I'm telling you the Supreme Court has left open the door to a strong argument of an anti-trust violation applicable to the NCAA too. (Note the NCAA filed a friend of the Court Brief on behalf of the NFL who lost). Several of us attorneys have noted on here over the years that in NCAA v. Georgia and Oklahoma, the Supreme Court noted that each university is an individual entity for antitrust purposes and each separate university controls its own TV rights. The NFL case reasserts what we have emphasized over the years. After 20 years of the BCS you may be scratching your head because since the BCS everything has been about Conferences whose collective power exerts substantial market power to the exclusion of other NCAA schools-but that is not what the Supreme Court said. Why shouldn't a TV network be able to enter into a contract with any school it wants to televise on a particular date. Why shouldn't a bowl be able to choose any team that will best fit its purposes. The second important fact is that if the NFL(or BCS) is not a single business enterprise, then each member can be sued together for an "contract, combination or conspiracy" they took part in. For the novices-a single business enterprise can not conspire under the anti-trust laws with itself as a matter of law. This leaves open the question of whether the BCS and BCS Conferences are involved in monopolistic restraint of trade by entering into exclusive BCS Bowl contracts with "tying arrangements" that have repercussions in non-BCS Bowl Contracts, TV Contracts and Bowl realignment.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent ... 26fe2.html