When Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose received his banishment from Major League Baseball in 1989, after he was accused of betting on his own team, comparisons were immediately drawn to the Black Sox, the eight members of the White Sox who were banned from the game for allegedly throwing the 1919 World Series in return for payoffs from gamblers. Such comparisons are incomplete without an understanding of the legal settings of both incidents. This Note examines the judicial deference given to decisions of the Commissioner of Baseball and considers such deference in conjunction with Major League Baseball\u27s unique exemption from federal antitrust liability. The author asserts that these factors will probably keep Pete Rose out of baseball a...
It should be noted that the Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, Kathleen A. Blatz, signed ...
Ty Cobb and Napoleon Lajoie were fighting for the 1910 American League batting title right down to t...
Congressional discussion of baseball\u27s antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a...
Major: BiologyFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderry, Center for Engaged Learning In 1919, baseball pl...
Pete Rose just won\u27t go away. He just doesn\u27t seem to understand, and probably never will. His...
As professional baseball’s unique exemption to antitrust law celebrates its one-hundredth year of ex...
Major League Baseball, alone among industries of its size in the United States, operates as an unreg...
Jacques Barzun once commented that [w]hoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better...
Baseball remains the only professional sport exempt from anti-trust scrutiny. Because of this unique...
This note explores a less glamorous aspect of baseball\u27s golden past: the sport\u27s forgotten ...
The players on Charles Comiskey\u27s 1919 Chicago White Sox team were a fractious lot with plenty to...
This note will describe the creation and development of the antitrust exemption granted to Major Lea...
Professional sports organizations\u27 relationships with their players are, like other employer-empl...
Somewhere in small town America there is a group of young boys with an old tattered ball and a game ...
Baseball and law have intersected since the primordial days. In 1791, a Pittsfield, Massachusetts, o...
It should be noted that the Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, Kathleen A. Blatz, signed ...
Ty Cobb and Napoleon Lajoie were fighting for the 1910 American League batting title right down to t...
Congressional discussion of baseball\u27s antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a...
Major: BiologyFaculty Mentor: Dr. Darra Mulderry, Center for Engaged Learning In 1919, baseball pl...
Pete Rose just won\u27t go away. He just doesn\u27t seem to understand, and probably never will. His...
As professional baseball’s unique exemption to antitrust law celebrates its one-hundredth year of ex...
Major League Baseball, alone among industries of its size in the United States, operates as an unreg...
Jacques Barzun once commented that [w]hoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had better...
Baseball remains the only professional sport exempt from anti-trust scrutiny. Because of this unique...
This note explores a less glamorous aspect of baseball\u27s golden past: the sport\u27s forgotten ...
The players on Charles Comiskey\u27s 1919 Chicago White Sox team were a fractious lot with plenty to...
This note will describe the creation and development of the antitrust exemption granted to Major Lea...
Professional sports organizations\u27 relationships with their players are, like other employer-empl...
Somewhere in small town America there is a group of young boys with an old tattered ball and a game ...
Baseball and law have intersected since the primordial days. In 1791, a Pittsfield, Massachusetts, o...
It should be noted that the Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, Kathleen A. Blatz, signed ...
Ty Cobb and Napoleon Lajoie were fighting for the 1910 American League batting title right down to t...
Congressional discussion of baseball\u27s antitrust exemption stretches over forty years involving a...