Basketball’s
growth in urban areas and among immigrant groups attracted both Jewish and
non-Jewish entrepreneurs who sought to expand the sport’s scope. Basketball promoters and commentators had discussed
forming a ‘national’ basketball league in the 1910s and a national commission failed
to control the various professional leagues of the northeast in the early 1920s. In the middle of the decade, however,
promoters formed the American Basketball League (ABL) as a ‘national’ league
and attempted to reconstruct professional basketball into a mass,
commercialized sport.[1]
The ABL attempted
to turn basketball into a respectable sport.
The league banned profanity, used amateur rules, abandoned the ‘cage,’
and played its games in large urban arenas.
Moral condemnations of professional basketball declined as outright
violence occurred less frequently.[2] The ABL became the first league to serve as
the pinnacle of a linear, though unstable, basketball hierarchy as a younger
generation of former college players entered professional basketball. Media attention remained fairly sparse,
however, until the Celtics joined the league during its second season in
1926-27.[3]
ABL owners wanted
to leave behind the chaos and instability of Progressive-era professional
basketball where players had more control over their production. The Celtics had illustrated the importance of
continuity in building team success.
Other teams adopted the contractual model that both intensified the
commodification of players and provided a massive salary surge. ABL owners attempted to challenge all aspects
of local basketball cultures, including scheduling, ticket prices, and most
importantly, fan loyalties. In some
cities, fans decried an ABL team’s “unpopular attendance charge” and the
possibility that the league would “unfavorably affect the popularity of local
basketball games.”[4]
[1]
For information on the national commission and discussion of the need for a
national league, which would standardize rules of professional basketball, see
Introduction, Reach Official Basketball Guide 1921-22 (Philadelphia,
A.J. Reach & Co.: 1922); Applin,
“From Muscular Christianity to the Marketplace,” 194-196; Peterson, Cages to
Jump Shots, 55.
[2] As
a ‘national’ league, the ABL had teams in New York ,
Brooklyn, Cleveland , Washington
D.C. , Rochester (N.Y.), Fort
Wayne , Boston , Chicago ,
Detroit , and Buffalo . On the ban against profanity, see
“’Oh, Pshaw,’ Limit in Epithets for Pro Fives; $10 a violation,” New York
Times, December 31,
1927 . For sporadic incidents of violence during basketball games,
see “Celtics Win from Rosenblum Five, “New York Times, April 15, 1924;
“Fist Fights as Jewels Defeat Celtics,” Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November
26, 1932. Jewish players were involved in both fights as Marty Friedman and Nat
Holman squared off in 1924 during a game played for U.S. Olympic fund under the
auspices of the Mayor’s Committee on Municipal Athletic Activity. The 1932 fight occurred during another
fundraiser, this time for a retired player.
[3]
“Youngsters Crowding Cage Pros,” Los
Angeles Times, December 25, 1927 . The article describes the generational
transfer within the professional game as “college-trained youngsters” began to
replace “old-timers.”
[4]
The ABL owners suspended a Brooklyn player
during the first season for playing with a non-ABL team during the season. See “Brooklyn Basketball Star Suspended,” Washington
Post, November 20, 1925 .
Quote from “Thru Sportdom,” Baltimore
Jewish Times, September 19, 1926. On salaries, see Peterson, Cages to
Jump Shots, 84-94. Holman received
an annual salary of $10,000 from the Celtics during the mid-1920s.
No comments:
Post a Comment