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O'Bannon Archives - The National Law Forum https://nationallawforum.com/tag/obannon/ Legal Updates. Legislative Analysis. Litigation News. Wed, 19 May 2021 17:32:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://i0.wp.com/nationallawforum.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/cropped-grey-temple-Converted.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 O'Bannon Archives - The National Law Forum https://nationallawforum.com/tag/obannon/ 32 32 111745018 March (Appellate) Madness re: O'Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case https://nationallawforum.com/2015/03/20/march-appellate-madness-re-obannon-ncaa-antitrust-case/ Fri, 20 Mar 2015 19:43:00 +0000 http://nationallawforum.com/?p=8930 It has been a few months since we updated on the O’Bannon antitrustcase, where federal judge Claudia Wilken ruled last summer that theNCAA’s amateurism rules violated federal antitrust laws. But this week, as the rest of the country filled out their brackets and geared up for the start of the NCAA tournament, the NCAA was getting … Continue reading March (Appellate) Madness re: O'Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case

The post March (Appellate) Madness re: O'Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case appeared first on The National Law Forum.

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Womble Carlyle Sandridge Rice, PLLC

It has been a few months since we updated on the O’Bannon antitrustcase, where federal judge Claudia Wilken ruled last summer that theNCAA’s amateurism rules violated federal antitrust laws. But this week, as the rest of the country filled out their brackets and geared up for the start of the NCAA tournament, the NCAA was getting ready for another battle – in the Ninth Circuit.  On Tuesday, the appeals court heard oral argument from both the NCAA and plaintiffs’ counsel, as the parties debated the lower court’s decision, which allowed limited compensation for the use of athletes’ name, image, and likenesses.

Central to the parties’ argument was the interpretation of NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, a 1984 case regarding football television rights. While the NCAA lost that case, one statement in that case has become central to the NCAA’s current “amateurism” defense:  “To preserve the character and quality of the ‘product,’ athletes must not be paid.”  In Tuesday’s arguments, some of the judges seemed skeptical of the NCAA’s shifting definition of “pay,” they were also concerned about opening the door to “pay for play.”

We can expect a ruling in the upcoming months, though this is unlikely to be the final appeal in the case.

ARTICLE BY

The post March (Appellate) Madness re: O'Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case appeared first on The National Law Forum.

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March (Appellate) Madness re: O’Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case https://nationallawforum.com/2015/03/20/march-appellate-madness-re-obannon-ncaa-antitrust-case-2/ Fri, 20 Mar 2015 19:43:00 +0000 http://nationallawforum.com/?p=8930 It has been a few months since we updated on the O’Bannon antitrustcase, where federal judge Claudia Wilken ruled last summer that theNCAA’s amateurism rules violated federal antitrust laws. But this week, as the rest of the country filled out their brackets and geared up for the start of the NCAA tournament, the NCAA was getting … Continue reading March (Appellate) Madness re: O’Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case

The post March (Appellate) Madness re: O’Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case appeared first on The National Law Forum.

]]>
Womble Carlyle Sandridge Rice, PLLC

It has been a few months since we updated on the O’Bannon antitrustcase, where federal judge Claudia Wilken ruled last summer that theNCAA’s amateurism rules violated federal antitrust laws. But this week, as the rest of the country filled out their brackets and geared up for the start of the NCAA tournament, the NCAA was getting ready for another battle – in the Ninth Circuit.  On Tuesday, the appeals court heard oral argument from both the NCAA and plaintiffs’ counsel, as the parties debated the lower court’s decision, which allowed limited compensation for the use of athletes’ name, image, and likenesses.

Central to the parties’ argument was the interpretation of NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, a 1984 case regarding football television rights. While the NCAA lost that case, one statement in that case has become central to the NCAA’s current “amateurism” defense:  “To preserve the character and quality of the ‘product,’ athletes must not be paid.”  In Tuesday’s arguments, some of the judges seemed skeptical of the NCAA’s shifting definition of “pay,” they were also concerned about opening the door to “pay for play.”

We can expect a ruling in the upcoming months, though this is unlikely to be the final appeal in the case.

ARTICLE BY

The post March (Appellate) Madness re: O’Bannon NCAA Antitrust Case appeared first on The National Law Forum.

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