Edward O'Bannon, Jr. v. NCAA, et al

  1. July 20, 2015

    NCAA Asks 9th Circ. To Stay Antitrust Order On Athlete Pay

    The NCAA asked the Ninth Circuit on Friday to pause a judge's decision that allows college athletes to be paid for the use of their names, images and likenesses, a request that comes about two weeks before the lower court's order is set to take effect.

  2. July 08, 2015

    Antitrust Cases To Watch In The 2nd Half Of 2015

    The first half of 2015 was action-packed with rulings on key pharmaceutical antitrust issues and agency wins in high-profile challenges, but there's still plenty to watch for over the next six months, including cases that could alter the landscape of college sports and professional baseball and major challenges to benchmark banking rates.

  3. March 17, 2015

    9th Circ. Wary Of Pay Plan In NCAA Athletes' Antitrust Case

    A Ninth Circuit panel heard oral arguments Tuesday in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's appeal of a lower court's ruling that the organization's ban on compensating student-athletes violates federal antitrust law, with a skeptical panel questioning a licensing payment regime proposed by the lower court.

  4. March 16, 2015

    9th Circ. Hearing A Test Run For NCAA's Amateurism Defense

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday will weigh whether the National Collegiate Athletic Association's ban on compensating student-athletes violates federal antitrust law in a case that may prove key to broader efforts to challenge the NCAA's policies.

  5. January 29, 2015

    NCAA Athletes Should Get Publicity Pay, SAG Tells 9th Circ.

    The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists urged the Ninth Circuit on Wednesday to affirm a ruling that said college athletes must be paid for use of their images, saying attempts to diminish laws protecting an individual's right of publicity could be "ruinous" to performers' careers.

  6. January 22, 2015

    Athletes Tell 9th Circ. NCAA Pay-Rule Ban Is Appropriate

    Plaintiffs accusing the National Collegiate Athletic Association of forming a cartel to prevent college athletes from getting paid for the use of their likenesses urged the Ninth Circuit on Wednesday to affirm a lower court's ruling that the NCAA violated antitrust law, arguing evidence showed the association exploited students.

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