Kane Republican

Jury rules NFL violated antitrust laws in 'Sunday Ticket' case and awards $4.7 billion in damages

- By Joe Reedy

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A jury in U.S. District Court ruled Thursday the NFL violated antitrust laws in distributi­ng out-of-market Sunday afternoon games on a premium subscripti­on service and has awarded nearly $4.7 billion in damages.

The jury ordered the league to pay $4 billion in damages to the residentia­l class and $96 million in damages to the commercial class.

The lawsuit covered 2.4 million residentia­l subscriber­s and 48,000 businesses who paid for the package of outof-market games from the 2011 through 2022 seasons on Directv. The lawsuit claimed the league broke antitrust laws by selling its package of Sunday games at an inflated price. The subscriber­s also say the league restricted competitio­n by offering "Sunday Ticket" only on a satellite provider.

The jury of five men and three women deliberate­d for nearly five hours before reaching its decision.

"This case transcends football. This case matters," plaintiffs attorney Bill Carmody said during Wednesday's closing arguments. "It's about justice. It's about telling the 32 team owners who collective­ly own all the big TV rights, the most popular content in the history of TV — that's what they have. It's about telling them that even you cannot ignore the antitrust laws. Even you cannot collude to overcharge consumers. Even you can't hide the truth and think you're going to get away with it."

The NFL was expected to appeal to the 9th Circuit and then possibly the Supreme Court.

The league maintained it has the right to sell "Sunday Ticket" under its antitrust exemption for broadcasti­ng. The plaintiffs say that only covers overthe-air broadcasts and not pay TV.

"We are disappoint­ed with the jury's verdict today in the NFL Sunday Ticket class action lawsuit," the league said in a statement. "We continue to believe that our media distributi­on strategy, which features all NFL games broadcast on free over-theair television in the markets of the participat­ing teams and national distributi­on of our most popular games, supplement­ed by many additional choices including Redzone, Sunday Ticket and NFL+, is by far the most fan friendly distributi­on model in all of sports and entertainm­ent.

"We will certainly contest this decision as we believe that the class action claims in this case are baseless and without merit."

Directv had "Sunday Ticket" from its inception in 1994 through 2022. The league signed a seven-year deal with Google's Youtube TV that began with the 2023 season.

The lawsuit was originally filed in 2015 by the Mucky Duck sports bar in San Francisco but was dismissed in 2017. Two years later, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdicti­on over California and eight other states, reinstated the case. Gutierrez ruled last year the case could proceed as a class action.

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