Gamechangers and Rainmakers is the story of how sport became big business, along with 40 pivotal moments that helped create a trillion-dollar global entertainment industry.
The growing relationship between sport, television and the advertising industry has been key to this development – as have the boundless ambitions of influencers such as Bernie Ecclestone, Billie Jean King, Rupert Murdoch and the founders of Adidas and ESPN.
The 1980s was the defining decade when sport morphed into primetime entertainment and Nike invented the playbook for brands. Ten years later, Sky won the inaugural Premier League TV contract, UEFA re-launched the European Cup, and a global fan base got hooked on the real-world drama of football, fantasy league, videogames and online betting.
As the value and profile of sport soared, investors wanted to own teams, while prosperous nations wanted to host the top events – which led to a firehose of unregulated cash and rogue behaviour by some of sport’s top bosses.
This fascinating book analyses how and why this happened, exploring the new challenges facing sport, such as how it must adapt to stay relevant to young people. Did sport peak at Paris ’24 or is the best still to come?
About David Stubley
David spent the first decade of his career working in television at ITV and Channel 4. The last 25 years have been spent advising some of the world’s top brands, governing bodies and sporting properties on how to unlock value through sports marketing.
He wrote this book for two reasons. First, to tell the untold story of how sport morphed from being an amateur pastime played on Saturday afternoon – to killer content for modern day brands and broadcasters. Second, to provide a rallying cry to sports leaders to create a roadmap for their sports which excites the next cohort of fans: A restless generation who see the world (and consume content) very differently to their parents.