NFL Thrown for Loss in Two Legal Cases
- Share via
A federal jury in Washington on Monday awarded 235 NFL players a total of $30 million in damages from the 28 teams for fixing wages of practice players.
The five-woman, three-man jury agreed that the $1,000-a-week wage paid to members of six-man developmental squads during the 1989 season was less than they would have earned had they been free to negotiate their own contracts.
After less than a full day of deliberation, the jury awarded the players the $10 million in damages they claimed. Under antitrust laws, the awards were tripled.
In a separate ruling, the National Labor Relations Board affirmed a decision in March of 1991 that the league violated federal labor law during the 1987 strike and must pay $30 million to the 1,100 players who joined the walkout.
NLRB administrative law judge Benjamin Schlesinger, in his 1991 decision, said the clubs owe the money because they withheld a week’s salary from the players after the strike ended.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said the league will appeal the jury verdict and the NLRB decision.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.