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miter's avatar

Great piece, thanks. I often feel this uncomfortable relationship with sports, and agree that the financial aspects of professional and collegiate sports leave a bad taste in my mouth. For example, I am a life-long Nuggets fan and have been following the team especially closely over the past 5 year as Jokic emerged. I'm ecstatic about the championship and am able to share and connect with a diverse group of people about it. There is a lot of comradery and community built around teams, but the main beneficiaries of it all are Stan and Josh Kroenke, Walmart heirs (by marriage) who are simply in the position to write the checks and make decisions based on inheriting unlimited wealth. My view is that sports, art, creativity, games or whatever brings humans together, have enormous social benefit and value. The majority of the financial value of sports being controlled by a few individuals is just another market failure.

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Andrew Smith's avatar

As a person who does sports (Brazilian Jiu Jitsu) and someone who has been in punk bands, I've lived this paradox for more than 30 years now. It's a weird tightrope to walk, and society has often thrown the baby out with the bathwater.

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