A jury in U.S. District Courtroom ordered the NFL to pay almost $4.8 billion in damages Thursday after ruling that the league violated antitrust legal guidelines in distributing out-of-market Sunday afternoon video games on a premium subscription service.
The jury awarded $4.7 billion in damages to the residential class and $96 million in damages to the business class.
The lawsuit lined 2.4 million residential subscribers and 48,000 companies who paid for the bundle of out-of-market video games from the 2011 by means of 2022 seasons on DirecTV. The lawsuit claimed the league broke antitrust legal guidelines by promoting its bundle of Sunday video games at an inflated worth. The subscribers additionally say the league restricted competitors by providing “Sunday Ticket” solely on a satellite tv for pc supplier.
The NFL mentioned it might attraction the decision. That attraction would go to the ninth Circuit after which probably the Supreme Courtroom.
“We’re upset with the jury’s verdict as we speak within the NFL Sunday Ticket class motion lawsuit,” the league mentioned in an announcement. “We proceed to consider that our media distribution technique, which options all NFL video games broadcast on free over-the-air tv within the markets of the collaborating groups and nationwide distribution of our hottest video games, supplemented by many extra selections together with RedZone, Sunday Ticket and NFL+, is by far the most fan pleasant distribution mannequin in all of sports activities and leisure.
“We will definitely contest this choice as we consider that the category motion claims on this case are baseless and with out advantage.”
The jury of 5 males and three ladies deliberated for almost 5 hours earlier than reaching its choice.
“This case transcends soccer. This case issues,” plaintiffs lawyer Invoice Carmody mentioned throughout Wednesday’s closing arguments. “It is about justice. It is about telling the 32 group house owners who collectively personal all the large TV rights, the preferred content material within the historical past of TV – that is what they’ve. It is about telling them that even you can’t ignore the antitrust legal guidelines. Even you can’t collude to overcharge customers. Even you’ll be able to’t cover the reality and suppose you are going to get away with it.”
The league maintained it has the fitting to promote “Sunday Ticket” underneath its antitrust exemption for broadcasting. The plaintiffs say that solely covers over-the-air broadcasts and never pay TV.
DirecTV had “Sunday Ticket” from its inception in 1994 by means of 2022. The league signed a seven-year deal with Google’s YouTube TV that started with the 2023 season.
The lawsuit was initially filed in 2015 by the Mucky Duck sports activities bar in San Francisco however was dismissed in 2017. Two years later, the ninth U.S. Circuit Courtroom of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over California and eight different states, reinstated the case. Gutierrez dominated final yr the case might proceed as a category motion.