Does the NBA Still Have 'Market Power'? Exploring the Antitrust Implications of an Increasingly Global Market for Men’s Basketball Player Labor
43 Pages Posted: 24 Sep 2009 Last revised: 9 Jun 2011
Date Written: June 7, 2011
Abstract
This article examines whether, based on the recent globalization of the men’s basketball player market, a court today could find NBA teams to compete, in an antitrust sense, in an international market for men’s professional basketball labor.
Part I of this article discusses how antitrust law applies to professional sports leagues, and explains why a sports league such as the NBA might seek to argue, from an antitrust perspective, that its players are part of an international labor market. Part II discusses the history of professional basketball in both the U.S. and abroad. Part III describes the differences between the NBA and foreign basketball leagues, and charts player movement between U.S. and foreign leagues. Finally, Part IV explores whether, based on information provided in Parts II and III of this Article, a court could reasonably find there to be an international market for premier men’s basketball labor.
Keywords: Antitrust, Sherman Act, Collusion, Section 1, sports, sports law, market power, basketball, market definition, geographic market, labor market, labor
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation