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NCAA Ban On Lawyers for Athletes Ruled Illegal

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N.C.A.A. Ban on Lawyers for Athletes Ruled Illegal

 

By ALAN SCHWARZ

Published: February 12, 2009

 

An Ohio court ruling on Thursday could markedly alter negotiations between Major League Baseball draft picks and their teams if it withstands appeal.

 

Erie County Judge Tygh M. Tone ruled that an N.C.A.A. rule, which renders a student-athlete ineligible for collegiate competition if he or she has a lawyer present during contract negotiations, was illegal because it interfered with an athlete’s right to legal representation.

 

Tone called the ban “arbitrary and capricious.”

 

The rule was being contested by Oklahoma State pitcher Andrew Oliver, who was declared ineligible by university officials last May after Oliver’s status became an issue with the N.C.A.A. Oliver, after being drafted out high school, had his lawyer present at negotiations with the Minnesota Twins.

 

In August, a judge granted Oliver a temporary restraining order restoring his eligibility to pitch for the Cowboys. Tone’s decision makes the injunction permanent eight days before Oklahoma State’s season begins.

 

“These people were trying to destroy this kid,” said Oliver’s lawyer, Richard G. Johnson, referring to the N.C.A.A. “The implications for Andy is he gets to play baseball. He gets his life back. And for the 360,000 student-athletes in the N.C.A.A., it’s the tip of the iceberg that they actually have legal rights. They have the opportunity to consult counsel when entering a contract.”

 

The N.C.A.A. responded in a statement: “We are disappointed in the judge’s ruling. The bylaws related to agent relationships are important principles our colleges and universities have established to protect and preserve amateurism standards. We intend to seek a review of the decision by a higher court, and we are hopeful these significant standards will be preserved.”

 

Baseball draft picks and teams have danced around the rule regarding agents ever since representatives started working with draft picks in the late 1970s. Agents and club officials routinely discuss contract terms for players in varying levels of detail, whether in person, on the phone or via fax and e-mail. In one instance, as negotiations between club officials and a player’s family took place in a hotel room, an agent had an associate listen with a glass up against the wall of an adjoining room.

 

Only occasionally have teams complained to the N.C.A.A., and only a few players have been disciplined with either suspension or ineligibility. However, the ability to have an agent unabashedly negotiate contract terms can only help the player’s leverage.

 

Thursday’s ruling dealt with a narrow slice of the N.C.A.A. ban against agents that forbids a lawyer from being present during negotiations or having direct contact with a team. It did not speak to agents who were not lawyers, a distinction that now begs clarification.

 

“We haven’t seen the end of this,” said Tom Reich, a player agent for almost 40 years. “A guy should be allowed to have protection. He may not know the implications of different clauses and things. He may commit to things without full knowledge or full disclosure. People have lawyers for that reason. But what’s the difference between an attorney and an agent? That has to be examined.”

 

It also remains to be seen how far the ruling will reach. Although Tone wrote that the overturned attorney restriction was “against the public policy of the State of Ohio as well as all states within this Union,” it was unclear what effect it could or would have on players in other states.

 

The judge also sternly rebuked an N.C.A.A. rule which could penalize a university or a student for complying with the terms of a court injunction if that injunction was later reversed on appeal.

 

“Student-athletes must have their opportunity to access the court system without fear of punitive actions being garnered against themselves or their institutions and teams of which they belong,” Tone wrote, adding that the rule “takes the rule of law as governed by the courts in this nation and gives it to an unincorporated business association.”

 

The Oliver case began as a dispute between Oliver and his former agents, Tim and Robert Baratta, over a bill for services during negotiations with the Twins in 2006. The Barattas wrote the N.C.A.A. saying that they had negotiated on Oliver’s behalf. Oliver and his family did not dispute the account, saying only that they did not know the mere presence of lawyers during talks was against N.C.A.A. rules.

 

Now, if the ruling stands, Oliver and perhaps many other draft picks this June could be allowed to have their lawyer negotiate their contracts. Oliver’s was expected to be quite large — as a 6-foot-3 left-hander with an excellent curveball, he was expected to be taken in the first round, where the average signing bonus exceeds $2 million.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/13/sports/b...3ncaa.html?_r=1

 

 

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