional status, rugby players needed to make adequate personal financial management decisions. The purpose of this study is to investigate the personal financial management attitudes and practices of South African rugby players. Previous research about personal financial management largely focussed on the general public, and did not focus on South African rugby players. Rugby is a professional sport where players earn money from a young age. It is expected of rugby players to make adequate personal financial decisions from as early as 19 years old. The literature review provided an overview of personal financial management and a discussion on the various components that should be included in personal financial management. A framework for this study was developed. The framework used these components as the base for the personal financial attitudes and practices and how it relates to the demographics of the respondents. Three hypotheses were also formulated based on the literature overview and framework. The objectives of this study were achieved by adopting a quantitative research methodology. A convenience sample of 132 rugby players was drawn for this study. Rugby players from NMMU Madibaz, Eastern Province Rugby Union (EP), South Western Districts Rugby Union (SWD) and Sharks Rugby Union participated in this study. The results of the empirical survey showed that respondents have positive attitudes towards the importance of budgeting, retirement planning, risk management, debt management and investment and the importance of employing a financial planner. On the other hand the personal financial management practices of the respondents in this study can be described as weak. From the results of the empirical survey it is clear that the respondents have weak practices towards the majority of the personal financial management practices. Only one of the three hypotheses was accepted namely that there is a relationship between the demographics of rugby players and their personal financial practices. There is no relationship between personal financial management attitudes and personal financial management practices of South African rugby players and that there is also no relationship between demographic variables and personal financial management attitudes of South African rugby players. This study has provided insight into the personal financial management attitudes and practices of South African rugby players. Valuable information was obtained that could help to address the personal financial management needs of rugby players.
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Malinowski, Mateusz. "Capital Market Efficiency : an event study on the incorporation of football transfers." Thesis, Högskolan Kristianstad, Sektionen för hälsa och samhälle, 2013. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hkr:diva-12770.

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We live in an era where internationalization and globalization are two extremely attractive concepts. People aim to create a society where limits and restrictions are erased and a thriving society is a reality. Numerous transformations have occurred in order to realize this and one of the most vital ones is the globalization of the economy. The globalization was made possible through the discovery on the capital market. This market enables people to trade with each other, no matter place or time. Thus, a more efficient solution is offered for rapid and significant transfers such as loans and investment. According to various researchers, the capital market determines, in a way, which company will grow and which will stagnate in development. However, the capital market needs to be efficient in order to offer the services intended. The aim of this dissertation is to explain how efficient the capital market is when incorporating information regarding football player transfers. By examining the empirical findings, it will also be able to establish if assets of the same market value cause different share price fluctuations depending on if they are acquired or sold.
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Correia, Diogo Guilherme Câmara. "Is the stock market influenced by the results of national football teams?" Master's thesis, Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/12648.

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Mestrado em Finanças
Este estudo analisa o efeito do humor dos investidores no mercado bolsista. Nos últimos anos muitos autores encontraram uma relação entre desporto e humor e, tendo por base essas descobertas, decidimos utilizar os resultados dos jogos das selecções nacionais de futebol como variável de humor. Concluímos que a média dos retornos diários após dias de jogo é inferior à que se verifica nos dias subsequentes a dias em que não foram disputados jogos e que as derrotas têm um impacto estatisticamente significativo nos retornos após dias de jogo.
This study analyzes the effect of investors' mood in the stock market. In the past years many authors found a relationship between sports and mood and, motivated by those findings, in our study we use international football as a variable of mood. We conclude that the daily mean returns after game days are lower than the ones after no game days and that losses have a statistical significant impact in the returns that follows a game day.
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Seth, Sharan. "The Effects of Managerial Turnover on Share Prices Of Publicly Traded English Football Teams." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2016. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1378.

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This paper explores the effects of managerial changes on the share prices of publicly traded football teams in England. Using data from 9 publicly traded teams during 1992- 2016, 21 managerial changes were analyzed through an event study analysis. Events were categorized as sackings or resignations, and the hypotheses for each were laid out differently. The results indicated that two of the managerial sackings generated negative abnormal returns prior to the sacking and positive abnormal returns after the change of manager. The study also identifies the difficulties in the study of football teams’ share prices due to their illiquidity and identifies improvements that can make further research in this topic more accurate.
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Books on the topic "Finance in Football"

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Moorhouse, Herbert F. It's goals that count?: Football finance and football subcultures. [Champaign]: [Human Kinetics Publishers], 1986.

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Great Britain. Football Task Force. Football: Commercial issues. London?]: The Task Force, 1999.

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Gerrard, Bill. Football, fans and finance: Understanding the business of professional football. Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1999.

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Football economics and policy. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

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Morrow, Stephen. The people's game?: Football, finance, and society. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.

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Ndoye, Doudou. Gestion sportive et gestion financière du football. [Dakar, Sénégal]: EDJA, 1994.

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A, Goddard John, ed. The economics of football. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011.

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Crampsey, Robert A. Economics of Scottish professional football: A resource for teachers of economics. Glasgow: Education for the Industrial Society Project in co-operation with the Scottish Examination Board, 1986.

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Couch, Kedric. Winning football while becoming financially secure--: How it's done in Texas. Dallas, Tex: K. Couch, 1988.

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Saturday millionaires: How winning football builds winning colleges. New York, New York: Turner Publishing, Wiley, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Finance in Football"

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Kučera, Martin. "Human Resource Accounting: The Football Sector." In Global Versus Local Perspectives on Finance and Accounting, 227–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11851-8_22.

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BEECH, J. "Finance in the Football Industry." In Managing Football, 119–49. Elsevier, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-1-85617-544-9.00008-4.

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"Finance in the football industry: John Beech." In Managing Football, 137–67. Routledge, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780080949765-15.

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"Afterword: Econometrics, Finance and Football …" In Structured Credit Products, 569–74. 2 Clementi Loop, #02-01, Singapore 129809: John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte. Ltd., 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118390504.after.

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Wilson, Rob, and Daniel Plumley. "Finance and accounting in football." In Routledge Handbook of Football Business and Management, 186–98. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351262804-15.

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Raustiala, Kal, and Christopher Jon Sprigman. "Football, Fonts, Finance, and Feist." In The Knockoff Economy, 123–66. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780195399783.003.0005.

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"FOOTBALL FINANCE IN A POST-COVID-19 WORLD AND PROJECT BIG PICTURE." In The Price of Football, 211–20. 2nd ed. Agenda Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1mvw918.18.

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Beech, John. "Football’s Failing Finances." In Routledge Handbook of International Sport Business, 135–45. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315709635-15.

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Broughton, Chad. "An American Classic in the Global Era." In Boom, Bust, Exodus. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199765614.003.0006.

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In April 1974, Admiral was absorbed into Rockwell International’s growing empire. The Vietnam War contractor was, according to the New York Times, on a “debt-financed acquisition binge that lasted almost a decade” as it spread its reach into aircraft, defense, aerospace, electronics, and appliances. Admiral, meanwhile, was still churning out televisions, radios, and home appliances at factories across the Midwest. Productive as it was, the little company couldn’t afford the massive capital outlays required to modernize, market, and survive in the increasingly brutal electronics and appliance businesses. Accustomed to the massive revenues and fat profits of big government contracts, Rockwell International trimmed employment at the plant, investing $25 million to automate the chest-freezer line. In 1975 Rockwell added a 60,000-square-foot microwave oven facility, and in 1978 it spent $12 million to retool the top-mount refrigerator line and erect the “Blue Goose,” a massive machine the length of a football field that spat out finished metal cabinets. In earlier times, investment meant more jobs. Under Rockwell’s rigorous ethic of scientific management, it usually meant fewer. Admiral accounted for about an eighth of Rockwell’s revenues. “We weren’t even peanuts to Rockwell,” Michael Patrick said. It was a new era for Appliance City. One afternoon in the mid-1970s, Dave Bevard was let out of work an hour and a half early. Production workers were instructed to gather in the vast parking lot across the street from the factory. Under a circus tent, a Rockwell representative and the Admiral plant manager told workers about the importance of the B-1 bomber to the nation’s defense, to Rockwell’s future, and, consequently, to Galesburg jobs. By this time Rockwell had production of the B-1 in over forty states, making itself the model practitioner of militaryindustrial growth. The plan was to use its nonmilitary production facilities in a lobbying campaign to maintain one of the most lucrative military contracts in history—around $10 billion at the time. Workers signed premade postcards for their congressman and went home early that day.
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Conference papers on the topic "Finance in Football"

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Nemec, Juraj. "CORRUPTION IN SPORT: CZECH AND SLOVAK FOOTBALL." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b21/s4.010.

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"Analysis on the Agglomeration and Radiation Effects of Campus Football Project." In 2018 International Conference on Economics, Finance, Business, and Development. Francis Academic Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25236/icefbd.18.044.

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Morozova, Ekaterina. "REPRESENTATION OF CONCEPT FOOTBALL EXTREMISM IN ENGLISH AND RUSSIAN DISCOURSES." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b21/s4.046.

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"Analysis on the Financing Mode of Joint Guarantee Loan for Professional Football Clubs of China." In 2018 International Conference on Economics, Finance, Business, and Development. Francis Academic Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25236/icefbd.18.002.

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