Tag archive for "American Needle v. NFL"

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Supreme Court Rejects NFL’s Plea for Antitrust Exemption

No Comments 24 May 2010

Sports Fans Coalition Praises Supreme Court’s Unanimous Decision

Rejecting NFL’s Plea For Antitrust Protection

Washington, D.C. — Today, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously against the National Football League in its pursuit of broad antitrust law protection.  The court rejected the NFL’s request to be considered as one entity rather than 32 individual teams when negotiating contracts in this landmark case, American Needle v. NFL. “This is a victory of Super Bowl proportions for America’s sports fans,” said Sports Fans Coalition Chairman David Goodfriend.  “A unanimous Supreme Court told the professional sports leagues in no uncertain terms that leagues must live by the same rules as any other business.”

The high court overturned a lower court’s decision against regional hat-maker American Needle which complained that the NFL’s exclusive 10-year contract with Reebok restricted competition amongst NFL merchandisers. “Although NFL teams have common interests such as promoting the NFL brand,” said Justice John Paul Stevens, “They are still separate, profit-maximizing entities, and their interests in licensing team trademarks are not necessarily aligned.”

While the parameters of the case were subject to interpretation, sports fans stood to lose considerable purchasing power when it came to buying their favorite player’s jersey and perhaps when subscribing to a particular NFL television package.  “For sports fans,” Goodfriend stated, “This means that professional leagues will not be able to shut out fans or jack up prices for tickets, merchandise, or televised games unchecked by competition.”

Read SFC board member Dave Zirin’s article published in The Nation magazine here.

Read Drew Brees’ Op Ed published in The Washington Post prior to his testimony in the Supreme Court in January here.

Blog

Baseball Card Company Sued by Major League Baseball

No Comments 15 February 2010

HonusWagnerAnother exclusive deal entered into by a sports league has one wonder about the future results of the Supreme Court case American Needle v. the NFL and how it will affect sports fans. In August of 2009, Major League Baseball and Topps Company announced an exclusive deal for the baseball card creator to have the rights to use logos, trademarks, and other intellectual property on their baseball cards effective the first of the year.

Topps rival Upper Deck stated that it would not halt production on its line of baseball cards and continue to use team logos. Herein lies the point of contention and the basis for the lawsuit which finds the plaintiff, Major League Baseball properties, accusing Upper Deck of copyright infringement.

50snostalgia-bikeThis is not the first lawsuit against Upper Deck to emerge from this newly established relationship between MLB and Topps after becoming bedfellows “more than 50 years ago” when previous generations were busy sticking Mickey Mantles and Honus Wagners (which would now by worth six-figures and up) in the spokes of their bycicles. Just this past November, Topps settled a lawsuit with Upper Deck for copyright infringement of several 1970’s Topps designs which were reproduced by Upper Deck in their 2009 series.

It would appear that the former Disney mogul, Michael Eisner, who took over ownership of Topps in 2007, is seeking to eliminate the company’s most fierce competition through admonishing their legal team to go forth and sue! In this case of Upper Deck’s use of team logos on their cards following the exclusive deal struck 6 months earlier, it is not apparent that Topps is to blame. Couldn’t this just be good business?

Through the eyes of the sports fan, that’s not typically the case. In fact, this exclusive deal with a marketer and manufacturer does cause one to recall the terms of NFL hat manufacturer American Needle’s case against the NFL which decided to end competition in the sub-market by signing an exclusive deal with Reebok. While the case will be decided in the Supreme Court by June, one thing is for certain: the NFL is not currently exempt from anti-trust suits, Major League Baseball enjoys the benefits of such status.

Generally speaking for sports fans, keeping lawsuits, and in turn, taxes and charges, at bay is in our best interest. Furthermore, competition breeds lower prices and the best deals for consumers. So, the case is another sign that allowing sports leagues, whether it be MLB today or the NFL tomorrow, to be exempt from anti-trust measures, is not in the best interest of consumers.

In full disclosure, another recent smudge on Upper Deck’s record – whether merely in the court of public opinion or in reality – can be found in the company’s dealings with Konami, the makers of the Yu-Gi-Oh brand. Upper Deck also settled this case out of court.

The SFC will be following this issue seeking to determine whether this baseball card lawsuit is simply a sign of Upper Deck conducting itself improperly in the marketplace and paying the penalty of such actions or of a bigger picture that will actually hit sports fans and collectors financially. The SFC is determined to educate sports fans on the sports business issues affecting their every day lives, and when large companies get together and strike deals, the goal is to get sports fans off the sidelines and on to the field to have a say in those big decisions.

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NFL Owners Stiff-arm Fans/Union in Supreme Court

4 Comments 23 January 2010

The following article published by The Nation was co-written by SFC board member Dave Zirin and SFC managing editor Jeremiah Tittle. 

(It can also be found in the NEWS section on this site.)

nfl-logo

Call it the Super Bowl for lawyers and the reckoning for football fans. On January 13 the owners of all thirty-two NFL teams asked the Supreme Court to shield them from anti-trust laws. Their argument is that the league does not comprise, despite all evidence, thirty-two individual competing units but is made up of one “single entity.”

This might seem bizarre on the face of it. After all, the 49ers and Cowboys don’t meet on the field to sing “Kumbaya,” and players don’t rotate from team to team. But the NFL has won in court every step of the way, and the outcome of this case could provoke a labor lockout or strike that would shut down the most popular sport in the country.

The legal saga started in 2000, when Reebok signed an exclusive contract to slap the NFL logo on its caps and jerseys for every team in the league. Illinois-based hat manufacturer American Needle was, in turn, left out in the cold, no longer allowed to strike deals with individual teams; so it therefore sued the NFL, claiming that by brokering this deal with Reebok, the NFL had violated the Sherman Act.

To the NFL, it was like discovering penicillin. This small merchandiser had been growing like a pestering fungus until that Aha! moment hit, and the league’s legal team realized the opportunity before it: a chance to knock out competition among apparel providers.

While the NFL repeatedly won the case in the lower courts, American Needle appealed to the Supreme Court for a hearing. The Court first reached out to the Obama administration to weigh in on the matter. Solicitor General Elena Kagan told the justices, “This case would be a particularly unsuitable vehicle to consider the broad rule that the NFL seeks.” Heedless of Kagan’s warning, the Supreme Court took the case, and with the NFL’s support, American Needle’s wish was granted. Now the “single entity” argument will be tested at the highest level, and, like the MLB All Star Game, this time it counts.

To anyone who pays attention to the billion-dollar catfight between Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, and Dan Snyder, owner of the Washington Redskins, each year, in which a new owner is crowned at the unveiling of the franchise value rankings, the idea that the NFL is one company and not thirty-two competing businesses is just absurd. They are called franchises for a reason. Each franchise makes individual business decisions about how to market its product against opposing franchises wearing different-colored uniforms.

However, the NFL insists that even though it is made up of individual teams with individual profits and losses, it is still that “single entity.” As the sports experts at Forbes wrote, “From a business standpoint, the NFL, like any sports league, has always predominantly acted as a single entity. Teams compete on the field, which does mean bidding on players and coaches. But from a business standpoint, they’re partners above all else.” Forbes, “the capitalist’s bible,” turns collectivist. Why?

It’s simple. The NFL’s collective bargaining agreement expires in March 2011. There will be no salary cap or salary floor in the league if a new deal isn’t reached by March 5, 2010. If the Supreme Court rules that the NFL is a single entity, that changes the way the league negotiates—or doesn’t negotiate—with the players. Teams could slash payroll, violate labor law, and the NFL Players Association would have no recourse. Lockout, here we come.

DeMaurice Smith, NFL Players Association executive director, has told ESPN that he has called upon his players to save 25 percent of their salaries over the next two years: because of uncertainty around salary caps and floors, “I look at the way in which it looks like we’re moving to this lockout, and first and foremost, we have to be in a position where our young men are in a position to be able to take care of themselves and their families.”

New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees took a break from preparing his team’s Super Bowl run last week to deliver some Supreme Court testimony. In an op-ed published in the Washington Post, Brees warned that “if the Supreme Court agrees with the NFL’s argument that the teams act as a single entity rather than as 32 separate, vigorously competitive and extremely profitable entities, the absence of antitrust scrutiny would enable the owners to exert total control over this multibillion-dollar business.”

Serving on the Executive Committee of the Players Association, Brees understands that the players’ collective future hangs in the balance. The owners are looking to knock labor rights back into the Stone Age, or at least back to 1993, before Freeman McNeil, football’s Curt Flood, left a mammoth footprint on the game by fighting for and winning his rights as a free agent. The players sink or swim with the final decision to be delivered this summer.

It would be even worse for fans, and not only because the Sunday entertainment would go the way of Lost.

If owners were emancipated from anti-trust laws, collusion would be the law of the land. After all, they aren’t thirty-two competing entities but one solid corporation. They then could do more than slash payroll. They could raise ticket prices through the roof, and charge $100 for a stocking cap. The NFL-Reebok deal struck a decade ago illustrates quite clearly how the costs of doing business this way are passed on to fans, as “official hats,” Brees notes, “cost $10 more than before the exclusive arrangement.”

Owners could move clubs on a whim, and be protected legally from violating any individual agreements with individual municipalities. After all, they would be acting in the interest of their “one entity.”

In other words, think about everything you despise about the NFL experience: disloyal franchises, overpriced merchandize, unbridled greed, and give it an injection of a Mark McGwire cocktail. The NFL already acts like it has diplomatic immunity. It feeds at the public trough for stadium construction, charges a fortune for tickets, parking, souvenirs and—most tragically—beer, and accepts public input about as well as the CIA does. It is also about as transparent.

In addition, if we’ve learned nothing else from the scandals in banking and on Wall Street, the last thing big business needs in this country is more legal protection and less transparency. We all—fans and players alike—have every right to fear what further legal protection would mean for the future of fandom, no matter what they say at Forbes.

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Drew Brees Makes the Case for Players and Fans Before the Supreme Court

No Comments 09 January 2010

SUPREME COURT

In tomorrow’s Washington Post, Drew Brees makes the case for American Needle in a landmark case before the Supreme Court to be heard this Wednesday.  While this may come as a surprise to many, athletes have brains and often show courage even after they remove their pads and helmet. 

The New Orleans Saints Pro Bowl Quarterback serves on the Executive Committee for the NFL Players Association, and through writing this op-ed, is serving his fellow players and sports fans by supporting American Needle, a small merchandise manufacturer based in Buffalo Grove, Illinois.  This relatively small company decided to take on the NFL, and Brees has their back.

What does that have to do with sports fans, you ask?  Well, let’s start from the beginning. 

After the NFL signed a league-wide contract with Reebok, this small hat maker concluded that it had been unfairly excluded from the entire hat market serving the League.  Therefore, American Needle sued both Reebok and the NFL for restricting competition and in turn violating antitrust laws.

Roger Goodell with DeMaurice SmithWhile the SFC will cheer on the proverbial David in any David & Goliath scenario in the world of sports, this case potentially could change this country’s most popular sport in a variety of facets. Attorney Mark Greenbaum wrote in a San Francisco Chronicle article that ‘an overly expansive decision could adversely affect not just football, but all the leading professional sports leagues, potentially leading to the scrapping of free agency, protracted work stoppages and higher ticket prices’.

On the surface, all of that is hard to believe, but it’s true.  The NFL has used this tiny law suit to it’s power-hungry benefit, requesting that its victory in the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago be heard in the Supreme Court. 

The best analogy explaining this is summoned by Tulane University sports law professor Gabe Feldman repeated in the LA Times. “This is like scoring a touchdown and then asking the officials to review the replay.”

A ruling in their favor at the highest level will not just allow the National Football League to flick the flea that is American Needle, Inc. off  its Gorilla-sized shoulder, but it will forever more be treated as a single entity, rather than 32 separate businesses.  That ruling would trump the League’s tax-exempt status, making franchise owners exempt from collusion, exempt from any limits on lowering players’ and employees’ salaries, not to mention raising prices of sports fans’ tickets, jersees, hats, you name it! 

Higher prices for tickets, merch, and the increased possibility of work stoppage?  Sounds like this case is clearly in the interest of the sports fan. According to Mike Freeman of CBS Sports, this case of American Needle v. National Football League is the ‘most significant sports legal case in history’. 

On Wednesday, the playoff-bound quarterback of the New Orleans Saints will take time out of his rigorous schedule preparing for the winner of this weekend’s Wild Card game to testify before the Supreme Court (which is set to make a decision about the case this summer). 

DrewBreesNo matter what team we root for on Sundays, rest assured we here at the Sports Fans Coalition are rooting for Brees on Wednesday.





About SFC

SFC is the American sports fan’s advocate in the D.C. public policy arena fighting for sports fans in every city across the country.

Sports Businesses, Leagues, and Universities are grasping for our cash left and right. Let's join together to keep their hands off our wallets unless and until we have a say in how that money is spent. Futhermore, we sports fans believe we should be able to watch our games, no matter how we get our media.

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