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Football subscribers sue Google for NFL ‘conspiracy’ information.

Subscribers of Sunday Ticket File Lawsuit Against Google

Subscribers of Sunday Ticket, the sports package that broadcasts‌ National Football League regular season games unavailable⁣ to ⁢fans on local affiliates,⁣ have filed a lawsuit against Google. Google has a multibillion-dollar deal with the NFL, allowing it to exclusively hold the broadcast rights ⁣for Sunday Ticket games shown on⁢ YouTube⁣ starting with⁢ the upcoming season.

The ⁢Case Explained

Each NFL team entered into a “Teams-NFL Agreement” with the NFL⁤ to pool their telecasting rights and give the​ NFL the authority to exercise those rights. Acting on behalf​ of its ​teams, the NFL entered into two additional‍ agreements licensing the teams’ ​telecast rights. Under the “NFL-Network Agreement,”⁤ CBS and⁢ Fox ‌coordinate⁤ to ‌create a⁢ single ⁢telecast for every Sunday-afternoon NFL game, and the NFL permits CBS and Fox to broadcast a limited number of what are known as local games through free, over-the-air television.

Under the “NFL-DirecTV Agreement,” ⁢the NFL allows‌ DirecTV to obtain all of the live telecasts produced⁣ by CBS and Fox, package those telecasts, and⁢ deliver the bundled feeds to NFL Sunday Ticket subscribers. Plaintiffs‌ alleged that defendants’ interlocking agreements work together to​ suppress competition for the sale‍ of ⁣professional football⁢ game telecasts in violation of §§ 1 and​ 2 of ​the Sherman Act.

The ⁤subscribers in the new lawsuit want Google to supply information — including retail pricing, rights fees, and subscriber numbers —⁤ for ‌their case against NFL and DirecTV. DirecTV hosted Sunday Ticket before Google. In their case against the NFL, the subscribers accused the NFL, its teams, and DirecTV of ⁣conspiring to limit the‌ availability of televised games, thus boosting the price for Sunday⁤ Ticket.

The NFL has denied the claims of a conspiracy, stating‌ that the plaintiffs’ had not identified “any evidence that⁤ could transform a lawful exclusive‍ distribution agreement into an unlawful antitrust conspiracy.”

The plaintiffs claim Google gave only three⁣ documents, what the plaintiffs ​called “summary presentations,” regarding its Sunday Ticket deal, and the paucity ⁢of information “does not even scratch the surface” ‌of relevant information. “Evidence that the NFL imposed restrictions⁤ on Google will ​support plaintiffs’ claims that the NFL ⁢imposed these same restraints on ​DirecTV during the class period,⁣ to ‌the ​detriment of consumers,’ the ‍plaintiffs’ ‌lawyers claimed.



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