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NCAA Football 14 News Post



You read that headline right. As the Ed O'Bannon vs. the NCAA lawsuit continues onwards in the courts, both sides are jockeying for what could be a blockbuster trial by next summer.

In a recently filed study, EA and the College Licensing Company (CLC) claim that less than 25% of all men's basketball and football players were actually represented in EA's college athletic video games with their correct height, weight, home state and position.

EA and the CLC, while arguing against the fact they don't use college athletes is claiming that they do in fact use some college athlete likenesses right down to their correct height, weight, home state and position. This seems highly counterproductive simply because we don't know the exact boundaries for how the study was done. If it required an exact match, then a player being 10-20 pounds too heavy or light would mean they weren't exactly represented, which seems to actually indicate more players than claimed are actually somewhat well represented within the game.

Earlier in the winter, it was revealed that some NCAA e-mails tend to indicate that they knew about the use (but not use) of players likenesses in all but name.

"The issue for me is that the names and likenesses are rigged into the games now by illegal means, meaning that many of the video game players have the features, it's just that our membership doesn't benefit from it," then NCAA Vice President Greg Shaheen wrote.

The e-mails also revealed that the NCAA and EA have looked at trying to find ways to include real player names into the games, with no definitive ways to pull that feat off just yet.

Thanks to the O'Bannon lawsuit, talk about whether to pay college football players is becoming a hot topic. This morning, Oklahoma Head Coach Bob Stoops chimed in, "I don’t get why people say these guys don’t get paid. It’s simple, they are paid quite often, quite a bit and quite handsomely."

The O'Bannon and Sam Keller lawsuit alleges that the NCAA and EA Sports, amongst other entities, have been illegally profiting off of college athletes likenesses with no direct return to the athletes. This is an exceptionally important case which we have been following for several years now, as EA Sports stands to lose $1 billion if an unfavorable ruling for EA is handed down.

It is our position that if Keller and O'Bannon do prevail, college football video games will likely cease to exist due to much higher licensing costs and little return on investment.

Where do you stand on this case as of right now?

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Member Comments
# 61 Cryolemon @ 04/15/13 03:20 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by IlluminatusUIUC
Because if they don't get any benefit from it, why would they sign it? I suppose the argument would be that players want to play as themselves in the game, but other then that they are signing away their likeness rights for no compensation at all.
They more or less do that now, since IIRC the schools themselves are allowed to use them in promotional materials.
 
# 62 jeebs9 @ 04/15/13 12:11 PM
This isn't good at all. I've always loved naming players. But I've always knew something like this would eventually come to a head. We all know what's going on when we get the game and now that we can switch roster online. It's even more wide spread. oh well.. I guess I'll get the next NCAA just for good old sake.
 
# 63 jlmattick54 @ 04/16/13 04:04 AM
This will eventually end college sports games totally I have a feeling. Hey O Bannon maybe you should have graduated college. How was that ligament he was gifted from a cadaver not a special benefit?
 
# 64 jwjones @ 04/29/13 11:47 PM
Screw Ed O'Bannon! Just because he wasted his talents that were given to him by the Nets & he wasted it doesn't mean he screw over society for their right to have fun. He is a loser.
 
# 65 loccdogg26 @ 04/30/13 12:22 AM
You guys in here getting angry over stuff that you can't control. Smh. On another note EA was doing the same thing on Madden by putting legendary players on there without permission until they were sued by Jim Brown and others.
 
# 66 T-Moar @ 04/30/13 02:06 PM
In all honesty, O'Bannon and Co. are probably in the right here. My question is, though, what does this mean beyond the NCAA series? Are schools still going to be able to sell jerseys without names and not pay the players? Will we see a model for college athletes like the one we see for Teaching Fellows, where they're not even allowed to get outside jobs, but they get paid a little bit? This could very easily have implications beyond the athletic world, and if it comes to a ruling (it won't) the decision needs to be worded very carefully.
 
# 67 Cryolemon @ 05/19/13 01:06 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by T-Moar
In all honesty, O'Bannon and Co. are probably in the right here. My question is, though, what does this mean beyond the NCAA series? Are schools still going to be able to sell jerseys without names and not pay the players? Will we see a model for college athletes like the one we see for Teaching Fellows, where they're not even allowed to get outside jobs, but they get paid a little bit? This could very easily have implications beyond the athletic world, and if it comes to a ruling (it won't) the decision needs to be worded very carefully.
That might be seen as a reasonable compromise.
 


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