
We show that the tenure lengths for managers of sport teams follow a power law distribution with an exponent between 2 and 3. We develop a simple theoretical model which replicates this result. The model demonstrates that the empirical phenomenon can be understood as the macroscopic outcome of pairwise interactions among managers in a league, threshold effects in managerial performance evaluation, competitive market forces, and luck at the microscopic level.
Power-law distributions, Competitive sports, Managerial turnover, Complexity, Tenure of managers, GV, 620
Power-law distributions, Competitive sports, Managerial turnover, Complexity, Tenure of managers, GV, 620
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