The NCAA and its member schools are a joint venture that fixes the compensation of its most important workers, the athletes, at a level that is substantially below what would otherwise occur in a competitive market. Claims of amateurism and the need for competitive balance obscure the more than $3.5 billion dollars in revenue generated mostly on the backs of those athletes. From the point of view of rule of reason antitrust analysis, the NCAA’s justification for its concerted wage fixing has obvious weaknesses. Recent phenomenal growth in revenue has made the claims of the necessity and reasonableness of concerted action to restrain wages increasingly dubious
<p>Division I men’s college athletics has become a mainstay in American culture. On Saturdays in the...
While student-athletes are the backbone of the $11 billion college sports industry, they do not curr...
This Article reviews the recent and highly publicized district court decision holding that NCAA rule...
The NCAA and its member schools are a joint venture that fixes the compensation of its most importan...
The NCAA is facing liability for eligibility rules that violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Student-...
This brief essay considers the use of antitrust’s rule of reason in assessing challenges to rule mak...
College sports are a multi-billion dollar industry. The best college football head coaches, like the...
This Comment examines the current state of pay-for-play arrangements between the universities and th...
The NCAA\u27s longstanding tradition of amateurism is a pillar of the NCAA that has been regularly c...
College sports generate approximately $8 billion each year for the National C[artel] Athletic Associ...
This Note argues that courts should interpret NCAA conduct under the Principle of Amateurism as a vi...
The NCAA is in the midst of an era that will define the future of collegiate athletics and determine...
Few traditions are as near and dear to the hearts of Americans as college athletics. The institution...
The college athletics industry is worth $16 billion, and it only continues to grow as the number of ...
43 p.This Article begins with a brief description of the development of the NCAA and its emergence ...
<p>Division I men’s college athletics has become a mainstay in American culture. On Saturdays in the...
While student-athletes are the backbone of the $11 billion college sports industry, they do not curr...
This Article reviews the recent and highly publicized district court decision holding that NCAA rule...
The NCAA and its member schools are a joint venture that fixes the compensation of its most importan...
The NCAA is facing liability for eligibility rules that violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Student-...
This brief essay considers the use of antitrust’s rule of reason in assessing challenges to rule mak...
College sports are a multi-billion dollar industry. The best college football head coaches, like the...
This Comment examines the current state of pay-for-play arrangements between the universities and th...
The NCAA\u27s longstanding tradition of amateurism is a pillar of the NCAA that has been regularly c...
College sports generate approximately $8 billion each year for the National C[artel] Athletic Associ...
This Note argues that courts should interpret NCAA conduct under the Principle of Amateurism as a vi...
The NCAA is in the midst of an era that will define the future of collegiate athletics and determine...
Few traditions are as near and dear to the hearts of Americans as college athletics. The institution...
The college athletics industry is worth $16 billion, and it only continues to grow as the number of ...
43 p.This Article begins with a brief description of the development of the NCAA and its emergence ...
<p>Division I men’s college athletics has become a mainstay in American culture. On Saturdays in the...
While student-athletes are the backbone of the $11 billion college sports industry, they do not curr...
This Article reviews the recent and highly publicized district court decision holding that NCAA rule...