Retired players file antitrust suit against NFL

Discussion in 'New York Jets' started by Titans, Mar 29, 2011.

  1. Titans

    Titans Member

    Joined:
    May 7, 2004
    Messages:
    282
    Likes Received:
    0
    This is getting good..........

    Retired players file antitrust suit against NFL

    By Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports
    14 hours, 38 minutes ago


    tweet93EmailPrintFour retired NFL players, including Hall of Fame defensive end Carl Eller and Pro Bowl running back Priest Holmes, filed a federal class action, antitrust lawsuit against the NFL on Monday seeking to end the current lockout.

    Eller v. NFL, obtained by Yahoo! Sports, is similar to the current Brady, et al v. NFL. However, it is based on a potentially clever legal maneuver that could box the league into a corner and prove a significant development in ending pro football’s nearly month-long labor impasse.

    The former players’ suit also covers draft-eligible prospects, who aren’t represented by the NFL Players Association under the previous collective bargaining agreement. As such, these plaintiffs could potentially avoid one of the league’s chief counterarguments against the Brady lawsuit – that the union illegally decertified.

    AdChoices
    “The owners say the union has unlawfully decertified and the union should be ordered to reconstitute and forced to sit at the bargaining table,” lead attorney Michael Hausfeld of the Washington D.C.-based Hausfeld LLC told Y! Sports. “If you look at the last CBA, it represents the rookies that have been drafted and the rookies who have begun negotiating with teams.”

    Therefore, college players awaiting next month’s draft are not represented by the union and can’t be faulted for its decertification. However they are, Hausfeld argues, being affected by the lockout.

    “These players have an antitrust claim,” Hausfeld said. “They’ve essentially staked the pursuit of a career on being eligible for the NFL.

    “The owners have shut down their potential employees through a concerted boycott,” Hausfeld continued. “[The suit is] going to avoid the main thrust of the owners’ defense and their argument that the matter should be settled by the [National Labor Relations Board] not in the courts.”

    The NFL said its “attorneys have not had an opportunity to review” the suit, which was filed in United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. The NFLPA was made aware of the suit prior to its filing, according to Hausfeld. It too has yet to respond with comment.



    O’Bannon has been named in several suits against the NCAA and EA.

    (Isaac Brekken/AP Photo)

    Hausfeld has made a career out of winning complicated lawsuits – that includes earning reparations for Holocaust survivors from Swiss banks. His firm is currently one of the lead councils in a suit filed by former college athletes such as Ed O’Bannon and Oscar Robertson against the NCAA for the unlawful use of their likenesses.

    In the Eller case, Hausfeld believes a crack has been found in the NFL’s armor.

    “How silly is it to have a draft in April and then say, congratulations, you’re locked out?” he asked.

    By using the window between now and the start of the NFL draft on April 28, the NFL is exposed to this kind of argument.

    The NFL, Hausfeld said, would have to work out a deal with the NFLPA or risk taking on an antitrust case without its top counterarguments. If the league were to lose, it would risk the basic structures of its business – the salary cap, the draft, free agency and so forth. It would be better off agreeing to a deal.

    “We see something different,” Hausfeld said. “[The NFL has] created more of a mess for themselves. If we can end the lockout and there is no union then they’re going to individually negotiate with every player and former player.

    “This is basically the proverbial straw that breaks the camel’s back. Hopefully it forces everyone to the table.”

    That remains to be seen. Predicting how any lawsuit, let alone complicated antitrust arguments, will go is fruitless. The NFL has plenty of lawyers also.

    For fans eager for any kind of solution or forced movement on the labor impasse though, this unexpected legal challenge is, at the very least, a potential positive.
     
  2. sec314

    sec314 Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Apr 7, 2006
    Messages:
    4,641
    Likes Received:
    1,033
    Its baseball season, fuck the NFL players. Who cares if you workout together. Go strike, NFl lock them out. Don't come back selfish douche bags all of them. Fuck the draft, fuck it all, I am disgusted with football after the Super Bowl money grab
     
  3. Big Blocker

    Big Blocker Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    May 7, 2008
    Messages:
    13,104
    Likes Received:
    1,348
    On one hand, imo the OP's quote lay out an interesting antitrust claim. Now you have to caveat discussions of antitrust law - it ain't what it used to be, plain and simple. But, it's not dead yet, to be sure.

    The owners are using the decertification issue, I take it, as a way to avoid the merits of the antitrust claims. But it would seem this group of plaintiffs cannot be derailed in that manner.

    But... I tend also to share 314's disgust with the whole thing. I guess I feel somewhat more sympathetic to the players, if we are talking about them as a group. Certainly I do for individual players, but depending that may also be true of the owners. Not every single one of them are cakeholes like Jerry Jones.

    But as two groups competing over a pie made up of an increase in revenues that we as fans pay for, and too much at that with the PSL's, cable licensing fees, NFL Network, I am increasingly disgusted.

    It almost makes me wish I didn't love football. Well, I got over some pretty nice girlfriends in the past. I can certainly live without the NFL. If it comes to that, which we can hardly rule out at this sickening point.
     
  4. Footballgod214

    Footballgod214 Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Aug 25, 2005
    Messages:
    15,254
    Likes Received:
    6,108
    The owners will win. They are rich with our without the NFL. But the players?
     
  5. Eastriverdiver

    Eastriverdiver New Member

    Joined:
    Mar 20, 2011
    Messages:
    25
    Likes Received:
    2
    I just wish they could all divy up the 9 Billion and be fucking happy. What a bunch of twats.
     

Share This Page