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Latest Cases & Developments
Date:
Blythe v. National Collegiate Athletic Association (D. Nev. Feb. 20, 2026)
Opinion and Order Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for a Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiff, a Division I baseball recruit for the University of Nevada, Reno, challenged the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) Five-Year Rule and sought a preliminary injunction barring enforcement after his hardship waiver was denied and he was declared ineligible based on his prior seasons playing baseball at Division II and NAIA institutions. The court held that plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits of his Sherman Act claim, finding that the rule was commercial in nature and produced substantial anticompetitive effects, as well as finding the NCAA’s procompetitive rationales for the rule were insufficient. The court reasoned that the Five-Year Rule “forecloses the opportunity for qualified student-athletes from non-NCAA schools from entering a labor market for Division I baseball . . . simply because of their non-NCAA status.” While the court concluded that plaintiff faced immediate and irreparable harm “due to the time-sensitive loss of season play, compensation and related opportunity,” the NCAA “[would] not.” Accordingly, the court granted the preliminary injunction and enjoined enforcement of the Five-Year Rule against the plaintiff.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Student Athlete Issues | Students | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Corzo v. Brown Univ. (N.D. Ill. Jan. 12, 2026)
Opinion and Order Denying Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs, a putative class of alumni from 17 selective universities, sued the universities for violating section 1 of the Sherman Act, alleging that the schools colluded through the “568 Presidents Group” to standardize financial-aid calculations in ways that reduced competition and raised prices for students receiving aid. The court held that plaintiffs presented sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude there was an antitrust violation, finding (1) the universities “agreed on the Consensus Approach to avoid bidding wars and then adhered to it”; (2) the universities held “high enough market shares to infer market power”; and (3) plaintiffs had “suffered an injury when they paid too much.” The court rejected the universities’ section 568 antitrust exemption defense, reasoning that the defense did not apply because some of the universities in the Presidents Group were not admitting students on a “need blind” basis. While several universities maintained that they were still need blind, the court rejected this argument as unpersuasive and contrary to the statutory text, finding that plaintiffs had demonstrated their processes favored wealthier applicants.
Topics:
Antitrust | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Students | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Elad v. NCAA (3rd Cir. Nov. 25, 2025)
Opinion Vacating and Remanding. Plaintiff, a football player at Rutgers University, challenged the NCAA’s “JUCO Rule,” which counts years spent at a junior college toward an athlete’s five-year eligibility clock, alleging that the rule unreasonably restrains the college-football-athlete labor market in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. A district court granted plaintiff a preliminary injunction enjoining the NCAA from enforcing the rule against him, following a failed effort by Rutgers University to obtain a waiver from the NCAA. On appeal, the Third Circuit vacated the district court’s ruling, holding the district court erred by failing to adequately define the relevant market for its analysis, and remanded the case for further consideration. The court reasoned that the district court merely recited plaintiff’s expert’s identified market and “did not engage in a fact-specific analysis of the relevant market despite the parties’ differing opinions on the topic.” The court further reasoned that the definition of the relevant market relied upon by the district court “[did] not account for changed market realities in Alston’s wake” and ordered the district court to conduct a relevant market analysis on remand.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Student Athlete Issues | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Hansen, et al., v. Northwestern University et al., (N.D. Ill. Sep. 24, 2025)
Opinion and Order Granting Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiffs, a putative class of alumni from forty universities, sued the universities and the College Board under section 1 of the Sherman Act alleging defendants had engaged in concerted action by requiring any applicant to provide noncustodial parent (“NCP”) financial information, which in turn substantially increased plaintiffs’ costs to attend college. In dismissing the plaintiffs’ antitrust claim, the court held that while plaintiffs had plausibly alleged “parallel conduct,” they had failed to plausibly allege the parallel conduct was reflective of an agreement among defendants to fix prices. The court further reasoned that nothing in the complaint suggested defendants had exchanged internal financial aid decision-making processes or guidelines, shared the amount of financial aid they planned to offer a particular student, or agreed on the same formula for calculating financial aid based on the NCP financial information. The court dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint without prejudice.
Topics:
Antitrust | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Students | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Martinson v. National Collegiate Athletic Association (D. Nev. Sep. 18, 2025)
Order Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiff, a student athlete at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, (UNLV) sued the NCAA arguing the NCAA’s “Five-Year Rule,” which capped plaintiff’s playing eligibility to a maximum of two or three seasons due to his prior playing time at a junior college, was a violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. In granting plaintiff’s preliminary injunction, the court held that (1) plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits, (2) plaintiff would suffer immediate and irreparable harm in being disqualified for the 2025-2026 season, noting that in addition to losing his spot on the football team, he would also lose “time-sensitive, unparalleled, and incalculable career opportunities” and (3) enjoining anticompetitive eligibility rules “serves a compelling public interest of increased participation and competition in the competitive football services labor market.” The court also granted plaintiff’s request to enjoin the NCAA’s Rule of Restitution, in order to prevent the NCAA from punishing the plaintiff, either directly or indirectly by punishing any institution for which he plays.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Student Athlete Issues | Students | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Choh v. Brown Univ. (D. Conn. Oct. 9, 2024)
Opinion granting Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiffs, current and former student athletes, filed a putative class action, claiming a violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 against Brown University, the Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York, Cornell University, the Trustees of Dartmouth College, Harvard University, the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, Yale University, and the Ivy League Council of Presidents. Plaintiffs allege the Universities formed a price-fixing agreement, referred to by the Universities as “the Ivy League Agreement,” “not to provide athletic scholarships to their Division I Athletes and not to pay Ivy League Athletes any compensation (or reimbursement of education-related expenses).” Plaintiffs further allege the Agreement is per se illegal because the Universities are “horizontal competitors in the commercial activities in the Relevant service markets.” The Universities argued that they hold authority in setting rules for financial aid and compensation, and the ban on sports scholarship is meant to “foster campus cultures that do not prioritize athletics.” In finding that plaintiffs do not allege a cognizable antitrust violation, a restraint that violates the Rule of Reason, or the requirements for defining a plausible relevant market, the court wrote “at best, the plaintiffs’ allegations of anticompetitive effects relate to just some market participants, not effects in the market as a whole.”
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Students | Taxes & FinancesDate:
DOJ Proposed Final Judgment in Ohio v. Nat’l Collegiate Athletics Ass’n (June 11, 2024)
Department of Justice (DOJ) Antitrust Division Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement in Ohio v. Nat’l Collegial Athletics Ass’n. The Department of Justice joined ten states and the District of Columbia in suing the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA), challenged NCAA Bylaw 14.5.5.1 (“Transfer Eligibility Rule”), which requires a one-year delay in eligibility for certain athletes transferring between institutions, alleging that it “unjustifiably restrains the ability of these college athletes to engage in the market for their labor as NCAA Division I athletes.” “The proposed Final Judgment, filed on May 30, 2024, requires the NCAA to refrain from enforcing the offending rules and to restore eligibility to certain affected athletes.” Public comment is due within 60 days of the publication of the notice in the Federal Register.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Tennessee v. Nat’l Collegiate Athletics Ass’n (E.D. Tenn. Feb. 23, 2024)
Memorandum Opinion and Order granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiffs, the State of Tennessee and the Commonwealth of Virginia, as parens patriae on behalf of their student-athletes, brought antitrust claims against the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA), asserting that the NCAA’s classification of name, image, and likeness (NIL) collectives as “boosters” that are prohibited from engaging in recruiting activities on behalf of a school, including discussions of potential NIL deals with student-athletes before they commit to a particular school, is “an ‘illegal agreement to restrain and suppress competition’ within the labor market of Division I athletics.” In preliminarily enjoining enforcement of the NCAA rules regarding the “NIL-recruiting ban” and Rule of Restitution, the court ruled that plaintiffs were likely to succeed on the merits, finding that (1) the balance between academics and athletics and the distinction between collegiate and professional athletics could be achieved by less restrictive rules, (2) the ban is anticompetitive for student-athletes even if it spreads competition evenly among member institutions, and (3) the social justification of protecting vulnerable students was not relevant to whether the rules are lawful. In finding that plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged irreparable harm, the court noted that the alleged harms of stripping student-athletes of some of their negotiating leverage and keeping them from knowing their full NIL value are not strictly monetary.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Taxes & FinancesDate:
Smart v. Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n (E.D. Cal. July 27, 2023)
Memorandum and Order granting-in-part and denying-in-part Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiffs in two related cases, former “volunteer coaches” in multiple sports at Division I universities in California and Arizona, on behalf of themselves and putative classes, brought antitrust and unjust enrichment claims against the National Collegiate Athletic Association, alleging that, as a result of NCAA Bylaw 11.01.06 (repealed in January 2023) permitting schools to add one unpaid coach position, they worked at a rate of compensation below what they would have received in a competitive market. In permitting plaintiffs’ antitrust claims to proceed, the court found under a quick look analysis that plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged that the Bylaw had an anticompetitive effect, noting the large salaries of other coaches and recent increases in those salaries. The court dismissed their unjust enrichment claims, however, noting that the volunteer coaches had not alleged that they worked without contracts.
Topics:
Antitrust | Athletics & Sports | Athletics Compliance & NCAA Rules | Taxes & Finances
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