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Research Article

Who doesn’t like sport? A taxonomy of non-fans

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ABSTRACT

The motives and behaviour of sports fans are heavily researched. Past work has distinguished “fans” and “supporters” on engagement with teams or athletes and identified “non-fans” who have little interest in sport; the latter are rarely investigated further. Sport’s ubiquity, both socially and in media, means that, unusually, disinterested people are often interacting with sport. A better understanding of non-fans could assist strategies to grow sports markets and encourage engagement. This paper describes a study, using both theory-driven and machine learning approaches, of types of self-identified non-fans of a professional sport. A nationally representative sample of 3,496 adults enabled investigation of non-fandom. Five segments of non-fans are identified, differing in terms of consumption of and passion for professional sport. There is a clear hierarchy of likelihood to consume, driven by social contacts, experiences and access to the product, and impeded by satisfying alternatives. To enable easier practical application of this work, a simplified (four question) segmentation process is also presented. This simplified process maintains a high degree of classification accuracy.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 Throughout this paper, “sport” refers to the consumption of professional sport rather than participation in sport or exercise. Whilst there is a link between playing and watching (Wann et al., Citation1999), participation is a distinct activity requiring specific investigation (e.g., Baker et al., Citation2018).

Additional information

Funding

The work was supported by the Australian Research Council [LP10010022].