Logo image
How Not to Apply the Rule of Reason: The O'Bannon Case
Journal article   Open access

How Not to Apply the Rule of Reason: The O'Bannon Case

Michael A. Carrier
Michigan Law Review First Impressions, Vol.114, pp.73-80
2015
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7282/T3VM4GMF

Abstract

The case of O’Bannon v. NCAA has received significant attention. On behalf of a class of student-athletes, former college basketball star Ed O’Bannon sued the NCAA, challenging rules that prohibited payment for the use of names, images, and likenesses (NILs) in videogames, live game telecasts, and other footage. A Ninth Circuit panel, in a 2-1 decision, found that this restraint had anticompetitive effects and procompetitive justifications. And it considered “less restrictive alternatives,” upholding payment for incidental educational expenses beyond tuition and fees, room and board, and required books, but rejecting a deferred $5,000 payment for NILs. Straddling the intersection of antitrust, intellectual property, and sports law, the O’Bannon case presents engaging and complex issues. Much of the complexity, however, is unnecessary. For it stems from a ruling that misconstrued antitrust law. In particular, the Ninth Circuit applied a version of the Rule of Reason that short-circuited the analysis and insufficiently deferred to a district court judge who presided over an exhaustive trial on amateurism.
pdf
How Not to Apply the Rule of Reason_ The _em_O_Bannon__em_ Case142.93 kBDownloadView
Journal Article Open Access
url
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr_fi/vol114/iss1/5/View
Michigan Law Review First Impressions
url
Report an accessibility issueView
Please complete a content remediation request to report an accessibility issue with a library electronic resource, website, or service.

Metrics

137 File downloads
66 Record Views

Details

Logo image