College
athletics as it’s been known in the
lifetime
of every living American ended June 21, 2021. We acknowledge that’s a bold
statement. As lawyers and sports fans, we’ll stand by it. The governing
structure of college sports, as operated by the National
Collegiate The
subject matter of the case before the High Nine wasn’t remarkable. College
athletes challenged limits the NCAA impose on educational benefits made
available to collegiate players such as graduate and vocational scholarships.
The case wasn’t
about direct compensation for
athletes. College players won’t get pay checks as a direct result of the
court’s 9-0 holding that the NCAA rules at issue violate anti-trust law.
Make no mistake though, college
students will
get
paid for playing sports. They will trace that compensation to the ruling in National Collegiate Athletic Association v.
Alston. After Alston,
it’s just a matter of the details and the timing. What’s in the Court’s
unanimous opinion, a stinging concurring opinion, and who wrote both likely
sound the death knell for the NCAA as we know it.
Brothers
and Sisters
We
learned in law school judges on appellate courts often refer to other members
of their court as “brother” or “sister” judges. In fact, Bob
Woodward and Scott
Armstrong wrote a 1979 book about the inner workings of the U.S. Supreme
Court titled The Brethren (there
were no women on the Court at the time). It’s a sign of respect and
collegiality in places that breed division and intense disagreement. Indeed, we
have a divided Supreme Court now, with six conservatives, appointed by
Republican presidents, and three more progressive justices, appointed by
Democrats. If the NCAA thought that conservative
tilt would work to its advantage in Alston,
it found itself sorely disappointed.
The
fact the decision went against the NCAA unanimously means a lot. Conservatives
and
justice, both thought the NCAA’s aid limits
violated anti-trust law and restrained trade. They joined a tightly-reasoned, narrowly
crafted opinion by their conservative brother, Neil Gorsuch, that fell
well within the mainstream of anti-trust jurisprudence. They rejected the
NCAA’s contention that amateurism trumps laws against anti-competitive
practices. That reflects what’s going on
in the country as a whole. State legislators and governors in both parties are
approving measures that give college athletes the right to receive compensation
for what’s called NIL – name, image, and likeness. The details vary in
different states, but ultimately, the new laws all aim at giving athletes a way
of getting paid for what they contribute in the sports marketplace.
Justice
Kavanaugh’s Shot Across the NCAA’s Bow
From
the NCAA’s perspective, the unanimous outcome against it in Alston was bad enough. Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s
concurring opinion amounted to a dagger in the NCAA’s heart.
Kavanaugh, a Trump
appointee, you’ll recall, made clear the NCAA should not expect a different
legal approach if other cases involving more direct payments to athletes come
before the Court. He wrote, “although the Court does not weigh in on the
ultimate legality of the NCAA’s remaining compensation rules, the Court’s
decision establishes how any such rules should be analyzed going forward.” That
passage no doubt sent shivers down the backs of NCAA officials in Indianapolis.
In
future cases, the Court will apply
what’s called “rule of reason” scrutiny to NCAA regulations. The Court will not
give those rules more deference than it would give any other business accused
of anti-competitive behavior. The Court
will define the relevant market, determine the effect of the rules at issue on
competiveness in that market, and reject the rules unless the NCAA can provide
“a legally valid procompetitive justification” for them. Kavanaugh expressed
doubt the NCAA could supply such a justification.
If Justice Kavanaugh had left
things there, the NCAA might have some optimism about future cases. But
Kavanaugh said he believes the “NCAA’s business model would be flatly illegal
in almost any other industry in America.”
He ended his opinion with another warning for the suits in the college
sports hierarchy. “The NCAA is not above the law,” he wrote.
And
it Means?
We think Justice Kavanaugh’s
last flourish, coming on top of all else he said in the context of a unanimous decision,
portends a death
sentence for the NCAA in its
current form. No one knows how long it will take to get a case to the Court
that directly challenges the NCAA’s basic don’t-pay-the-players rules. Gorsuch
and Kavanaugh went to great pains in making clear those rules were not before
the Court in Alston. The spate of NIL
legislation making its way through the state legislatures may delay the
reckoning.
Still,
the handwriting is on the wall. College
athletes will get paid for playing sports. As
Kavanaugh noted, the industry will have to sort out things like differences in
revenue and non- revenue sports, Title IX compliance, and
other details. But the question now is how and when, not whether. What we know
after Alston is that the Supreme
Court, as constituted, isn’t buying the NCAA’s argument about the value of
amateurism. In some number of years, someone
can say this isn’t your father’s college athletics.
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