Marquette Sports Law Review Volume 22 Article 8 Issue 1 Fall Inside the Huddle: Analyzing the Mediation Efforts in the NFL's Brady Settlement and its Effectiveness for Future Professional Sports Disputes Timothy J. Bucher Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw Part of the Entertainment and Sports Law Commons Repository Citation Timothy J. Bucher, Inside the Huddle: Analyzing the Mediation Efforts in the NFL's Brady Settlement and its Effectiveness for Future Professional Sports Disputes, 22 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 211 (2011) Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw/vol22/iss1/8 This Comment is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. BUCHER (DO NOT DELETE) 1/5/2012 4:01 PM COMMENTS INSIDE THE HUDDLE: ANALYZING THE MEDIATION EFFORTS IN THE NFL’S BRADY SETTLEMENT AND ITS EFFECTIVENESS FOR FUTURE PROFESSIONAL SPORTS DISPUTES I. INTRODUCTION Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is ubiquitous throughout professional sports disputes.1 Teams negotiatea form of ADRwith players over contracts. Professional sports leagues send disputes to arbitrationalso a form of ADR.2 Still, leagues have yet to readily utilize one of the fastest developing forms of ADR, mediation.3 Although the sports world is riddled with opportunitieslabor disputes, disciplinary disputes, broadcast disputesparties in American sporting disputes have utilized mediation on only a few occasions.4 Recently, the number of issues surrounding the National Football League’s (NFL) labor dispute proved too contentious for the parties to negotiate themselves. With the looming expiration of the league’s collective bargaining agreement (CBA)the 1.