Jumping on the bandwagon? Attendance response to recent victories in the NBA
- Resource Type
- research-article
- Authors
- Munoz, Ercio; Chen, Jiadi; Thomas, Milan
- Source
- Journal of Quantitative Analysis in Sports. 18(3):161-170
- Subject
- consumer behavior
regression discontinuity design
winner effect
D12
L83
Z2
Research Article
- Language
- English
- ISSN
- 2194-6388
1559-0410
This article studies whether a recent victory impacts attendance at sports events. We apply a regression discontinuity design to estimate the local average treatment effect of a win on the attendance of subsequent games in professional basketball. Using National Basketball Association data from seasons 1980–81 to 2017–18, we find that home team fan bases react to recent outcomes, with an increase in attendance of approximately 425 attendants (a 3% boost) following a close win relative to a close loss. The increment is approximately one-eighth of a recent estimate of the superstar effect. We do not find an attendance effect when the visiting team has a recent victory, which provides evidence against the existence of externalities. The positive fan base response to narrow home wins relative to narrow losses suggests that recent luck is rewarded in sporting attendance. We discuss possible mechanisms and document a gradual decline in the attendance response that coincides with the rise of alternative means for viewing games and secondary markets for tickets.