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Maurice Clarett takes on the NFL in court

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  • Maurice Clarett takes on the NFL in court

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Suspended Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett sued the NFL on Tuesday, asking a judge to throw out a league rule that prevents him from entering the 2004 draft.

    The lawsuit contends the NFL rule prohibiting players from being drafted until they have been out of high school for three years violates antitrust law and harms competition.

    Clarett, who rushed for 1,237 yards and led Ohio State to a national championship as a freshman last season, wants U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin to declare him eligible for the 2004 draft -- or require the NFL to hold a special supplemental draft sooner.

    Under current rules, he is not eligible for the draft until 2005.

    "Had Clarett been eligible for the 2003 Draft, it is almost certain he would have been selected in the beginning of the First Round and would have agreed to a contract and signing bonus worth millions of dollars," according to the lawsuit filed in federal court in New York.

    The NFL says it will fight any challenge to the rule.

    "We do not believe that this lawsuit serves the best interests of Maurice Clarett or college football players generally, but we look forward to explaining to the court both the very sound reasons underlying our eligibility rule and the legal impediments to the claim that was filed," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said.

    Clarett was suspended from the team for at least a year after an investigation determined he broke NCAA bylaws concerning benefits for athletes and lied to investigators.

    His attorney, Alan Milstein, filed the lawsuit against the NFL a day after he and Clarett's mother met with league executives in Washington to discuss whether Clarett would be eligible for the April 24 draft.

    The lawsuit argues the NFL rule "is a restraint of amateur athletes who were strangers to the collective bargaining process."

    A Duke University legal expert says Clarett has a strong case and the NFL will probably have trouble keeping Clarett out of the draft.

    "Any attempt by competitors to restrain competition in the labor market is regarded by the courts with great suspicion," said Paul Haagen, a Duke law professor. "Unless the restraint falls under a limited number of narrow exceptions, it will be treated as a violation of the antitrust laws."

    When NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue was asked earlier this month if he thought the league could win such a lawsuit, he replied: "My feeling as commissioner is that we have a very strong case and that we'll win it."

    Milstein said that if they win their lawsuit against the NFL, it wouldn't mean dozens of players would leave college early for the pros.

    "This is not going to open the floodgates," he said. "You still will have to be of a certain level of ability to consider this. I read where someone said, 'We don't want 13-year-olds in the NFL.' That's ridiculous. You still would have to be drafted, signed and make the team."

    Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said he had spoken to Clarett's mother this week and was told Clarett would be enrolled for the fall quarter.

    "I don't know really much of what's behind the decision, so I don't know if he's testing the waters, how he's approaching it," Tressel said.

    Clarett can only be reinstated by Ohio State after the school appeals to the NCAA. Athletic director Andy Geiger said Tuesday that, "We don't intend to apply for reinstatement for quite a while."

  • #2
    I think that Clarett is deluding himself if he thinks he can win this.

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    • #3
      I think that Clarett is nuts if he thinks that he would have gone in the top half of the first round. He had one year in which he couldn't make it through without getting hurt. He has shown a lack of maturity that would make any team interested in him, leery of wasting a first round draft pick on him. At best he would have been a middle of the second round pick. He needs to transfer to a division 2 school so that he can play next year, and prove that he can perform at that level for more than one year. Plus he needs to stop being so jealous of his friend Lebron James. He has seen his buddy come into all this money right out of high school and now he thinks that he is somehow entitled to the same thing. The only problem is that basketball and football are two totaly diferent beasts.

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      • #4
        Who would take him in the draft anyway? He is good, but what has he really proven with 1 good college season. He has already proven that authority is something he has a problem with,

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        • #5
          Damn big4life I need to type faster.

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          • #6
            I think his best option is to make a little cash in the CFL, where he can showcase his talents against better defenses and continue to develop at a high level. Then, in 2005, if he's done well, he will go very high in the NFL draft.

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