ProServ explained

ProServ
Type:Private
Foundation:1970
Location City:Washington D.C.
Key People:Donald Dell (Former CEO)
Industry:Sports management, Event production
Services:Marketing, Management
Parent:SFX Sports Group

Professional Services Inc., (ProServ) was one of the first sports management firms. Initially focused on tennis, the company would grow to become among the world's largest sports marketing, athlete management, event production, and TV companies.[1]

Background

Donald Dell became the first sports agent in tennis when he founded the Law Offices of Donald Dell in 1970. His first clients were Arthur Ashe and Stan Smith, his former teammates on the undefeated 1968 and 1969 U.S. Davis Cup teams.[2] After adding partners, the name of the firm became Dell, Craighill, Fentress, and Benton.[3] In 1976, the firm started ProServ to handle athlete recruiting and marketing.

At its peak, ProServ had 16 offices around the world with 300 employees and represented more than 200 professional athletes and coaches, including Michael Jordan, Patrick Ewing, James Worthy, Stan Smith, Arthur Ashe, Pete Sampras, Stefan Edberg, Nancy Kerrigan, Gabriela Sabatini and Jimmy Connors. The company also managed and promoted professional sporting events and created ProServ Television to handle sports television production and rights representation.[4]

ProServ Television created and produced thirty pre- and post- Olympic shows in 1984 as well as many sporting events. ProServ Television created the Emmy Award-winning documentary A Hard Road to Glory, with Arthur Ashe, about the history of black athletes in America.[5] ProServ represented the USTA in the sale and distribution of the international television rights to the U.S. Open for many years, and represented the French Federation of Tennis for the American television rights for the French Open.

Through the 1990s, ProServ expanded into football, golf, baseball, figure skating, gymnastics, and also became heavily involved with beach volleyball and the original AVP Tour.

ProServ was one of the first agencies to negotiate the naming rights for stadiums such as FedEx Field, M&T Bank, and Philips Arena.

Acquisition

ProServ was acquired in 1997 by The Marquee Group,[6] which in turn was acquired in 1999 by SFX Sports Group (itself now a subsidiary of Clear Channel Entertainment).[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.newenglandtennis.com/news_2008-08-28.html Northeast Tennis Magazine
  2. Brennan, 1996
  3. Web site: 2011-03-14 . Recalling ProServ: Tennis, talent, tenacity . 2024-07-16 . www.sportsbusinessjournal.com . en.
  4. Lisa Pike Masteralexis, Carol A. Barr, Mary A. Hums, Principles and Practice of Sport Management
  5. News: Litsky . Frank . 1999-06-20 . Bob Briner, 63, Innovator in Tennis and Television . 2024-07-16 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  6. Web site: The Marquee Group Acquires Proserv for $15M in Cash & Stock .
  7. http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/59879 Survey puts CAA tops in player salaries