Practice Areas
Entertainment
Sports
Intellectual Property
Real Estate
Contracts
Non Profit
PRACTICE AREA
Sports Law
Negotiating Sports Agent Contracts, Analyzing Sport: Leagues Contracts; Endorsement Contract, and Litigation.
Sports law in the United States overlaps substantially with labor law, contract law, competition or antitrust law, and tort law. Issues like defamation and privacy rights are also integral aspects of sports law. This area of law was established as a separate and important entity only a few decades ago, coinciding with the rise of player-agents and increased media scrutiny of sports law topics.
Until recently, torts were never part of the landscape of sports law. A tort can be defined as an actionable wrong. However, in 1975 an Illinois appeals court established that players can be found guilty of negligence if their actions are “deliberate, willful or with a reckless disregard for the safety of another player so as cause injury to that player.” See Nabozny v. Barnhill. Negligence torts are typically harder to prove in contact sports, where violent actions and injuries are more common and thus more expected (“assumption of risk” or “self-defense”). Spectators can also sue for negligence if their injuries could not have been expected (not “foreseeable”) given the nature of the sporting event they were attending. A baseball fan sitting in the bleachers could reasonably expect a baseball might come toward the seat, but a wrestling fan sitting courtside would not reasonably expect a wrestler to come flying his or her way.
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