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Listen in as Capitol Forum Executive Editor Teddy Downey interviews the authors of a recent paper entitled “The Re-Monopolization of the U.S. Sports Trading Card Industry.” Authors Marc Edelman, Nathaniel Grow and John Holden discuss the history of US sports trading cards leading up to sports retailer Fanatics' consolidation of the $8B industry. Learn how Fanatics used exclusive sports-licensing agreements to achieve the monopoly and what the potential implications are for the industry and for consumers.
With the recent expiration of Major League Baseball's Collective Bargaining Agreement, Alex and Bobby are taking some time to break down key concepts that will be on the table in the coming weeks and months and examine what's at stake for each side. To round out the series, they bring on Nathaniel Grow, associate professor of business law and ethics at Indiana University, to take a look at baseball's opaque revenue sharing system, parsing out how the system works for or against certain owners, what sets it apart from other sports' models, how MLB's antitrust-exempt status play into this and other CBA fault lines, what potential recourse the players have if they really want a fight, and much more. Follow Nathaniel Grow on Twitter at @NathanielGrow Links: The CBA ABCs: Salary Arbitration (feat. Jerry Blevins & Kevin Goldstein) The CBA ABCs: Competitive Balance Tax (feat. Maury Brown and Lindsey Adler) Contextualize these discussions with our CBA crash course Songs featured in this episode: Title Fight — “Mrahc” • Jennifer Lara — “I Am In Love” • The Bitter Tears — “Bachelors Say” • Booker T & the M.G.'s — “Green Onions”
University of Illinois College of Law Adjunct Professor Scott Szala and WTTW-TV “Chicago Tonight” correspondent and former Statehouse Bureau Chief Amanda Vinicky join Rich and Tina to discuss the latest stay-at-home lawsuits filed against Illinois Governor JB Pritzker. University of Indiana Kelley School of Business Associate Professor Nathaniel Grow discusses the future of the Baseball […]
Nathaniel Grow joins the show and answers the question on if MLB players could not get paid until the season starts?
Will we see baseball’s sign stealers in court, or will attempts to take legal action be a suing and a miss? In a bonus episode of EW, Ben Lindbergh talks to sports-law expert Nathaniel Grow about the viability of and precedents for several lawsuits related to MLB’s ongoing sign-stealing scandal, as well as another case […]
Sentinel Radio summer vacation has begun. We’ll be back on Aug. 27. Until then, enjoy some old interviews. We take you back to May, for today’s interview. Sam and I chatted with Indiana University’s Nathaniel Grow about the history of Major League Baseball’s antitrust exemption, and moves that can be made in the future to possibly break it. Enjoy: Broadcasted from Washington, DC Music courtesy of Adam Fligsten (adamfligsten.com/) Contribute to our Patreon, and you’ll get to see the show recorded live: www.patreon.com/DistrictSentinel/ www.districtsentinel.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/DistrictSentinel/ Twitter: www.twitter.com/TheDCSentinel
Indiana Expert on Sports Betting joins me: 1:10- Why New Jersey could be the first state to open new Sportsbook? 2:35-How Professional Leagues view Sports Betting? 4:34-Which states are most prepared for Sports Betting? 5:16: How will a Sportsbook in Indianapolis look? 6:35- Domino of States accepting Sports Gambling. 7:51- Sports Betting at Indianapolis OTB. 9:11- Who can own & operate a casino? 10:57- Arrival of Mobile & In-Arena betting. 13:15- How will this affect illegal sports betting. 14:55-Impact on integrity of sports leagues
Ben Lindbergh and Michael Baumann talk to Cubs pitcher David Rollins about changing teams five times in 36 days (01:25). Then they bring on FanGraphs writer Nathaniel Grow to discuss a legal loophole that could make Mike Trout a free agent before his contract expires (13:43). Lastly, they talk to Baseball Prospectus writer Meg Rowley about Jerry Dipoto's latest trades (29:31), the Mariners' strange rotation (35:57), and Edgar Martinez's Cooperstown case (43:33). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ben Lindbergh and Michael Baumann talk to Cubs pitcher David Rollins about changing teams five times in 36 days (01:25). Then they bring on FanGraphs writer Nathaniel Grow to discuss a legal loophole that could make Mike Trout a free agent before his contract expires (13:43). Lastly, they talk to Baseball Prospectus writer Meg Rowley about Jerry Dipoto's latest trades (29:31), the Mariners' strange rotation (35:57), and Edgar Martinez's Cooperstown case (43:33).
This episode of the Replacement Level Podcast features Nathaniel Grow. Nathaniel is a contributor at FanGraphs, the author of the book Baseball on Trial: The Origin of Baseball’s Antitrust... [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
Ben and Sam talk to author, associate professor, and FanGraphs writer Nathaniel Grow about the financial ramifications of Prince Fielder’s retirement and how contract insurance works in baseball.
In this episode, Peter Ott discusses the recent fan safety class action lawsuit brought against MLB with Nathaniel Grow, Associate Professor of Legal Studies at the University of Georgia’s Terry College of Business. Nathaniel is also the author of the book Baseball on Trial: The Origin of Baseball’s Antitrust Exemption, a number of sports-related law review articles, and some sports-law posts on the website Fangraphs. His most recent Fangraphs post, which we discuss in this podcast episode, is entitled MLB Scores Important Victory in Fan-Safety Lawsuit. He is one of the top baseball legal analysts on the internet. You can follow him on twitter at @NathanielGrow.∼ Continue Reading ∼
Ben and Sam talk to FanGraphs legal analyst Nathaniel Grow about a number of baseball-related cases working their way through the courts.
Episode 624 Nathaniel Grow is a contributor to the electronic pages of FanGraphs and also a doctor of jurisprudence, by virtue of which latter distinction he serves as a professor at the University of Georgia. Here he discusses certain issues wherein baseball and the law meet — including, but not limited to, the class-action suit […]