A publication of the Society for American Baseball Research Business of Baseball Committee March 7, 2010 Winter 2010 Will The Supremes Revolutionize “Sports Arbitration Wrap-up – 2010 Law” And Sing The Praises Of Either NFL or MLB, or Both? In American By Bill Gilbert and Tim Darley Needle, Inc. V. NFL et al. U.S. Supreme During the 2010 baseball offseason, a total of 235 Court Docket No. 08-0661, argued Jan. 13, players were distinctly affected by the arbitration 2010 process, which has been a means for determining player salaries since 1974. Currently, this process is By Lawrence W. Boes1 available to two classifications of players. The first being players with 3 to 6 years of major league service On January 13, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral (“MLS”), plus the top 17%, based on service time, of argument on a legal issue significant to the NFL, players with at least two years of MLS (provided the MLB and other sports leagues and allied interests in player has accrued a minimum of 86 days of MLS). interpreting and applying the antitrust laws, specifi- These players are all still under “team control,” in that cally, whether Section 1 of the Sherman Act of 1890,2 their rights are reserved by their current club. A total applies to collective business activities of professional of 164 team controlled players were eligible for arbi- sports leagues and their member clubs in limiting or tration during 2010. prohibiting intra-league competition. Arbitration is also available to players who are eligi- The NFL is seeking to obtain the Supreme Court’s ble for free agency. When a player accrues the neces- blessing of its centralized and exclusive licensing pol- sary 6 years of MLS, he may file for free agency. icy for the NFL member clubs’ logos for use on sports Upon filing, his former club may offer to proceed with apparel. This policy is based on the legal hypothesis the player into the arbitration process. Typically, this that the NFL and its clubs are acting as a “single en- offer is only extended to pending free agents who tity,” not subject to Sherman Act § 1, which basically qualify their prior team for draft pick compensation. applies to concerted business actions among business Draft pick compensation is available if the departing competitors. The precise legal issue is whether a player qualifies as a Type A player (the top 20% of (Continued on page 3) (Continued on page 14) 1 Copyright, Lawrence W. Boes, 2010. Attorney and Counselor- at-Law, admitted in NYS-1965, also, U.S. District Courts, INSIDE THIS ISSUE SDNY, EDNY, U.S. Courts of Appeal for 2d, 3d, 8th & 9th Circuits and U.S. Supreme Court; J.D, Columbia Law School, American Needle v. the NFL 1 1964; Reviews Ed., Columbia Law Review, 1963-64; Law Clerk, 2d Cir., 1964-65; Empire State Counsel, 2006-07. Re- Arbitration Wrap-up – 2010 1 tired Partner, Fulbright & Jaworski, L.L.P., previously Reavis & McGrath, NYC, 1965-2000, Associate, 1965-71; ABA, NYSBA, NCBA. Law Office of Lawrence W. Boes, 256 As- The Business of Segregation in 2 bury Ave., Westbury, N.Y. 11590-2023; Tel. No.: 516-997- Baseball 2996; Email: [email protected] 2 15 U.S.C. § 1. This federal law forbids contracts, combinations and conspiracies among business competitors resulting in un- Rating the GMs--2009 2 reasonable restraint of interstate commerce, for example, re- straining competition, restricting output, dividing territories and fixing prices. From the Editor 30 Winter 2010 Outside the Lines The Business of Segregation in Baseball Rating the GMs--2009 By Joe Marren By Bill Felber INTRODUCTION Measuring the performance of a general manager is a lot tougher than measuring the performance of a Segregation was good for business. At least that may player. That’s true in large part because while the be what the so-called “lords of baseball” believed. Ra- yardsticks for determining the best players are statisti- cism was blatant when the majors and affiliated mi- cal in nature and generally understood, there are no nors refused to allow African Americans to play until readily accepted parallels for GMs. 1946, when Jackie Robinson was assigned to the Montreal Royals, then the top farm team of the Brook- The most obvious parallel -- victories – doesn’t work lyn Dodgers. But racism didn’t go away after that wa- because GMs work with markedly different resources tershed year, or in ’47 when Robinson was promoted and restraints. For reasons that bear both on the talent to the Dodgers. In fact, it’s more subtle but it still gets base and the financial base, it’s more difficult to win ugly occasionally. As, for example, when Al Campa- with some franchises than others. The few attempts to nis of the Los Angeles Dodgers told a national televi- develop a suitable formula don’t really try. sion audience on April 6, 1987, that there were no Af- rican-American executives in baseball because “they A few years ago Baseball Prospectus offered what it don’t have some of the necessities to be … a field termed a Payroll Efficiency Rating (PER) for GMs. In manager, or, perhaps, a general manager.” essence, it assessed GMs on the basis of what they were given to work with. The idea of getting away And it was racism that mattered in baseball business from victories as a yardstick for measuring GM per- decisions right from the sport’s genesis up to the pre- formance has a certain egalitarian aspect, but it ig- sent day. The 19th century alone could produce a book nores the reality that GMs of even low-rent franchises of essays on the topic, so most of the focus here is on must show signs of actual progress in order to main- the 20th century with 19th century context inserted tain faith and hope among their fans. It also posits that when needed. success can be measured in financial terms. There is an element of truth to that, but it will hardly satisfy the First, it must be understood that the press played a fan of a second division team to be told that his GM crucial role in defining the issue. Was deciding what won the frugality pennant. to report (and how) a business decision? Well, yes and no because newspapers depend on advertising, which The GM Rating System I created in “The Book On depends on readers. So the depth of coverage could be The Book” in 2004 tries to strike an appropriate bal- suspect. But no reporter, editor or publisher could ig- ance in expectations of GMs. The GM Rating System nore the overall contextual issue in the American psy- asks a question that is central to what rich-market and che: Essentially, many in the press came to frame the poor-market general managers alike try to do: Did he story for Civil Rights as being an All-American strug- improve the talent he was given to work with? gle for traditional and iconic values of justice and freedom. The mainstream press didn’t originally Because not all franchises operate in the same circum- frame it that way, though a non-traditional cast of stances, not all the definitions of ”improvement” are characters did. San Francisco State University history alike. That means the answer gets complex. In some professor Jules Tygiel wrote, “Two groups that instances, improvement is most appropriately meas- emerged in the late 1930s provided this impetus: a ured over the long term. In others, it is a “what have small coterie of young black sportswriters and the you done for me lately?” question. Communist party.” Beyond that, some teams improve based on decisions Most African-American newspapers, then and now, that weren’t even made by their general managers, but are weeklies. Yet some had (and still have) national by the guys who preceded them. The St. Louis Cardi- reputations. For example, the Pittsburgh Courier was nals won the NL Central in 2009 in large measure due (Continued on page 17) (Continued on page 23) 2 Winter 2010 Outside the Lines American Needle (Continued from page 1) sports league or other voluntary association of com- MLB HAS LONG BEEN THOUGHT TO ENJOY A UNIQUE peting sports clubs and affiliated business entities, AND TOTAL JUDICIAL EXEMPTION FROM THE ANTI- such as the NFL or MLB and other sports leagues and TRUST LAWS for professional organized baseball which their member clubs, may act as if a “single entity” to was not considered within “interstate commerce” under grant collective licenses of its member clubs’ logos, the Sherman Act, as a result of repeated time-honored without a full inquiry and trial of its anticompetitive decisions in Federal Baseball Club v. National League, 259 U.S. 200 (1922) (Holmes, J., writing for a unani- effects. mous Court); Toolson v. New York Yankees, 346 U.S. 356 (1953); Flood v. Kuhn, 407 U.S. 258 (1972) MLB and its teams are indirectly involved in this NFL (Blackmun, J., writing for a majority of seven justices). case as silent bystanders, even abstaining from filing It is highly doubtful, however, whether this an amicus curiae (“friend of the court”) brief. They “exemption” (limited to professional baseball among all probably did so because MLB had similarly defeated, other sports enterprises) would be extended to exempt on the merits, an antitrust claim brought by a former such undoubtedly nationwide commercial activities as licensee.3 MLB had advanced factual and legal licensing logos for use on products sold in “interstate grounds based on a different and more complicated commerce,” in which both MLB and NFL are engaged.
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