Extending Athlete Reputational Crises: Theorizing Underperformance Crises and the Flip Appeal

Authors

  • Lillian B. Feder Marquette University, Wisconsin, USA
  • Diana Zulli Purdue University

Keywords:

athlete reputational crises, attribution theory, crisis, situational crisis communication theory, social media

Abstract

Crisis management scholarship recommends matching crisis response with crisis type to repair reputational damage. However, focusing on the corporate context has limited our understanding of crisis types and available responses. One crisis context yet to be extensively explored is sport/fan interactions online, an increasing site for athlete crises. This article addresses this gap, developing a theoretical framework for underperformance crises, where online publics perceive athletic underperformance as a norm violation that merits excessive hate toward athletes. Using the crisis case of basketball player E. J. Liddell, whose underperformance during a 2021 March Madness game resulted in widespread online harassment, we extend the situational crisis communication theory and athlete reputational crises to include underperformance as a unique crisis type. We then propose a new response strategy, termed the flip appeal, where underperformers can mitigate the crisis cycle through awareness raising, vulnerability, and inviting publics into the crisis narrative.

Author Biographies

Lillian B. Feder, Marquette University, Wisconsin, USA

Lillian B. Feder, 1st and Corresponding AuthorBrian Lamb School of Communication, Purdue University, USAfeder@purdue.edu100 N University St Beering Hall Room 2114, West Lafayette, IN 47907Beering Hall of Liberal Arts and Education, Room 2114ORC ID:  0000-0002-7324-268XLillian Feder (MA, Purdue University, 2019) is a doctoral student in the Brian Lamb School of Communication at Purdue University. Her research interests include public relations, organizational behavior, and sport crises. 

Diana Zulli, Purdue University

Diana Zulli, PhD, 2nd AuthorBrian Lamb School of Communication, Purdue University, USAdzulli@purdue.edu; @diana_zulli 100 North University StreetWest Lafayette, Indiana 47907-2098Beering Hall of Liberal Arts and Education, Room 2115Diana Zulli (PhD, University of Utah, 2018) is an Assistant Professor of Public Relations and Political Communication in the Brian Lamb School of Communication at Purdue University. Her research interests include communication theory, digital technology, and political discourse and crises.

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Published

2024-05-30

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Section

Articles