Thursday, April 14. 2011 Abusive University of Iowa Football Workout Has No Place In College Athletics Tyrannical, authoritarian coaches have for years walked a fine line between tough practices and abusive practices. It appears that Kirk Ferentz’ University of Iowa football program recently went over the line. After an intense — some would say [...]
Friday, March 25. 2011
League of Fans Proposes Eliminating Athletic Scholarships to Help Restore Integrity on College Campuses
Initiative Would Positively Impact High School and Youth Sports As Well
WASHINGTON, D.C. – As the NCAA’s Final Four draws near, League of Fans, a Ralph Nader sports reform project, today called for our nation’s colleges and [...]
By Dave Zirin
With each passing week, I hear from football fans saying that it’s getting harder to like the game they love. They’ve spent years reveling in the intense competition and violent collisions so central to the sport, but this is the first time these NFL diehards feel conscious about what happens to players when they become unconscious.
In August, to much fanfare, NFL owners finally acknowledged that football-related concussions cause depression, dementia, memory loss and the early onset of Alzheimer’s disease. Now that they’ve opened the door, this concussion discussion is starting to shape how we understand what were previously seen as the NFL’s typical helping of off-field controversy and tragedy.
Sports leagues bilk the public for glitzy new stadiums – and the bills just keep on coming.
By David Bollier
On the Commons
September 8, 2010
In the early 1980s, Ralph Nader launched a new advocacy group called FANS, Fight to Advance the Nation’s Sports, which aspired to address many of the social ills associated with professional sports. While some of his ideas were arguably misguided, such as trying to ban junk food sales at the ballpark, others were incredibly prescient. One idea was to stop taxpayer subsidies to the mega-stadiums that were being built for big-league baseball and football teams.
Essentially, wealthy team owners, who over lunch at their elite clubs would rail against socialistic intrusions on corporate America, invariably demanded that city governments subsidize the construction of lavish new sports palaces for their teams. Why? Because of all the civic pride and economic gain that they would allegedly stimulate.
Bud Selig
Commissioner of Baseball
245 Park Avenue, 31st Floor
New York, NY 10167
July 13, 2010
Dear Mr. Selig:
Now that you have had over a month to absorb and digest the reactions to what a sports writer called the worst umpire call since the 1850s, it is time for you to respect the vast majority of the fans, players and coaches who either believe that umpire Jim Joyce’s call should be reversed as false or who have no objection to such a ruling.
Let’s review the situation. The video clearly shows that Armando Gallarraga of the Detroit Tigers received the throw on a grounder for the last out in the ninth inning before the batter reached the base. Umpire Jim Joyce recognized, to his everlasting credit, in many ways his clear error. His best sentence was “I took a perfect game away from that kid.”
A letter from Ralph Nader and League of Fans to NBA Commissioner David Stern received nationwide attention in June 2002 for raising questions about the impartiality of officiating during Game 6 of the 2002 Western Conference Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Sacramento Kings. Nader and League of Fans demanded that Stern conduct a review to satisfy fans’ sense of fairness and to deter future recurrences of such egregious officiating.
According to reports on June 11, 2008, former referee Tim Donaghy — who has pleaded guilty after being charged in 2007 with conspiring with gamblers — accused NBA executives and referees of broad misconduct and outright manipulation of game results in a recent court filing.
According to Donaghy, NBA executives directed referees “to manipulate games” in order to “boost ticket sales and television ratings.” Donaghy pointed to Game 6 of the 2002 Western Conference finals as one such instance.
Following is the letter from Ralph Nader & League of Fans to Commissioner Stern regarding the egregious officiating in Game 6 of the 2002 Western Conference finals.
Two recent articles from the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times examine the big business of college football and question the tax-breaks and non-profit status enjoyed by athletic departments involved in an arms race of spending on stadiums and coaches.
By Dave Zirin
Barry Bonds should be basking in the moment. The San Francisco Giants outfielder has just passed Hank Aaron to become the all-time home-run king of Major League Baseball. With 756 home runs, seven most-valuable-player awards and eight gold gloves, he should be trotting into the twilight of his career in a hail of hosannas as the finest ballplayer of his generation. But expect no laurels, parades or calls from President Bush.
by Dave Zirin
“You can’t throw money at the problem.” As a former public school teacher in Washington, I heard this cliche from countless bureaucrats. It was code for “Stop whining about ancient textbooks and prehistoric classroom materials, because there is no money.” Imagine my shock when the city announced it would be spending more than $500 million on a new baseball stadium. Clearly when it comes to the needs of billionaire sports owners, there always seems to be money available to be thrown.
(League of Fans’ Washington Post letter to the editor)
The City’s Verizon Center Perk
Washington Post, Letter to the Editor
Monday, March 21, 2007; Page A12
Regarding “Wizards Owner’s $50 Million Request Gets Initial Approval” [Metro, April 4]:
If public investment in pressing city needs were to guarantee the District’s elected leaders free luxury suites at sports venues, maybe such problems would actually get some attention.
Archives
Q&A's
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Q’s & A’s with Jim Thompson
14 May 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Leading Sports Activists: Dave Zirin
18 Apr 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Leading Sports Activists: William Dowling
27 Mar 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Notable Sports Figures: Taylor Branch
9 Mar 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Notable Sports Figures – Joe Nocera
27 Feb 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Notable Sports Figures – Chris Nowinski
13 Feb 2012
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Q’s & A’s with Notable Sports Figures: Joe Ehrmann
3 Feb 2012
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Q & A With John Gagliardi
24 Jan 2012
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Q & A With Robert Lipsyte
10 Jan 2012
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Q & A With Jay Coakley
27 Dec 2011
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Q’s & A’s with Jim Thompson
Special Features
From League of Fans
League of Fans is a sports reform project founded by Ralph Nader to encourage social & civic responsibility in sports industry & culture. See League of Fans Core Principles
League of Fans Announces 2012 “Sport At Its Best” Awards
December 20, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on Ralph Nader's Call for Budding Sports Reformers
December 7, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on Ralph Nader's Claim that Sports Media Are Dropping the Ball on Social, Cultural, and Economic Issues in Sports
November 22, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on the campaign to Make the NCAA Live Up to Its Stated Purpose
October 26, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on the campaign to create a National Sports Commission
October 11, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on the campaign to Ensure Equal Opportunity in Sports for all Americans
September 21, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on putting the "Youth" back into "Youth Sports"
September 8, 2011 Click here to read the news release and report on the campaign to abolish the BCS and Establish a College Football Playoff
August 25, 2011
Read the news release and report on Mandatory Implementation of King-Devick Concussion Test in High School and Youth Sports
August 11, 2011
Click here to read the report and news release and about the campaign to promote sports and physical education for all students
Read the news release and report on Campaign to Promote Humanistic Coaching Education Programs
July 13, 2011
Read the news release and report on the Push For Community Ownership in Professional Sports
June 24, 2011
Read the news release and report and Sports Manifesto on Re-Launch of League of Fans
March 24, 2011
NCAA's Reaction to League of Fans' Proposal
March 29, 2011
League of Fans' Response to NCAA
March 25, 2011
League of Fans Proposes Eliminating Athletic Scholarships to Help Restore Integrity on College Campuses
League of Fans is a project of the Center for Study of Responsive Law.

