please answer the questions on the attached document and provide references I have included an example of how it should look Answer all of the questions listed. Discuss

please answer the questions on the attached document and provide references I have included an example of how it should look

Answer all of the questions listed.

Discuss the evolution of sport law. Provide at least one example as part of your analysis.

Review the following information:

FACTS: Mariana Shaw was a sophomore at Stanford University. She was a talented tennis player who had earned a full four-year athletic scholarship. Last year, she attended a Stanford- USC football game with two friends. She left the game early to go to the library to study for her Sport Law midterm. She walked through a Stanford University parking lot on her way to the library and noticed two men who appeared to be drunk and fighting. The two men were walking away from each other when one of them staggered and fell into Mariana from behind, tearing the ACL in her left knee. There were no security personnel from Stanford in the area when the injury occurred.

Shaw sued Stanford alleging that she, as a business invitee, should have been protected by Stanford from the act of this third party. Stanford argued that it had no liability absent any actual notice of a particular danger to a patron.

The trial court granted Stanford’s motion for summary judgment.

HOLDING: The California Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case back to the trial court.

Justify the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment.

Why do you think the Appellate Court did not agree with the trial court’s decision?


Review the following information:

Homer Foster took his family (7-year-old son Bart, 9-year-old daughter Lisa, and wife Marge) to see the New Hampshire Fisher Cats baseball team. A colleague from the Southern New Hampshire University Sport Management department gave him four tickets to the game and told him to bring baseball gloves because the seats were in the first row behind the first base dugout. It was a rainy day but the umpires decided to let the game be played. Only Homer and Marge had been to a baseball game before. Between the third and fourth innings, Bart volunteered to participate in a promotional event to run around the bases against the team mascot. Bart, in a state of confusion, turned around and ran into the mascot upon reaching second base, sustaining a concussion and a broken arm. Bart, being a tough kid, returned to his seat, put on his iPod, and watched the rest of the game. In the sixth inning, the mascot came over to see how Bart was doing, and then Bart and Lisa played with the mascot. While the visiting team was throwing the ball around between plays, and while Lisa and Bart were being distracted by the mascot, the shortstop accidentally threw the wet, slippery ball over the first baseman and into the stands, hitting Lisa in the face and breaking her nose. Homer finished his fifth beer, which he had just purchased from th

SPT 610: Midterm Exam

Answer all of the questions listed.

1. Discuss the evolution of sport law. Provide at least one example as part of your analysis.

Sports Law is like any other form of law in that it evolves with time, changes in technology, and the
environment as new rules and court decisions are made. There is some debate about whether sports law
is its own category or if it is just the application of the law regarding sports disputes. Sports law touches
on a variety of legal doctrines including contract, tort, agency, antitrust, constitutional, labor, trademark,
sex discrimination, criminal, negligence, and tax issues. The sports industry is a multi-billion-dollar
enterprise in the United States and as it continues to grow sports law will become a recognized subset of
law. According to Boyes (2013), Edward Grayson is widely regarded as the father of sports law as his
published works provide a historical narrative of the development of the discipline up until its
emergence in the mainstream in the 1990s.

One of the most significant cases involving college sports, which was ultimately decided by the United
States Supreme Court, was the case National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) v. Board of Regents
of the University of Oklahoma. In the early 1980s, the NCAA controlled the number of times a school’s
football games could be televised both nationally and regionally, and the revenue the school received for
each broadcast. The NCAA claimed that limiting the number of television appearances (no more than six
times over a two-year period) reduces the adverse effects of live television upon football game
attendance. Universities belonging to the College Football Association (CFA) were unhappy with the
agreement and negotiated a separate television contract with NBC. This agreement allowed for
increased television appearances and ultimately increased the revenues of CFA members. The NCAA
attempted to take disciplinary action against any CFA member that complied with the CFA-NBC contract
by banning them from all NCAA competitions. The CFA schools then sued the NCAA in federal court for
violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act claiming the NCAA was constraining the market. The
Sherman Antitrust Act was enacted in 1890 to oppose the use of combinations, monopolies, or cartels
that harmed free and open trade and prohibited the restraint of trade. The United States Supreme Court
ruled that the NCAA’s television plan was a violation of the free market of the Sherman Act and was a
form of price-fixing. The ruling stripped the NCAA of a large source of revenue. As a result of the ruling,
the free market took hold in college football, and schools such as Notre Dame and Texas were able to
enter their own television contracts, while conferences such as the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, and Pac-12 were
able to create their own networks to increase




please answer the questions on the attached document and provide references I have included an example of how it should look




Answer all of the questions listed.

Discuss the evolution of sport law.  Provide at least one example as part of your analysis.
Review the following information:


FACTS:  Mariana Shaw was a sophomore at Stanford University.  She was a talented tennis 	player who had earned a full four-year athletic scholarship.  Last year, she attended a Stanford-	USC football game with two friends.  She left the game early to go to the library to study for her 	Sport Law midterm.  She walked through a Stanford University parking lot on her way to the 	library and noticed two men who appeared to be drunk and fighting. The two men were 	walking 	away from each other when one of them staggered and fell into Mariana from behind, tearing 	the ACL in her left knee. There were no security personnel from Stanford in the area when the 	injury occurred.
        

	Shaw sued Stanford alleging that she, as a business invitee, should have been protected by 	Stanford from the act of this third party.  Stanford argued that it had no liability absent any 	actual notice of a particular danger to a patron.

	The trial court granted Stanford’s motion for summary judgment.


HOLDING: The California Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case back to the trial 	court.
        

Justify the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment.

Why do you think the Appellate Court did not agree with the trial court’s decision?
             





Review the following information:

Homer Foster took his family (7-year-old son Bart, 9-year-old daughter Lisa, and wife Marge) to see the New Hampshire Fisher Cats baseball team. A colleague from the Southern New Hampshire University Sport Management department gave him four tickets to the game and told him to bring baseball gloves because the seats were in the first row behind the first base dugout.  It was a rainy day but the umpires decided to let the game be played.  Only Homer and Marge had been to a baseball game before. Between the third and fourth innings, Bart volunteered to participate in a promotional event to run around the bases against the team mascot.  Bart, in a state of confusion, turned around and ran into the mascot upon reaching second base, sustaining a concussion and a broken arm.  Bart, being a tough kid, returned to his seat, put on his iPod, and watched the rest of the game. In the sixth inning, the mascot came over to see how Bart was doing, and then Bart and Lisa played with the mascot. While the visiting team was throwing the ball around between plays, and while Lisa and Bart were being distracted by the mascot, the shortstop accidentally threw the wet, slippery ball over the first baseman and into the stands, hitting Lisa in the face and breaking her nose.  Homer finished his fifth beer, which he had just purchased from th



SPT 610: Midterm Exam

Answer all of the questions listed.

1. Discuss the evolution of sport law. Provide at least one example as part of your analysis.

Sports Law is like any other form of law in that it evolves with time, changes in technology, and the
environment as new rules and court decisions are made. There is some debate about whether sports law
is its own category or if it is just the application of the law regarding sports disputes. Sports law touches
on a variety of legal doctrines including contract, tort, agency, antitrust, constitutional, labor, trademark,
sex discrimination, criminal, negligence, and tax issues. The sports industry is a multi-billion-dollar
enterprise in the United States and as it continues to grow sports law will become a recognized subset of
law. According to Boyes (2013), Edward Grayson is widely regarded as the father of sports law as his
published works provide a historical narrative of the development of the discipline up until its
emergence in the mainstream in the 1990s.

One of the most significant cases involving college sports, which was ultimately decided by the United
States Supreme Court, was the case National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) v. Board of Regents
of the University of Oklahoma. In the early 1980s, the NCAA controlled the number of times a school’s
football games could be televised both nationally and regionally, and the revenue the school received for
each broadcast. The NCAA claimed that limiting the number of television appearances (no more than six
times over a two-year period) reduces the adverse effects of live television upon football game
attendance. Universities belonging to the College Football Association (CFA) were unhappy with the
agreement and negotiated a separate television contract with NBC. This agreement allowed for
increased television appearances and ultimately increased the revenues of CFA members. The NCAA
attempted to take disciplinary action against any CFA member that complied with the CFA-NBC contract
by banning them from all NCAA competitions. The CFA schools then sued the NCAA in federal court for
violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act claiming the NCAA was constraining the market. The
Sherman Antitrust Act was enacted in 1890 to oppose the use of combinations, monopolies, or cartels
that harmed free and open trade and prohibited the restraint of trade. The United States Supreme Court
ruled that the NCAA’s television plan was a violation of the free market of the Sherman Act and was a
form of price-fixing. The ruling stripped the NCAA of a large source of revenue. As a result of the ruling,
the free market took hold in college football, and schools such as Notre Dame and Texas were able to
enter their own television contracts, while conferences such as the Big Ten, SEC, ACC, and Pac-12 were
able to create their own networks to increase

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