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JURY DECIDES IN FAVOR OF MLS, PLAYERS WILL APPEAL RULING

          In a "major victory" for MLS, an 11-member jury
     unanimously decided yesterday that the six-year old league
     was not a monopoly, according to Michael Lewis of the N.Y.
     DAILY NEWS, who notes that the verdict came after a 12-week
     trial.  A class-action antitrust lawsuit, filed by MLS
     players in Boston federal court in '97, claimed that league
     owners "conspired" with the USSF to "eliminate competition
     for Division I soccer players and challenged the league's
     single-entity structure."  After one day of deliberation,
     the jury found that competition existed in Europe and South
     America and in domestic minor and indoor leagues.  Players
     attorney Jeffrey Kessler said that the verdict will be
     appealed to the first U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.  To
     date, the suit has cost MLS "in excess" of $10M (N.Y. DAILY
     NEWS, 12/12).  Also in N.Y., Richard Sandomir writes that
     the jury "specifically found that the league operated
     legally within a global market for players."  MLS attorney
     Michael Cardozo: "They found the market the M.L.S. competed
     in for players was global, not just the United States."  MLS
     Commissioner Don Garber: "To argue that we're not competing
     with teams overseas is ridiculous and patently untrue" (N.Y.
     TIMES, 12/12).  The AP's Jimmy Golen writes that the jury
     found two "topflight leagues would oversaturate the limited
     American interest in the sport."  Juror Tina Hart, on the
     verdict: "It was our feeling that if these two leagues had
     been in place, both would be bankrupt" (AP, 12/11).  In DC,
     Eric Fisher calls the win "somewhat bittersweet for MLS," as
     league attorneys said during the trial that the league has
     "lost more than" $250M since it began in '96, "with no
     immediate hope for breaking even while" its network TV
     exposure decreases (WASHINGTON TIMES, 12/12).  In L.A.,
     Grahame Jones notes that the NFLPA had funded the players'
     suit and helped represent them (L.A. TIMES, 12/12).  

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