In this article, the author comments on Professor Michael LeRoy\u27s article Federal Jurisdiction in Sports Labor Disputes (2012 Utah L. Rev. 815) and explains why he disagrees with the claim that federal courts improperly invoke the Sherman Act in sports labor disputes
A casual glance at the daily newspapers would suggest that athletes and sports teams spend almost as...
Congress urgently needs to reformulate the antitrust labor exemption. Courts and legal scholars alik...
In his article, The Application of Antitrust Law to Labor Markets—Then and Now, Richard Epstein argu...
Short of its two critical premises—that sports labor restraints may harm players but benefit fans an...
The baseball strike and the ongoing hostilities between the players\u27 association and owners have ...
This Article argues that the Sherman Act regulates concerted employer activity in the labor market o...
[Excerpt] “Contemporary sports have seen an influx of young talent opting for a chance at playing in...
In this essay I argue that the Eight Circuit got things very wrong when it found, in Brady v. Nation...
Professor Nathaniel Grow has produced a creative, thoroughly researched piece arguing that antitrust...
This Article reviews the recent and highly publicized district court decision holding that NCAA rule...
This Article will examine the economic structure of the professional sports industry, explore profes...
This article argues that Justice Rehnquist has analyzed the operational structure of the NFL in a ma...
In recent years, two law review articles have proposed that the United States regulate commercial sp...
The hallmark of an antitrust violation is an agreement which has the effect of raising price, loweri...
Twenty-four years after pronouncing that Congress[ ,]... not... this Court[, must remedy] any incon...
A casual glance at the daily newspapers would suggest that athletes and sports teams spend almost as...
Congress urgently needs to reformulate the antitrust labor exemption. Courts and legal scholars alik...
In his article, The Application of Antitrust Law to Labor Markets—Then and Now, Richard Epstein argu...
Short of its two critical premises—that sports labor restraints may harm players but benefit fans an...
The baseball strike and the ongoing hostilities between the players\u27 association and owners have ...
This Article argues that the Sherman Act regulates concerted employer activity in the labor market o...
[Excerpt] “Contemporary sports have seen an influx of young talent opting for a chance at playing in...
In this essay I argue that the Eight Circuit got things very wrong when it found, in Brady v. Nation...
Professor Nathaniel Grow has produced a creative, thoroughly researched piece arguing that antitrust...
This Article reviews the recent and highly publicized district court decision holding that NCAA rule...
This Article will examine the economic structure of the professional sports industry, explore profes...
This article argues that Justice Rehnquist has analyzed the operational structure of the NFL in a ma...
In recent years, two law review articles have proposed that the United States regulate commercial sp...
The hallmark of an antitrust violation is an agreement which has the effect of raising price, loweri...
Twenty-four years after pronouncing that Congress[ ,]... not... this Court[, must remedy] any incon...
A casual glance at the daily newspapers would suggest that athletes and sports teams spend almost as...
Congress urgently needs to reformulate the antitrust labor exemption. Courts and legal scholars alik...
In his article, The Application of Antitrust Law to Labor Markets—Then and Now, Richard Epstein argu...