Fan
interest in the CCNY-NYU game aroused the curiosity of promoters. The game had been played before 5,000 fans at
the 102nd Armory, but reports indicated that three times as many
people wanted tickets. Promoters made a
failed attempt to move the game to Madison
Square Garden ,
although they successfully organized a series of double-headers at the Garden
the following season.[1] Lead promoter Ned Irish explained that he left
his job as a sportswriter at the New York World Telegram to run the
double-headers because: “Basket ball in the Metropolitan area should have the
greatest ready-made market of any sport. It is played in colleges, high schools,
elementary schools, at playgrounds.” Speaking
to the same fluidity of New York
basketball that Barney Ain had described in Spalding, Irish stated that “games
in college gymnasiums and armories have been well-attended – but principally by
younger enthusiasts who were willing to brave the discomforts of first-come
first-served ushering, makeshift seats with somebody’s legs hanging over your
shoulders and abominable ventilation.”
These conditions could only attract the most dedicated – and partisan –
fans, whereas “adult fans were not attracted.”
Irish intended to transform the audience experience and hoped to exploit
basketball’s popularity by giving “the fans a good place in which to watch
games.”[2]
Not
everyone celebrated the new model of New
York college basketball. Prior to a double-header in December 1935,
NYU students publicly complained of being relegated to “gallery” seats. A student publication declared that, “one can
easily deduce that the non-commercialism of NYU athletics is just so much talk
and nothing more.” Two student
publications boycotted basketball and refused to include news on the team until
officials remedied the situation. Upon
being informed of the controversy, Irish denied any responsibility. A media report stated that Irish believed the
“matter rested solely between the students and the university officials.” He also provided assurances to all fans “that
there was no foundation for the claims of poor visibility from the balcony.”[3]
The
failed boycott did not prevent the isolation and marginalization of students
purposely implemented by Irish. Promoters
of the March 1934 CCNY-NYU game limited student tickets to 500 from each
school, but students remained well represented at a contest with an audience of
5,000. Irish’s desire to exploit an
existing mass culture and cater to an older audience led to a scathing critique
in the Nation. In March 1935, columnist ‘Left Wing’ stated:
“a college basketball team has no more place in a professional sports arena…
than a Jew in Hitler’s bathtub.” ‘Left
Wing’ connected the Garden double-headers to the ‘evils’ of college athletics,
which “today is in the control of thoroughly venal men” who only cared about
the commercial benefits of sport. They
hypocritically called college sports amateur while “making it professional in
everything but name, with paid athletes, games played before enormous throngs,
and a professional atmosphere surrounding the whole thing.”[4]
Few
commentators or sportswriters joined ‘Left Wing’ in condemning the new model. The double-headers assured college
basketball’s place in the pantheon of American sport. They received national media attention and praise
from national sportswriters as articles marveled at the sudden rise of college
basketball into the “big-time.” Magazines
and newspapers produced familiar storylines as teams, players, and coaches
became recognizable figures. New York schools
welcomed the financial opportunities provided by the Garden. One media report stated that CCNY’s Holman
“looks with high favor upon the development” of basketball’s “prosperous
future.”[5] Yet, whereas the charity double and triple
headers of the early 1930s had been local or regional events, the regular
double-headers brought teams from across the nation to play New York schools. This posed a problem.
[1] Isaacs, All the Moves, 76, 78-79.
[2] “Basket
Ball Cashes Big Time in New York , Seen as
Threat to Football in Crowds, Dollars,” Washington
Post, January 7, 1935 .
[3] “NYU
Papers Urge Basketball Boycott,” New York Times, December 20, 1935 . The cited quote is from the Washington
Square College Bulletin. NYU had
recently de-emphasized football due to commercialism.
No comments:
Post a Comment