"In REAL WORLD business, the competition also ends when someone WINS."
I am afraid this couldn't be further from actual human behavior.
The competition shifts to a competition against ones self, to constantly improve, because there is always someone in a garage building a better product. Just ask Mr. Steve Jobs.
When someone "wins" it is almost always the consumer, the average person, if not those with even less resources of an average person. These wins may come in form of cheaper oil for everyone, thanks to Mr. Rockefeller. It may come in the form of cheaper transportation for everyone, thanks to Mr. Vanderbilt or Ford. It may come in the form of the food grown or raised hundreds or even thousands of miles away from your home. Today, millions should be thanking Mr. Walton for the improved quality of their lives simply by being able to buy good items, cheaply.
So, yes, marxism and the like is not for me, nor is it for any healthy society, anywhere, on planet earth. Just ask the Cubans, Venezuelans or North Koreans.
Back on point, I would posit that yes, indeed, baseball is the most American of games, precisely because it depends on, no, it requires the excellence of the individual in order for the "team" to succeed. A man, alone, stands at the plate. He gets no help from anyone. The pitcher stands, alone, atop the mound. He too gets no help from anyone. The best man wins, on merit, and merit alone, as it should be in a free society.
In W.I.S. land, there is no team, there is no collective. We are here as individuals, with our club in hand, to strike down our opponent.