2014
DOI: 10.1177/1527002514521428
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Does Performance Consistency Pay Off Financially for Players? Evidence From the Bundesliga

Abstract: The purpose of the current study is to investigate how consistency of professional soccer players’ performance affects salaries in the German Bundesliga. Using game-level data for five consecutive seasons ( n = 34,413 player–match day observations), we find empirical evidence for a salary premium to players showing volatility in performance. Applying ordinary least squares, fixed-effects as well as quantile regression analyses, this effect remains robust.

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Cited by 31 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Our initial results (see Table 8, regressions 1 to 4) show that we can replicate previous findings from German football. Using more precise salary and performance measures (the IVG single composite measure), we find that inconsistent players earn more than consistent ones; similar to Deutscher and Büschemann (2016) An increase of the average performance by one unit increases salaries by 7.4%, while increasing the average performance by one standard deviation would raise salaries by 11.3% in the OLS regression. If performance inconsistency increases by one unit, salaries increase by 7.9%.…”
Section: Regression Resultssupporting
confidence: 59%
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“…Our initial results (see Table 8, regressions 1 to 4) show that we can replicate previous findings from German football. Using more precise salary and performance measures (the IVG single composite measure), we find that inconsistent players earn more than consistent ones; similar to Deutscher and Büschemann (2016) An increase of the average performance by one unit increases salaries by 7.4%, while increasing the average performance by one standard deviation would raise salaries by 11.3% in the OLS regression. If performance inconsistency increases by one unit, salaries increase by 7.9%.…”
Section: Regression Resultssupporting
confidence: 59%
“…In some cases, principals prefer consistent performances to volatile ones by their agents (Bodvarsson & Brastow, 1998;Deutscher, Gürtler, Prinz, & Weimar, 2017;Dickinson & Oaxaca, 2014), in other cases, researchers suggest that principals prefer inconsistent agents to consistent ones (Bollinger & Hotchkiss, 2003;Deutscher & Büschemann, 2016). Although existing literature finds evidence for either case, the question under which conditions inconsistency is penalized or rewarded remains ambiguous, especially because the necessary conditions are not identified.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similar to findings about salary discrimination, the results from two decades ago cannot be taken 3. Using subjective rather than objective performance measures, Deutscher and Büschemann (2016) study the effect of performance consistency on soccer players' estimated market values. They find a negative correlation between performance consistency and market values.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%