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Sports As a Reflection of Society
Angela Lumpkin University of Kansas
Three Goals of this Session
To analyze the importance of and possibly challenge perceptions about the status of sport in American society
To explore whether sports develop or reflect character and other societal values
To examine the impact of commercialized sports on values using several sociological factors, including race and gender
To answer this question: Do sports lead or reflect societal values?
A Cheating Culture Pervades Society as It Condones
Cheating on tests, income taxes, spouses, and bosses
Lying to gain advantage Stealing from employers
and others
Why: Personal benefit, regardless of who may be adversely affected.
The Pursuit of Fame and Fortune in Society
The aspiration to get into the most prestigious universities
The quest for power and status by politicians
The greed of corporate executives, lawyers, and accountants
Bernard Madoff
The emphasis is on “me first,” self-promotion, and a “winner-take-all” approach.
Recent Examples of The Cheating Culture 2004 — Martha Stewart convicted of insider
trading and sent to prison 2005 — Bernie Ebbers, CEO of WorldCom,
convicted of accounting and securities fraud 2006 — Enron’s Kenneth Lay convicted of
securities fraud, conspiracy, insider trading, and making false statements to auditors
2008 — Bernard Madoff arrested for financial fraud in the largest Ponzi scheme ever
2009 — Rod Blagojevich, governor of Illinois, ousted for his arrogant abuse of power
2009 — Former Senator Tom Daschle failed to pay more than $128,000 in income taxes
Recent Examples of The Cheating Culture in Sports 2001 — George O’Leary resigned as the head
football coach at Notre Dame after it was found he had lied on his resume.
2005 — Several baseball players lied to Congress about their use of performance-enhancing drugs.
2007 — During their game, New England Patriots Coach Bill Belichick directed his staff to videotape the defensive signals of the New York Jets
2008 — Helio Castroneves, a two-time winner of the Indianapolis 500, indicted for income tax evasion.
2009 — Florida State University received several sanctions for a cheating scandal involving 61 athletes in 10 sports.
Is there a pattern of behavior that shows that
sports reflect societal values?
Why Are Sports So Important in the United States? Enjoyable use of leisure time Entertainment Social bonding Winning is rewarded An enriching part of
education Incessant promotion and
telecasting by the media Praised for teaching
character and moral values
Sports as Entertainment Can sports be defined as
athletic competitions promoted through extravagant presentations for the purpose of entertaining audiences in person and electronically?
Do sport journalists describe sports as entertainment in ways that reflect people’s cultural, economic, and moral values?
Social Bonding while Cheering for our Favorite Teams
Families schedule their lives and budgets around sports.
Friends and families socialize in and around sporting events Tailgating at football games Sports bars Fantasy leagues
Winning Is Richly Rewarded
Sports Illustrated’s Richest Athletes in 2008#1 Tiger Woods earned $127,902,706#3 LeBron James earned $40,455,000#6 Alex Rodriguez earned $35,000,000#9 Peyton Manning earned $30,500,000#11 Dale Earnhardt, Jr. earned $27,221,970
Winning in Sports Brings Status and Monetary Rewards Millions are seeking after the
elusive dream of “making it” as an athlete.
National Championships for Young Athletes Age Group Gender Sponsoring Organization National Championship
6 years and under
boys; girls Callaway Golf (a golf equipment company)
Callaway Junior World Golf Championship
8 years and under
boys; girls Amateur Athletic Union Amateur Athletic Union Basketball National Championships
8 years and under
boys; girls United States Tennis Association
U.S. Open Junior Tennis Championships
8-11 years with weight limits
boys Pop Warner Football Junior Pee Wee Pop Warner Super Bowl
8-11 years girls Pop Warner Cheer and Dance Junior Pee Wee Cheer and Dance Championships
9 years and under
boys; girls Amateur Athletic Union Amateur Athletic Union Junior Olympic Swimming Meet
9 years and under
boys; girls US Club Soccer Youth World Series
9 years and under
boys; girls Youth Basketball of America Youth Basketball of America National Championships
9-12 years boys; girls Little League Little League Baseball World Series
9-12 years girls Little League Little League Softball World Series
10 years and under
girls Amateur Athletic Union Amateur Athletic Union Girls Junior National Volleyball Championships
10 years and under
boys; girls Babe Ruth League Cal Ripken Baseball 10-Year-Old World Series
What Is the Likelihood of Becoming an Olympic, Professional, Intercollegiate, or
Interscholastic Athlete? US population —
over 306 million Just over 7 million
high school athletes
Less than 500,000 college athletes
Approximately 10,000 professional athletes
Less than 800 Olympic athletes
7,000,000
500,000
10,000 800
0
1,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
6,000,000
7,000,000
1
Athletes
Interscholastic Intercollegiate Professional O lympic
Estimated Probability of Competing in Athletics beyond the High School Interscholastic Level (NCAA, 2007)
Student-AthletesMen's
BasketballWomen's
BasketballFootball Baseball
Men's Ice Hockey
Men's Soccer
High School Student Athletes
546,335 452,929 1,071,775 470,671 36,263 358,935
High School Senior Student Athletes
156,096 129,408 306,221 134,477 10,361 102,553
NCAA Student Athletes
16,571 15,096 61,252 28,767 3,973 19,793
NCAA Freshman Roster Positions
4,735 4,313 17,501 8,219 1,135 5,655
NCAA Senior Student Athletes
3,682 3,355 13,612 6,393 883 4,398
NCAA Student Athletes Drafted
44 32 250 600 33 76
Percent High School to NCAA
3.0% 3.3% 5.7% 6.1% 11.0% 5.5%
Percent NCAA to Professional
1.2% 1.0% 1.8% 9.4% 3.7% 1.7%
Percent High School to Professional
0.03% 0.02% 0.08% 0.45% 0.32% 0.07%
Do Sports Build Character? Athletes potentially can learn
Respect for opponents, teammates, and officials
Self-confidence Self-discipline Sportsmanship Teamwork Mental toughness How to win and lose with class Life skills and life lessons
Goals of Sports
Young athletes:
Have funLearn
sports skills
Learn life lessons of character
High school athletes:
Develop sports skills
Broaden educational experiences
Develop character
College athletes:
Achieve their potential in sports
Enrich educational experiences
“Going professional in something other than sports”
Coaches and other Adults Can
Teach, model, shape, and reinforce values like honesty, respect, and responsibility
Help athletes learn to play by the letter and spirit of the rules — the epitome of sportsmanship
Myths and Truths in Youth Sports (Farrey, 2008)Myths Truths
Myth…The best athletes are those who work the hardest.
The truth is…The elite often have innate, natural advantages.
Myth…Early, focused skills training makes a Tiger roar.
The truth is…In golf, sometimes; in most sports, no.
Myth…America is the world’s athletics superpower.
The truth is…We’re the fattest nation—and it all starts in preschool.
Myth…Organized competition breeds success.
The truth is…Unstructured play is often more valuable.
Myth…Children want to win. The truth is…They do, but it means far more to adults.
Myth…Athletic scholarships support amateurism.
The truth is…The lure of a payoff turns peewees into mini-pros.
Myth…The poor benefit the most from college sports.
The truth is…Rich kids are far likelier to get roster spots.
Myth…Grade-school travel teams identify future stars.
The truth is…They reward early bloomers, leaving the rest behind.
Myth…No national body coordinates grassroots sports.
The truth is…The U.S. Olympic Committee is supposed to.
Myth…Children inevitably find their best sport.
The truth is…Most are never exposed to sports they might excel at.
Myth…Money is pouring into youth sports. The truth is…It is, but not in the communities that need it most.
Myth…Media coverage drives up participation.
The truth is…Kids play a game — then they become fans.
Myth…Grassroots hoops has gotten too professional.
The truth is…The problem is it lacks a professional approach.
Myth…Playing sports builds character. The truth is…It depends on who runs, and who surrounds, the team.
Athletes Learn at an Early Age The importance of doing whatever it takes
to help win, as they Cheat to gain competitive advantages Taunt their opponents and use other
gamesmanship ploys Engage in harmful behaviors personally
and against opponents Display poor sportsmanship
Are athletes who engage in such actions simply displaying the values that characterize families,
peers, businesses, and society in general?
Did These Really Happen?
A mother abandoned her daughter alongside an interstate highway after the daughter did not perform to the mother’s expectations in a soccer game.
A mother abandoned her daughter alongside an interstate highway after the daughter did not perform to the mother’s expectations in a soccer game.
A father provided steroids and human growth hormones to his 13-year old son who was a world-ranked inline speed skater.
A father provided steroids and human growth hormones to his 13-year old son who was a world-ranked inline speed skater.
A T-ball coach offered a player $25 if he would hit an autistic teammate in the face so that child would not have to be played in a play-off game.
A T-ball coach offered a player $25 if he would hit an autistic teammate in the face so that child would not have to be played in a play-off game.
Justify Actions by Saying Everyone else does it. This is the way the
game is played. Do anything you can
get by with until the official calls it.
If you are not cheating, then you are not trying hard enough to win.
Commercialized Sports Are often Characterized by
Violence Gambling Drug abuse Racial discrimination Gender discrimination Academic abuses Recruiting abuses Arms race
Mitch Cozad, backup punter at Northern Colorado, convicted of assault for stabbing his rival’s kicking leg.
Tonya Harding’s cronies injured Nancy Kerrigan.
A Massachusetts judge sentenced Thomas Junta to 6-10 years in state prison for the beating death of Michael Costin, in a fight after a youth hockey practice in which the sons of both men participated.
VIOLENCE
GamblingFormer MLB player Pete Rose Former
NBA referee Tim Donaghy
College basketball has been plagued with point-shaving scandals beginning in 1951 with
33 players from 7 colleges, in 1961 with 37 players from 22 colleges, Boston College in the
1970s, Tulane University in the 1980s, and Arizona State University and Northwestern
University in the 1990s.
Performance-Enhancing Drugs
Baseball players like Barry Bonds
Marion Jones stripped of Olympic medals and sentenced to prison
Racial Discrimination against African Americans in Sports
Were subjected to racial taunts, discriminatory treatment, exclusion, and bigotry
Exceptional athletically and academically, a few males were the first to integrate sports.
Moses Walker, who played catcher for Oberlin College and the University of Michigan in 1881-1883, was the first to play at a Caucasian institution.
William Lewis, who played center-rush for Harvard University, was the first named an All-American in 1892 and 1893.
Continued Racial Discrimination
Historically Black colleges and universities and segregated leagues
Subjected to: withheld from games; violence; exclusion with “gentleman’s agreements;” stacking; and quotas
Oklahoma State’s Wilbanks Smith viciously hit Drake’s Johnny Bright in the face with his fist.
All-American Paul Robeson
John McClendon
Confronting Racial Discrimination
Succeeding against unbelievable odds
The watershed event of the 1966 NCAA men’s basketball championship game
Athletes fighting for their rights, such as through boycotts and demanding equitable treatment
Alice Coachman
Bill Garrett
Jesse Owens
Academic Exploitation of African Americans in Sports
Post-World War II, they were recruited mostly for their athletic skills.
Segregated schools, non-college-preparatory curricula, and socio-economic factors led to poor academic preparation for college.
Many majored in eligibility rather than obtained college degrees.
Dexter Manley
Heisman Trophy
Of the 74 recipients since 1935, 27 have been African Americans (Archie Griffin counted twice); Ernie Davis (Syracuse) was first (1961).
By decades, there were 3 African Americans in the 1960s, 7 in the 1970s, 8 in the 1980s, 7 in the 1990s, and 2 since 2000.
Twenty-one (or 78%) of the African American winners were running backs. Out of the 47 Caucasians, 24 were quarterbacks; 3 of the African Americans played this position.
An analysis of the recipients of the Heisman Trophy suggests these conclusions:
African American football players were denied opportunities to compete at the highest competitive level between 1935 and 1960 or were deemed undeserving of this recognition.
An African American who played running back had a much greater chance of being selected for this honor.
During the 1970s through 1990s, the best college football player was most likely an African American.
Relative to the Heisman Trophy, was football leading or reflecting
society?
College Basketball Players of the Year
Males 1966—Associated
Press 1969—Naismith 1977—Wooden
Females 1981—Wade 1983—Naismith 2004—Wooden
African American males have been selected for one or more of these awards over 81% of the 43 years.
African American females have received at least one of these awards in all but five years since 1981.
Once given equal opportunities, African
American males and females began to dominate college
basketball.
Gender Discrimination in Sports Historically, since sports have
been the domain of male, females were largely excluded.
Basketball — thought to be too vigorous for the “weaker sex” Courts divided into thirds
from 1899-1938 Half-court games until 1970
in colleges
The last sanctioned high school half-court game was played in 1995 in Oklahoma.
Alternative Sports for Females Play days and sports days prevented the
commercialized abuses of men’s athletics. In 1923, the Women’s Division of the National
Amateur Athletic Federation opposed international competition, favored play days for girls and women, and advocated for “a sport for every girl, and every girl in a sport.”
Expanded Opportunities in Sports The Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for
Women beginning in 1971, and the organizations it replaced, set standards and policies for women’s athletics and offered national championships until 1982 when the NCAA took over women’s championships.
1976 — NJCAA began national championships for females.1980 — NAIA began national championships for females.
Title IX and Beyond Title IX of the Education Amendments
of 1972 “…many Americans seemed to believe
that new times required new laws, and most were unwilling to admit that the hundred-year-old equal protection clause afforded far greater protection that Title IX, perhaps because such an admission would indicate that the country and the courts had been violating the Constitution for more than a century. In the final analysis, however, Title IX gave women no new rights, but it inspired them to take advantage of those they already had.”*
(*Fields, p. 161)
Participation Numbers by Gender in Interscholastic Sports
3,666,917
3,770,621
3,409,081
3,429,853
3,960,517
4,321,103
294,015
817,073
1,810,671
1,940,801
2,806,998
3,021,807
0 500,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 3,000,000 3,500,000 4,000,000 4,500,000
1971-1972
1972-1973
1981-1982
1991-1992
2001-2002
2006-2007
Boys Girls
Number of Athletes by Gender and Governing Organization in 2006
30,656 31,391
218,330
18,188 20,556
161,572
0
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
NJCAA NAIA NCAA
Males Females
Females in Intercollegiate Athletics in NCAA Institutions (Acosta & Carpenter, 2008)
Year Average Number of Sports for
Females
Female Head Coaches of
Women’s Teams
Female Head Administrators of
Women’s Programs
1972 not available Over 90% Over 90%
1978 5.61 58.2% not available
1982 6.59 52.4% not available
1986 7.15 50.6% 15.2%
1990 7.24 47.3% 15.9%
1992 7.09 48.3% 16.8%
1996 7.53 47.7% 18.5%
2000 8.14 45.6% 17.8%
2004 8.32 44.1% 18.5%
2006 8.45 42.4% 18.6%
2008 8.65 42.8% 21.3%
Comparison of Financial Support for Males and Females in Intercollegiate Athletics in 2006
$1,111,276,301
$893,048,748
$104,242,516
$902,623,678
$513,028,564
$52,385,535
$-
$200,000,000
$400,000,000
$600,000,000
$800,000,000
$1,000,000,000
$1,200,000,000
Grants-in-Aid Operating Expenses Recruiting Expenses
Males Females
Threats to Academic Integrity Some athletes masquerade as students
while chasing the elusive dream of playing at the next level.
Lies, dishonesty, and deceit have been used to keep athletes academically eligible.
University of Georgia (1981)University of Minnesota (1999)University of Tennessee (2000)
In Recruiting, Some Coaches
Creatively violate recruiting rules to gain competitive advantages.
Engage in cheating and lying to get the “blue chip” recruits.
Choose to cheat because of the pressures to win.
The Paradox of the Arms Race
Entice recruits with the biggest and best facilities
Pay winning coaches millionsBob Stoops
Oklahoma football coach Zero Sum Game
Moral Justifications Used to Defend Unethical Actions in Sport and Society
Try to make it seem that the unethical action is really ethical, such as by claiming there is no rule against it, no one will ever know, or everyone else does it.
State that the action is not really unethical since no one was really harmed or no foul was called or penalty assessed.
Argue that while a rule was violated, the situation along with the amount of good accomplished overshadowed the small amount of harm; that is, the end justifies the means.
Sports Reflecting Societal Values
Winning at all costs
Unethical behaviors
Influence of money
Sports Are a Reflection of Societal Values
While sports have been praised for leading positive societal changes, such as reducing discriminatory treatment of African Americans, today sports reflect society’s cheating culture.
Commercialized sports, especially as popularized by the media, entertain Americans, many of whom are obsessed by winning and cheer for athletes and coaches who do whatever it takes to win.
Questions or Comments?
Angela Lumpkin Department of Health, Sport, and Exercise
SciencesUniversity of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045-7567E-mail: [email protected]: 785-864-0778
Thank-you for attending!
References Acosta, V. R., & Carpenter, L. J. (2008).
Women in intercollegiate sport. A longitudinal, national study thirty one year update. Retrieved November 15, 2008, from www.acostacarpenter.org
Farrey, T. (2008). Game on: The all-American race to make champions of our children. New York: ESPN Books.
Fields, S. K. (2005). Female gladiators: Gender, law, and contact sport in America. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.
References Frank, R. (2004). Challenging the myth: A
review of the links among college athletic success, student quality, and donations (pp. 1-36). Miami, FL: Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. Retrieved December 1, 2008, from www.knightfoundation.org/dotAsset/131763.pdf
Lumpkin, A. (in press). Critical events: Historical overview of minorities (men and women) in college sports. In D. Brooks & R. Althouse (Eds.). Racism in college athletics (3rd ed). Morgantown, WVA: Fitness Information Technology, Inc.
References Lumpkin, A. (in press). Modern sport ethics: A
reference handbook. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.
National Collegiate Athletic Association. (2007). Estimated probability of competing in athletics beyond the high school interscholastic level. Retrieved January 5, 2009, from www.ncaa.org/wps/ncaa?ContentID=279