I suspect you may want the January 1986 Harvard Business Review article "The New New Product Development Game", by Hirotaka Takeuchi and Ikujiro Nonaka that has case studies.
In today's fast-paced, fiercely competitive world of commercial new
product development, speed and flexibility are essential. Companies
are increasingly realizing that the old, sequential approach to
developing new products simply won't get the job done. Instead, com-
panies in Japan and the United States are using a holistic method—as
in rugby, the ball gets passed within the team as it moves as a unit
up the field. This holistic approach has six characteris- tics:
built-in instability, self-organizing project teams, overlapping
development phases, "multilearning," subtle control, and
organizational transfer of learning. The six pieces fit together like
a jigsaw puzzle, forming a fast and flexible process for new product
development, fust as im- portant, the new approach can act as a change
agent: it is a vehicle for introducing creative, market-driven ideas
and processes into an old, rigid organization.
It has a section titled Moving the scrum downfield. There is a pdf available.
The first published work by Sutherland on SCRUM appears to be from the mid 90s.