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American Needle Supreme Court Ruling: NFL Loses Lawsuit

American Needle Supreme Court Ruling Nfl

JESSE J. HOLLAND   05/24/10 07:31 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court rejected the National Football League's request for broad antitrust law protection Monday, saying that it must be considered 32 separate teams – not one big business – when selling branded items like jerseys and caps.

"Although NFL teams have common interests such as promoting the NFL brand, they are still separate, profit-maximizing entities, and their interests in licensing team trademarks are not necessarily aligned," said the retiring Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for an unanimous court.

The high court reversed a lower court ruling throwing out an antitrust suit brought against the league by one of its former hat makers, who was upset that it lost its contract for making official NFL hats to Reebok International Ltd.

American Needle, Inc. sued, claiming the league violated antitrust law because all 32 teams worked together to freeze it out of the NFL-licensed hatmaking business and gave Reebok an exclusive 10-year license.

The company lost and appealed to the Supreme Court but the NFL did as well, hoping to get broader protection from antitrust lawsuits.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello noted that the American Needle case still has to be tried in federal court in Chicago. "We remain confident we will ultimately prevail because the league decision about how best to promote the NFL was reasonable, pro-competitive, and entirely lawful," Aiello said.

Major League Baseball is the only professional sports league with broad antitrust protection. The National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League, the NCAA, NASCAR, professional tennis and Major League Soccer supported the NFL in this case, hoping the high court would expand broad antitrust exemption to other sports.

The National Football League Player Association praised the court's decision. NFLPA lawyer Richard Berthelsen said the decision "affirms our belief that the NFL should not be allowed to operate as a monopoly to the detriment of fans, players and the government."

Added NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith:

"Todays Supreme Court ruling is not only a win for the players past, present and future, but a win for the fans."

Stevens said NFL teams directly compete on many levels. Citing the two teams in this year's Super Bowl, the New Orleans Saints and the Indianapolis Colts, Stevens said that teams compete against each other "to attract fans, for gate receipts and for contracts with managerial and playing personnel."

"Directly relevant to this case, the teams compete in the market for intellectual property," Stevens said. "To a firm making hats, the Saints and the Colts are two potentially competing suppliers of valuable trademarks."

American Needle was one of many companies that made NFL headgear until the league awarded an exclusive contract to Reebok. Lower courts threw out American Needle's lawsuit, holding that nothing in antitrust law prohibits NFL teams from cooperating on apparel licensing so the league can compete against other forms of entertainment.

But the high court turned away that theory.

"Decisions by NFL teams to license their separately owned trademarks collectively and to only one vendor are decisions that 'deprive the marketplace of independent centers of decisionmaking ... and therefore of actual or potential competition,'" Stevens said.

Just because NFL teams have a single organization, the National Football League Properties, to jointly develop, license and market its logos does not mean it can escape antitrust scrutiny, Stevens said.

"If the fact that potential competitors shared in profits or losses from a venture meant that the venture was immune from" antitrust law, Stevens said, "then any cartel" could evade the antitrust law simply by creating a 'joint venture' to serve as the exclusive seller of their competing products."

The argument that NFL teams also need each other to play an NFL season also doesn't work, Stevens said. "A nut and a bolt can only operate together, but an agreement between nut and bolt manufacturers is still subject to" antitrust scrutiny, Stevens said.

The league argued that a court decision against it "would convert every league of separately owned clubs into a walking antitrust conspiracy" and bring legal challenges to any decisions that the teams make collectively like scheduling.

But Stevens disagreed.

"The fact that NFL teams share an interest in making the entire league successful and profitable, and that they must cooperate in the production and scheduling of games, provides a perfectly sensible justification for making a host of collective decisions," he said.

The case is American Needle v. NFL, 08-661.

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court rejected the National Football League's request for broad antitrust law protection Monday, saying that it must be considered 32 separate teams – not one big ...
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court rejected the National Football League's request for broad antitrust law protection Monday, saying that it must be considered 32 separate teams – not one big ...
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10:50 PM on 06/12/2010
Gee the Supreme court is wrong again. Big surprise. To support my position, consider that the league controls charters on new franchises, centralizes schedules, coordinates TV deals and supplies referees. Finally consider what would happen is one franchise had a "monopoly" as a NFL franchise: who would they play? The Supreme Court proves again it doesn't understand economics.
01:59 AM on 06/05/2010
The NFL lost my support when they tried to claim "Who Dat" as their own. When my Saints were losing most of the past 30 years, the NFL never mentioned wanting to own our slogan.
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07:50 PM on 05/26/2010
If this means what I think it means, what is going to happen to EA?
They bought exclusive rights to the NFL teams if I remember correctly, will they lose their monopoly?
08:58 PM on 05/25/2010
I wonder if this will affect the DirecTV contract or the salary cap?
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stuckintraffic
05:57 AM on 05/26/2010
I never thought of the Sunday Ticket factor. Great question.
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SeattleTonyR
07:12 PM on 05/25/2010
Awesome! Maybe a little competition in the market might get me more reasonably priced NFL gear, woot woot!
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Elmer Gantry
01:07 AM on 05/25/2010
Like its free enterprise man.
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12:48 AM on 05/25/2010
Anyone who'd buy NFL sportswear is a fool. All their stuff, plus a good quantity of the NBA, MLB and NHL 'officially licenced' clothing and consumer fan/sports gear is all made in China or Mexico for pennies and re-sold to dumb Americans for unbelievable markups in profit. The bastards also go after the counterfeiters with a vigor because they don't want anyonwe ruining their greedy profitmaking off sports watching fools who buy the licenced crap.
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JohnDewey
Knowing Doing Being
11:29 AM on 05/25/2010
All of which is a good reason to support a company like American Needle over a demonstrably exploitative consortium like the NFL.
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10:35 PM on 05/24/2010
I like pro football probably more than most guys - but let's face it - the NFL is a greedy as BP or Goldman Sachs. If there's a dime ANYWHERE to be squeezed out of ANYONE - they're on the case. The behavior of the league as a business entity has dampened my enthusiasm for the game - and that wasn't easy to do...
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cplKlyde
I voted for change and all I got was a T-shirt
10:29 PM on 05/24/2010
Whenever the No Fun League loses it's a victory for the public
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FoonTheElder
Always choosing between the lesser of two evils
10:14 PM on 05/24/2010
All sports leagues are cartels, just like OPEC, who control their product and decide who gets in the club and who doesn't. The biggest travesty in sports justice was when the USFL won its anti-trust case against the NFL but was awarded only $1 which was tripled to $3.
09:56 AM on 05/25/2010
Let's fix what you said: All AMERICAN sports leagues are cartels.

In other parts of the world they aren't. I could start a football club in England tomorrow and given enough money to hire good players, coaches, etc etc that club could eventually play in the top league. There's no franchise required, i don't have to get permission from the other owners and there is no way the league could stop me. Or I could just buy a club, again, without needing agreement from the league.
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FoonTheElder
Always choosing between the lesser of two evils
10:41 AM on 05/25/2010
You're correct.
The American sports franchise owner who made his money through capitalism by telling his workers no, when it came to increased wages is always whining that they can't make the sports team work without socialism. It's typical of this group that they only want competition when it's to their advantage. When it is a sports star, they need to set up a system that limits their employee's ability to sell his services to the highest bidder, like salary caps and reserve clauses.
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blackhole2008
Me Lib
09:47 PM on 05/24/2010
If the NFL stuck the word "insurance" somewhere in their name, then maybe..
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09:43 PM on 05/24/2010
It was unanimous??? Naw, something's wrong in this picture.....
09:58 AM on 05/25/2010
Yea, it was that much os a legal slam dunk that all 9 justices agreed. Boy the NFL's lawyers are really dumb ...
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KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
09:22 PM on 05/24/2010
HA take that the TEAMS own there rights not the NFL, take that!
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DavidWyld
Professor of Management
09:00 PM on 05/24/2010
Wow, the NFL never loses! This could be a huge ruling with implications across professional sports, as the anti-trust doctrine appears to be withering away for pro football and baseball. We will see, but this could turn-out to be a significant victory for fans, for players, and for merchandisers.

David http://wyld-business.blogspot.com/
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MatthewHubbard
blogger, just not for HuffPo
09:10 PM on 05/24/2010
You must be younger than you look. The NFL has lost many times. Back before he became Kim Jong Il's uglier older brother, Al Davis beat the NFL like a drum on several occasions.
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09:45 PM on 05/24/2010
LMAO !! Fanned, #6 Too funny, bwa ha ha ha ha ha ha !!
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KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
09:23 PM on 05/24/2010
rothlesburger should sue now for the NFL punishing him!
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
05:34 PM on 05/24/2010
Poor NFL. Boo hoo. ;)