Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts

December 16, 2015

O'Bannon v. NCAA—College Athletes Get a Lump of Coal

In August 2014, a federal judge ruled in O'Bannon v. NCAA that the NCAA's amateurism rules were an unlawful restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act because colleges improperly prevented their athletes from being compensated for the use of their names, images, and likenesses (NILs). The judge entered an order requiring the NCAA to place some portion of the money colleges earned from athletics—up to $5,000 per athlete per year—into a trust fund which athletes could access once their collegiate careers had concluded. Not surprisingly, the NCAA appealed.

In September, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion largely affirming the district court's determination that the NCAA violated antitrust law by restricting compensation paid to college athletes to the cost of attending school (tuition, room and board, books, and fees). The panel, however, limited the athletes' relief to expanding athletic scholarships to the full cost of attendance, but struck the district court's order to establish an athlete trust fund. Today, the full Ninth Circuit denied the athletes' petition for rehearing en banc, leaving the panel's appeal decision as the final ruling in the case, barring an improbable appeal to the United States Supreme Court.

Although the O'Bannon decision has been rightly hailed as significant blow to the NCAA's claim of general exemption from federal antitrust law, the Ninth Circuit's opinion is actually a major loss for college athletes. Surprised? Let's take a closer look.

In applying what is known as the "Rule of Reason" analysis to the NCAA's amateurism rules, the district court and appellate court each agreed that the NIL rules actually provided a pro-competitive effect which was beneficial to the schools and athletes by creating special market conditions for college athletics. Both courts agreed that the benefits of the NIL rules included “preserving the popularity of the NCAA’s product by promoting its current understanding of amateurism” and “integrating academics and athletics.”

Of these supposed benefits of the NCAA's NIL rules, the more important was the public appeal of amateurism. Citing a U.S. Supreme Court decision, the Ninth Circuit noted that paying college athletes would potentially damage the NCAA product by transforming amateur college athletes into poorly paid minor league athletes. In other words, college athletics exists as a lucrative product in large part because athletes are not paid, so requiring athletes to be paid might destroy the very market upon which college athletics depends (italics in original):
"We cannot agree that a rule permitting schools to pay students pure cash compensation and a rule forbidding them from paying NIL compensation are both equally effective in promoting amateurism and preserving consumer demand. Both we and the district court agree that the NCAA’s amateurism rule has procompetitive benefits. But in finding that paying students cash compensation would promote amateurism as effectively as not paying them, the district court ignored that not paying student-athletes is precisely what makes them amateurs.

Having found that amateurism is integral to the NCAA’s market, the district court cannot plausibly conclude that being a poorly-paid professional collegiate athlete is “virtually as effective” for that market as being as amateur. Or, to borrow the Supreme Court’s analogy, the market for college football is distinct from other sports markets and must be 'differentiate[d]' from professional sports lest it become 'minor league [football].'"
Denying college athletes any share in the mountains of cash they earn for the NCAA and its member schools, in the court's view, is a feature, not a bug in the collegiate sports business model. Now the Ninth Circuit grudgingly acknowledged that the meager NIL payments ordered by the district court would likely not cause significant harm to the concept of amateurism for the sports-consuming public. Yet, the Ninth Circuit noted that payments of any kind would inevitably lead to slippery slope demands for greater payments to college athletes:
"The difference between offering student-athletes education-related compensation and offering them cash sums untethered to educational expenses is not minor; it is a quantum leap. Once that line is crossed, we see no basis for returning to a rule of amateurism and no defined stopping point; we have little doubt that plaintiffs will continue to challenge the arbitrary limit imposed by the district court until they have captured the full value of their NIL. At that point the NCAA will have surrendered its amateurism principles entirely and transitioned from its 'particular brand of football' to minor league status."
The upshot of the Ninth Circuit decision is a bright line determination that any payment in excess of the costs of attending college is substantively compensation for play, and athletes are instantly transformed from amateur to professional. Because the court determined that preservation of the amateur athletic paradigm is a pro-competitive purpose for the NCAA's business model, the Ninth Circuit has given the NCAA a green light to enforce a hard line rule against any NIL payments in excess of the cost of attending school. Essentially, while paying lip service to antitrust law, the O'Bannon decision actually provides the NCAA and its members schools a virtually unassailable get-out-of-jail-free card—"protection of amateurism"—which effectively trumps antitrust law and prevents athletes from obtaining any meaningful monetary compensation.

With O'Bannon in its hip pocket, the NCAA and its member schools are essentially free to continue to rake in billions of dollars of revenue (and in many cases, still run large deficits) without paying its labor force anything remotely close to their fair market value for their work. The relief the O'Bannon decision affirmed—increasing scholarships to the full cost of attendance—is a hollow victory, as major conferences had already adopted these minor scholarship enhancements. The O'Bannon decision also likely guts other pending athlete compensation class action cases; if modest compensation of $5,000 per year is out of bounds for athletes as a threat to amateurism, how can a court award the even greater unlimited "market value" compensation sought in these pending cases? Throw in the recent National Labor Relations Board decision to deny college athletes the ability to form labor unions, and it's pretty much business as usual for the NCAA.

So, as you sit back to enjoy the upcoming college football bowl games this holiday season, rest easy that America's colleges will take on the terrible burden of divvying up a half a billion dollars in revenue so that their athletes remain true amateurs. It's all about the integrity of the game.

October 14, 2010

An Ode to Arrogant College Football Fans

Nebraska is back and we’re here to stay.

—Nebraska head football coach Bo Pelini, accepting the 2009 Holiday Bowl trophy after the Huskers thrashed Arizona, 33-0.
I've been a lifelong Husker football fan.  Or, to be more accurate, I grew up in the Husker cult.  Most of the traditional college football powerhouses have legions of hardcore fans, but Husker fans are among the elite, perhaps rivalled nationally only by fans of a handful of teams—Notre Dame, Michigan, Ohio St., Alabama, Texas, Oklahoma, and USC (Southern Cal, not South Carolina, duh).  These are teams which have been consistently among the best teams since the 1950s, and also have rabid national fan bases.  Well, OK, Notre Dame is pretty consistently mediocre, but being the designated Catholic team for a couple of generations makes up for the relative lack of production on the field. 

Fans of powerhouse teams are a different sort than fans of more mundane teams.  Fans of powerhouse teams:
  • Are not satisified with just a winning season and a bowl appearance. No, they want a BCS bowl, or one of the other good bowl games (and then only in the rare "rebuilding season"). 
  • Have serious debates about how their team will win the National Title every season.
  • Believe that being ranked in the Top 25 is a birthright.
  • Complain when their team's game is only carried on ESPN2, rather than being a featured game of the week.
  • Expect their team to win most of their games simply by showing up.
  • Laugh at fans of upstart teams who dare to challenge their primacy in one-sided "rivalries", sort of the way a big brother laughs at a little brother who dares to challenge him to a fight (yeah, I'm looking at you, Kansas and Missouri).  
  • Measure their team's success only against other powerhouse teams ("Boise State?  Never heard of 'em.").
  • Only storm the field in a conference or national title game, or against a recognized elite level rival.
For Husker fans, this weekend's game against Texas is the most important game on the regular season schedule.  In terms of team goals, the Kansas St. and Missouri games matter more, because they are in the Big XII North Division with the Huskers.  In terms of talent and degree of difficulty, the games against Missouri and Oklahoma St. might pose a greater obstacle to an undefeated season.  But Husker fans regard their team's place in the college football hierarchy as being among the elite powers, so teams the Huskers have dominated over the decades simply don't matter as much as another of the elite teams.

Of course, there are all sorts of subtextual issues in play.  The Huskers leaving the Big XII for the Big 10 after the season, after Texas refused to commit its potential TV network money to the conference and flirted with its own move to the Pac-10 conference.  The long-simmering feud with Texas over control of the conference after Texas joined the then-Big 8.  The Longhorns' defeat of the Huskers in the 1996 Big XII title game, derailing the Huskers' drive for a third straight national title.  The controversial decision to put one second back on the clock in last year's Big XII title game, allowing Texas to kick a game-winning field goal (for what it's worth, I'm one of maybe five Husker fans who think the decision—although painful—was correct). 

Of course, the modern college game has changed significantly since the 1980s and 1990s.  With TV coverage proliferating and more money coming into more programs, it's gotten tougher for the college football powerhouses to maintain their elite status.  Former conference doormats can rise up and be competitive, at least for a few years at a time.  Non-traditional programs like Utah and Boise St. can run off winning streaks and put pressure on the big boys to let them play in the BCS bowl games.  It's no surprise that a team like Texas, even with all of its financial and recruiting advantages, is facing its first three-game losing streak in decades with a loss at Nebraska, while Husker fans continue to pretend the Bill Callahan era never occurred.  So yeah, there's a lot riding on the Big Game this weekend for both Husker and Longhorn fans.  Still, fans of both teams know that they are a cut (or two) above the average football fan.

Go Big Red!

* * * * *

To celebrate arrogant football fans, as well as to preview the Huskers' move to the Big 10 next season, here are a couple of videos sent to me by a friend who is a fan of the decidedly non-elite Iowa St. CyClowns:

A Hawkeye fan is given a dose of reality by a Husker fan:





Nebraska and Michigan fans debate the 1997 National Title:




* * * * *

Of course, it's not just Longhorn and Husker fans being arrogant this weekend.  Despite their team's tumble from its perpetual lofty perch in the Top 5 over the past decade, USC fans continue to act in the proper arrogant manner befitting a powerhouse team.  For a hilarious read, check out the USC arrogance series of posts over at the Lost Angeles blog.  Just to whet your appetite, here are excerpts from the brilliant pregame and postgame posts about last week's Stanford game (a loss for USC).

From the game preview:
[Stanford celebrates] easily the dumbest mascot in the history of guys-who-can’t-get-girls-dressing-up-as-animals-because-they-can’t-make-the-football-team.  We are treated to a Trojan warrior stabbing the fifty yard line with a sword and celebrating the death blow BEFORE THE GAME (That’s so arrogant I just filled a co-worker’s Sigg bottle with vodka while they were in a meeting and patiently am waiting for the fireworks.  Even more arrogant, I made the vodka from scratch by staring at a potato and calling it a bitch).  What does Stanford get?  A creepy tree that looks like it was an arts & crafts project from a methamphetamine rehab clinic.

And from the Stanford postgame recap:

Stanford was a DOUBLE DIGIT favorite to win the game on Saturday.  Long story short, the world expected Stanford to beat us.

So what happens when Stanford squeaks out a home win over unranked USC?  THEY RUSH THE FIELD.  Seriously.  It was the most pathetic, amateur hour display I have seen outside of a pre-school talent show (and at least THOSE kids are cute).  There is a saying in sports that goes, “Act Like You’ve Been There Before”.  I know Stanford has never been “there” before (“there” meaning a perennial powerhouse in anything other than academics), but if you want to change your lineage, you need to act like you were supposed to win, especially WHEN YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO WIN.  Rushing the field when you DO NOT COVER THE SPREAD is so ridiculous I bought some Stanford clothes, went into the streets of Westwood and let UCLA kids beat me up for fun (which took a really long time, totally reminded me of the part in Fight Club where everyone had trouble getting a stranger to pick a fight with them).  The official footwear of the Stanford football team is now officially clown shoes.
Side note, after the game a couple of my friends stole a Hummer Limo and took it to Mission Beach, broke into SeaWorld and dressed all the penguins in tuxedos. It was totally hilarious, especially since we brought along Morgan Freeman and he narrated the whole thing.

Zack, the creator of Lost Angeles, is also celebrating USC's super-arrogant coach—"Lane Fuckin' Kiffin"—and USC's current bowl game ban (for arrogantly violating NCAA rules) with commemorative t-shirts.  My personal favorite (which ironically could also be worn in a non-arrogant manner by my CyClown friends):