Baseball teams have operated under the assumption that anyone who attends a game accepts the risk of injury from foul balls or bats—an assumption that has been upheld by courts in many states including Indiana, under the baseball rule
Part II of this Note provides the facts and holding of Coomer. Part III discusses the legal backgrou...
PURPOSE: To determine what impact (major and significant) injuries sustained during participation in...
Despite whizzing fastballs and screaming line drives, baseball today is not especially dangerous. Bu...
Baseball teams have operated under the assumption that anyone who attends a game accepts the risk of...
Every Major League Baseball season ends with multiple injuries, if not casualties, resulting from fl...
This comment examines law regarding spectator injury at baseball games. The Baseball Facility Liabil...
This Article examines the so-called “Baseball Rule,” the legal doctrine generally immunizing profess...
When fans attend sporting events, they usually do so at their own peril. Fans are expected to assume...
Plaintiff sued for injuries sustained when struck by a foul ball at a baseball game while seated in ...
Gladiator sports, such as boxing, martial arts, and American football, are permitted to exist in par...
A high school baseball player sued a high school on the grounds of premises liability after being st...
The plaintiff, a spectator at a baseball game, brought an action to recover for injuries sustained w...
Purpose: To observe and describe foul tip impacts (FTIs) experienced by MLB catchers and to examine ...
This article analyzes the interrelationship between sports safety measures and sports injury litigat...
Background To identify injury patterns and mechanisms in professional men’s basketball by means of ...
Part II of this Note provides the facts and holding of Coomer. Part III discusses the legal backgrou...
PURPOSE: To determine what impact (major and significant) injuries sustained during participation in...
Despite whizzing fastballs and screaming line drives, baseball today is not especially dangerous. Bu...
Baseball teams have operated under the assumption that anyone who attends a game accepts the risk of...
Every Major League Baseball season ends with multiple injuries, if not casualties, resulting from fl...
This comment examines law regarding spectator injury at baseball games. The Baseball Facility Liabil...
This Article examines the so-called “Baseball Rule,” the legal doctrine generally immunizing profess...
When fans attend sporting events, they usually do so at their own peril. Fans are expected to assume...
Plaintiff sued for injuries sustained when struck by a foul ball at a baseball game while seated in ...
Gladiator sports, such as boxing, martial arts, and American football, are permitted to exist in par...
A high school baseball player sued a high school on the grounds of premises liability after being st...
The plaintiff, a spectator at a baseball game, brought an action to recover for injuries sustained w...
Purpose: To observe and describe foul tip impacts (FTIs) experienced by MLB catchers and to examine ...
This article analyzes the interrelationship between sports safety measures and sports injury litigat...
Background To identify injury patterns and mechanisms in professional men’s basketball by means of ...
Part II of this Note provides the facts and holding of Coomer. Part III discusses the legal backgrou...
PURPOSE: To determine what impact (major and significant) injuries sustained during participation in...
Despite whizzing fastballs and screaming line drives, baseball today is not especially dangerous. Bu...