Why Baseball is Still Good for America

When I started graduate school in Boston almost two decades
ago, I knew almost no one. I was nowhere near my family, had little community,
and only a handful of acquaintances. What helped quickly change that was Boston
sports; specifically, the Red Sox and Patriots. Within days of being in the
region, it was clear that Boston sports were a passion that united many—even if
it were in disdain for the Sox’s bullpen. Nonetheless, talking about Nomar or
Big Papi opened the door for me to connect with others and create meaningful
relationships that have now lasted decades.

Although there are many debates around the nation from Oakland to Tampa about public financing of sports stadiums, sports teams create real value and communal social capital in the regions in which they are embedded. My AEI colleague Arthur Brooks recently wrote about how the Chicago Cubs brought him closer to his father and local events like sports can and do foster relationships that are far deeper than purely transactional interactions; local events help foster shared experiences and generate a sense of real communal identity.

Boston Red Sox Nomar Garciaparra high fives teammates after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays’ 11-9, in Toronto July 27. The teams will meet again tomorrow.

PJ/HB/PB

The power of local sports to help foster connections has
been understood for centuries but bears repeating. The great Palio of Siena in
Italy, for instance, is a horse race held twice each year that
has been occurring since 1633. Ten horses and riders, dressed in colors representing
10 of the 17 contrade, or
city wards, race in the magnificent Piazza del Campo. The race is far more than
a sporting event; it is a chance to build strong bonds within the contrade much
like Major League Baseball does in the US.

Over the years, research has found that sports team loyalty is positively associated with a sense of belonging and a sense of meaning. New data from the Survey Center on American Life’s American National Family Life Survey of over 5,000 Americans reveals that those who regularly attend local events, including local sports, tend to be happier with their local neighborhoods and are appreciably more connected to others than those who do not.

The impact of attending a local event is immediately apparent: Over
half (54 percent) of those who say they have attended a local event in their
community, such as a high school sporting event, play, or local festival, report
that they are either completely or very satisfied with the quality of life in
their local community. Among those who have not attended an event in the past
year or never have, the figure drops to just 40 percent. And of those who recently
attended a local community event, 52 percent state that they were completely or
very satisfied with their social lives, whereas just over a third (37 percent)
of those who never participated or haven’t participated in the past year report
feeling the same way.

Beyond a sense of satisfaction, attending local events may also
impact one’s involvement in a community group or a neighborhood association. Those
who attend local events are nearly three times more likely to be more engaged
in community groups. A third (33 percent) of those who regularly partake in these
events state that they are members of local groups and associations, while just
12 percent of non-regular attendees do the same.

Volunteer rates and other social activities climb with community
event attendance too. For instance, 54 percent of those who regularly attend
local events report volunteering for a school activity, local charity, or religious
group in the past six months, compared to just 13 percent of those who did not
attend such events. And whereas one in three (29 percent) regular communal
attendees report that they have helped organize a communal activity in the past
six months, just 6 percent of those who have not participated in a sporting
event report doing the same.

Finally, friendship networks are also impacted by community events
attendance. Almost 10 percent of Americans who never attend local events say they
have no close friends. The number drops to 4 percent among those who attend
local events regularly. Concurrently, 20 percent of regular attendees maintain
that they have ten or more close friends, while only 11 percent of those who do
not attend such events report the same.

The data of the American National Family Life Survey illustrate that there is a very strong relationship between engaging in local culture and the fostering of meaningful, home-grown sociability. Local events, and sports more specifically, can make connecting with others easier. They can help Americans to feel that they are part of something bigger than themselves, and they help establish a sense of place. As loneliness rises, social capital declines, and neighbors talk less, baseball and local sports can be a force that helps bring Americans together in an era of fracture, isolation, and dislocation.

Samuel J. Abrams is a professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence College and a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute

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