American Decades
Football: The Fields of Friendly Strife
Professional Football's Increasing Popularity.
During the 1950s college football was surpassed in popularity by professional football. With the increased number of games on television and the growing efficiency of air transportation, regionalism became less of a factor in attracting fans. Pro teams could play throughout the country and fans could follow the fortunes of their favorite teams on television; like most pro sports, football promoted individual sports heroes. College athletes had a maximum of four years' exposure to a team's fans. Pro athletes could attract the fans' attention for their entire careers.
Symbolic Battles.
Colleges had always been able to maintain the interest of alumni, but they had to rely on other, largely symbolic attractions for other fans. Colleges often battled for prestige and superiority, based on team rivalries between states and regions, and among ethnic groups, religious and...
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1950's Sports
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Antitrust, Unions and Dynasties
- Baseball
- Basketball: From NCAA Fast Times to NBA Fast Breaks
- The Birth of Sports Illustrated
- Bowling
- Boxing
- Broadcasting Sports
- Cold War Olympics
- Football: The Fields of Friendly Strife
- Golf
- Horse Racing Near Misses
- Ice Hockey
- Integration at What Cost?
- Little League Big Men
- The Olympics for All
- Tennis
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Sports, 1950–1959
