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Antitrust laws are a major mechanism available to fans, players, owners, universities and others to effect change in sports. It is, however, important to realize that all sports combine aspects of both competition and cooperation. Unlike most industries, each entity (i.e., team) also has an interest in the success of the other entities in the industry (i.e., league). The success of each team is at least partly related to the success of each other team. If teams begin to fail the league will suffer and thereby increase the likelihood that the league itself will fail. Therefore, unlike most industries, in sports there is a required level of cooperation necessary to ensure the strength and sustaining power of the league.
Rule of Reason & Per Se Violations There are two types of antitrust analysis. In the first category are agreements whose nature and necessary effect are so plainly anticompetitive that no elaborate study of the industry is needed to establish their illegality. In this first category the complained of act is considered to be illegal per se. In the second category are agreements whose competitive effects can only be evaluated by analyzing the facts peculiar to the business, the history of the restraint and the reason why the restraint was imposed in the first place. The agreements that fall into this second category are judged by what is called the "rule of reason," which requires a cases-by-case approach that sometimes cannot be easily defined.
Per se Violations It is generally inappropriate for a judge to hold that a complained of violation is per se illegal. The per se rule is generally appropriate only after judges have had long experience with a certain practice, and have concluded that the practice produces many pernicious results and almost no beneficial ones. When a complained of violation is classified as a per se violation of the antitrust laws the court will not consider elaborate arguments (that are routine in rule of reason cases) that a particular practice is actually procompetitive. To the contrary, the court will condemn the practice without taking any arguments into account. The purpose of the per se rule is to avoid expensive litigation in areas in which it is not likely to be fruitful. Currently the per se rule is applied to horizontal price fixing, horizontal territorial or customer division, vertical price fixing and some concerted refusals to deal and tying arrangements.
Rule of Reason In antitrust litigation most complained of practices are analyzed under what is called the "rule of reason." The United States Supreme Court has stated (also in National Society of Professional Engineers).
Under the rule of reason test the fact finder must weigh all circumstances of the case to decide whether the practice complained of unreasonably restrains competition. The test requires that the plaintiff show anticompetitive effects, or actual harm to competition. The rule of reason does not, however, require the plaintiff to demonstrate that the complained of practice is unfair or tortious. With respect to sports, virtually all antitrust controversies will receive scrutiny under the rule of reason analysis.
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