Archive for ◊ October, 2010 ◊

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• Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

CNBC’s Darren Rovell looks at how Wrangler, which has paid Brett Favre millions for his endorsement and for his appearances in a wide-range of All-American type ads, often with footballs and dogs and pick-up trucks, might respond to allegations indicating that Favre, who has been married for 14 years with two children, may have sent inappropriate messages and photos to another woman.

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• Saturday, October 09th, 2010

Professor Dionne Koller of the University of Baltimore School of Law passes along this announcement of what should be an engaging symposium titled “The Death of Amateurism: Implications for Sport and Health“:
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• Friday, October 08th, 2010

By now, everyone has heard about the “senior thesis” in “horizontal academics” that a 2010 Duke grad wrote as joke, a spoof thesis presentation describing the performance of thirteen Duke student-athletes (seven of them happened to be lacrosse players) with whom she had sex during her time in school. The New York Times got in on the story today, talking about embarrassed and weary the campus is over another scandal.

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• Wednesday, October 06th, 2010

Over on M & A Law Prof Blog, Boston College Law Professor Brian Quinn takes a look at the divorce between Frank and Jamie McCourt and specifically how a document from six years ago — three copies of which use the word “exclusive” in it; three use “inclusive” — could impact whether Frank is the sole or joint owner:
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• Monday, October 04th, 2010

Last Thursday, Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association reached an agreement to alter some of the deadlines regarding free agency, tender/non-tender, and arbitration for upcoming negotiations in 2010 and 2011. The agreement grew out of concerns raised by the Players Association about the 2008 and 2009 off-season negotiation periods. Barry Bloom reported on the changes in an article posted on MLB.com, and the Players Association distributed a press release.

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• Sunday, October 03rd, 2010

Following onMike’s post about the new book on the science of choking: Prof. Bielock was on Diane Rehm two weeks ago (my wife had told me about the show, but I had not gotten around to the podcast; my plan for this week). Also, the New Yorker covered similar ground in 2000 in a piece called “The Art of Failure” (abstract and registration required). That piece discussed the difference between “choking” and “panicking.” The former is what happens when skilled, prepared people lose the ability to perform, in part because they start thinking (and overthinking) about otherwise learned steps. Panicking is what an unprepared or unskilled person does, often involving moving too quickly.

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• Saturday, October 02nd, 2010

A terrific new article in the Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal has posted on SSRN: Going Pro in Sports: Improving Guidance to Student-Athletes in a Complicated Legal & Regulatory Environment

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