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Full-Text Articles in Law
In Name Only: How Major League Baseball's Reliance On Its Antitrust Exemption Is Hurting The Game, Samuel G. Mann
In Name Only: How Major League Baseball's Reliance On Its Antitrust Exemption Is Hurting The Game, Samuel G. Mann
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
Setting The Terms Of A Break-Up: The Convergence Of Federal Merger Remedy Policies, Jessica C. Strock
Setting The Terms Of A Break-Up: The Convergence Of Federal Merger Remedy Policies, Jessica C. Strock
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
Ncaa Scholarship Restrictions As Anticompetitive Measures: The One-Year Rule And Scholarship Caps As Avenues For Antitrust Society, Neil Gibson
William & Mary Business Law Review
By referencing the historical record to expose the NCAA’s one-year rule and per sport scholarship limits as cost-cutting, anticompetitive measures imposing harmful effects upon scholarship-seeking student athletes, this Note argues that despite the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana’s unfavorable ruling in Agnew v. NCAA, a Sherman Act claim against the NCAA linking bachelor’s degrees and scholarships could be legally viable. In particular, just application of the quick look rule of reason, an abbreviated form of antitrust analysis, could lead a court to find the NCAA’s one-year rule and per sport scholarship caps as violative of …