Loserville : How Professional Sports Remade Atlanta--And How Atlanta Remade Professional Sports
ISBN: 9781496230096
Platform/Publisher: Ebook Central / University of Nebraska Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Limited; Download: 7 Days at a Time
Subjects: Sport &; Recreation;

SB Nation writer Trutor debuts with a fascinating and comprehensive survey of Atlanta's "first decade as a major league city." While, on its face, the formation of the NHL Flames in 1972 helped the metropolis find unprecedented success as "one of only nine North American cities with franchises in all four major professional sports leagues," Trutor reveals that the reality failed to meet expectations. As he writes, lackluster performances from the city's pro teams--MLB's Braves, the NFL's Falcons, the Flames, and the NBA's Hawks--led to such fan apathy by the mid-1970s that some ticket holders gave away their tickets for free by leaving them under their windshield wipers. Though the city's corporate leadership saw acquiring professional sports franchises as a "matter of public policy" to promote "social cohesion," Trutor underscores how that "top-down effort to construct a sense of community" faltered by further laying bare the divide between Atlanta's impoverished inner-city Black majority and its elite "politically autonomous white suburbs." In providing a cultural analysis of this epic flop in Atlanta sports history, Trutor also elucidates how other Sun Belt cities that pursued major league teams in the 1980s and '90s--including Tampa and San Diego--suffered similar fates. It's a brilliant look at the intricate ways sports and politics are intertwined. (Feb.)


Clayton Trutor holds a PhD in U.S. history from Boston College and teaches at Norwich University in Northfield, Vermont. He writes about college football and basketball for SB Nation . Trutor is also the Vermont state chairman of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) and is a regular contributor to the SABR Biography Project.

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