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April 12, 2011

Sports Law in Action

 

With the conclusion of another NCAA March Madness, and the NFL and NBA labor/management disputes heating up, it has been a busy spring in the sports world.  Did you ever wonder about the laws governing or related to sports?  There is a lot of sports-related legal material out there, and perhaps Biddle Law Library can point you toward some of it.  Biddle actually owns a fair amount of U.S. and international sports-related legal material.

Sports Law.jpg(Attorney Janet Judge, of Sports Law Associates, speaks on sports hazing, during the NCAA convention in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, Jan. 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

If all of the popular sports shows, newspapers headlines, and magazine articles have piqued your interest, you may want to look at the news through a more scholarly perspective.  Biddle has a wealth of relevant and very current print and electronic journals and treatises.

For starters, you may want to browse the library's journal collection.  The Spring 2009 issue of Virginia Sports and Entertainment Law Journal, for instance, has an interesting article by Max N. Panoff entitled: "Black, Tie Optional: How the NBA's Dress Code Violates Title VII."  Or, you may want to check out the Spring 2010 issue of The Sports Lawyers Journal, where you will find thoughtful articles on gender discrimination in coaching, salary arbitration in Major League Baseball, or the tax-exempt status of the NCAA.

After perusing the journals, you may want to move on to something with greater depth.  For example, Biddle owns books such as such as Taking Sports Seriously: Law and Sports in Contemporary American Culture (2009), Sports Justice: The Law & the Business of Sports (2010), and Reversing Field: Examining Commercialization, Labor, Gender, and Race in 21st Century Sports Law (2010).

And for concise, hard-hitting basics about sports law, take a peek at West's Fundamentals of Sports Law (2004), where you will find chapters on coach and referee liability, athlete eligibility, and the intersection of international law and the Olympics.

If you are looking for a resource with even more weight, try the three-volume Law of Professional and Amateur Sports (2002), which provides in-depth coverage of topics such as agent-player representation, endorsement contracts, and collective bargaining in professional sports.

Has the end of March Madness has left you yearning for more?  Would you like to know more about the legal ramifications of the professional sport labor/management disputes?  There is much more information out there.  Just search LOLA or speak with a reference librarian!

November 30, 2011

Little White Book of Baseball Law

 
By Joe Parsio, Head of Access Services
 
Thumbnail image for Little Book of Baseball.jpgI’m sorry, but I must admit, I find baseball a bit boring. However I did enjoy John Minan and Kevin Cole’s fun and informative Little White Book of Baseball Law.    If you've ever wondered who legally owns Barry Bonds’ record-setting home run ball, the answer is in “the eighth inning.” Each “inning” or chapter is about a specific real case with citations, so you can get more information on Westlaw or LexisNexis. It also has an “umpire’s ruling” at the end of each. 
 
Besides covering baseball memorabilia ownership, the book also covers new stadium construction, injured spectators and television contracts. Patent law is brought up with cases on safety masks in Thayer v. Spaulding, 27 F. 66 (C.C.D. ILL. 1886); antitrust in Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore, Inc. v. National League of Professional Baseball Clubs, et al., 259 U.S. 200 (1922), as well as Flood v. Kuhn et al., 407 U.S. 258 (1972); and scalping in Lainer v. City of Boston, 95 F. Supp. 2d 17 (D. Mass. 2000).  The sixth inning, “Hey, Beerman!,” Donchez v. Coors Brewing Co., 392 F.3d 1211 (10th Cir. 2004) gives an interesting distinction between service mark and trademark.
 

Continue reading " Little White Book of Baseball Law" »

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