Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An L.A. jury rules the NFL must pay nearly $4.8 billion in damages to fans and sports bars who were said to be overcharged to watch out-of-market games.
A class-action lawsuit filed by “Sunday Ticket” subscribers claiming the NFL broke antitrust laws got underway in federal court Thursday with the league's attorney telling jurors that fans ...
The NFL was exploring a world without “Sunday Ticket” in 2017, where cable channels would air Sunday afternoon out-of-market games not shown on Fox or CBS. ... jury in the class-action lawsuit ...
Every single competitor in this scheme benefited,” Amanda Bonn, an attorney representing “Sunday Ticket” subscribers, said in her opening remarks Thursday. DirecTV was the home of “NFL Sunday Ticket” from 1994 until 2022. YouTube will be in the second season this year of a seven-year deal after agreeing to the rights in December 2022.
A federal jury in L.A. ordered the NFL to pay aggrieved sports fans a total of $4.7 billion after finding the league conspired with DirecTV and network partners to increase the price of the ...
The NFL argued throughout the lawsuit that Sunday Ticket was simply a premium service, and that it came at a premium price. “The case is about choice,” NFL attorney Beth Wilkinson said to the ...
The class-action lawsuit, which represents nearly 2.5 million customers, including individuals and bar owners, argues that the NFL violated antitrust laws restricting competition in an effort to ...
The NFL got a major call overturned: A federal judge Thursday threw out a jury’s $4.7 billion award to subscribers of the league’s Sunday Ticket, finding that the verdict was unsupported by ...