The race factor

The last several months I’ve written a few articles about casual fans and their impact on the A’s. Not season ticket holders, not hardcore fans. Why? Because casual fans are the bulk of attendance, and have been for a long time. They are also the great variable, since numerous factors can affect their desire to choose the A’s over other forms of entertainment, whether the substitutes are Giants games, other sporting events, or entirely different types of entertainment.

The casual fan, who usually brings a spouse/SO or friends/family, has his own decision-making process. Maybe he wants to tailgate before the game. Maybe he’s interested in the opponent or star players. Maybe the A’s are doing well, maybe they’re not. Maybe they don’t care much for baseball or sports in general. Race may be a factor in determining whether he wants to go or not, but how much? Please enlighten me, because I can’t see how casual fan gives it that much thought.

How much does the black/latin player disparity matter? Is that phenomenon something that can even be linked to something as localized as attendance patterns? Do casual fans care much that Milton Bradley was a black player? Or that the team’s makeup is mostly white, then latin?

Now there are some that choose not to go because the stadium is in Oakland and they feel it’s unsafe. Then there are others who’ll go to Oakland only for A’s games or other Coliseum events but never go elsewhere in Oakland because of their own prejudices. Which is worse? Is that institutional racism? Or is it someone expressing their personal preference, even if it is ignorant? When does the abundance of personal prejudice become institutional?

To extend that further, let’s say ownership knew that the above attitudes were somewhat prevalent and they factored that into their decision-making on where to build a ballpark. Can they quantify it? And can you? Because if they/you can’t, it’s very difficult to say it’s anymore important than, say, access to BART, land availability, municipal politics, or true economic factors. These days it’s difficult to run a business on a notion that’s hard to substantiate. Quantify it, and we can have a real discussion. Until then, it’s just a hot-button topic that unfortunately hasn’t changed much in the A’s nearly 40-year residence in Oakland. If the perception problem is as bad as some say, it’s even worse that not much has been done to change it.

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