Copyright Protection of Sport Moves

Enrico Bonadio & Nicola Lucchi (eds.): Non-Conventional Copyright, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2018: p. 271-297.

20 Pages Posted: 4 Mar 2017 Last revised: 31 Aug 2021

See all articles by Péter Mezei

Péter Mezei

University of Szeged, Institute of Comparative Law and Legal Theory; Vytautas Magnus University - Faculty of Law

Date Written: February 28, 2017

Abstract

Creativity is at the very heart of sports. Creativity denotes individuality and that individual moment of brilliance often is the fine line that separates the extraordinary athletes from the ordinary. If one takes the sensational rise of Connor McGregor as a recent example: a creative punch from an unexpected angle in an unexpected moment secured him victory in his championship bout in under 13 seconds. Equally, individual expression is encouraged and rewarded with higher scores in sports such as rhythmic gymnastics, pommel horse and ice skating. This notion of creativity is at the very heart of copyright law as well. It is well established that original works of expressions deserve economic and – where available – moral rights protection. Now, of course these two types of creativity are of a seemingly different nature. Nevertheless, the question arises: at what juncture do sporting moves and/or choreographies become creative pieces in their own right and thus protectable as an author’s unique artistic expression? Should Krisztián Berki receive copyright protection for the move named after him in pommel horse? Bob Cousy for his behind-the-back pass in basketball? Antonín Panenka for his penalty kick in football? Werner Rittberger for his loop jump in ice skating? Dick Fosbury for his flop in high jump or even the Yawgoons for their unique incorporation of the everyday into their snowboarding environment? Some commentators remain at odds with the idea of sports being capable of artistic expression with one suggesting “the idea of a quarterback spinning in ballet slippers to the sound of Beethoven seems more ripe for a comedy than a football game”. The relevance of copyright protection is, however, significant. As sports have grown to a global multi-billion-dollar business, it is not irrelevant, whether these forms of expression shall be protected for decades, even after the death of the original athletes. Accordingly, this chapter analyses whether sports moves and choreographies fit into the concept of originality and thus whether they are copyrightable.

Keywords: sport moves, choreography, copyright law, originality, functionality, creativity

JEL Classification: L82, L83, O34, O39

Suggested Citation

Mezei, Péter, Copyright Protection of Sport Moves (February 28, 2017). Enrico Bonadio & Nicola Lucchi (eds.): Non-Conventional Copyright, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2018: p. 271-297., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2925195 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2925195

Péter Mezei (Contact Author)

University of Szeged, Institute of Comparative Law and Legal Theory; Vytautas Magnus University - Faculty of Law ( email )

Bocskai u. 10-12.
Szeged, H-6721
Hungary
+36-62-546-735 (Phone)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
782
Abstract Views
2,890
Rank
58,678
PlumX Metrics