Saturday, December 13, 2003
Clarett: NCAA is a farm system
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Lawyers for suspended Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett argued Friday that the NFL does not take players until three years after high school in order to maintain a free farm system.
The lawyers asked a judge to allow Clarett to enter next year's NFL draft. Clarett sued the NFL this year, challenging the league rule that a player must be out of high school three years to be eligible for the draft.
The league wants the case tossed out. U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin hopes to rule by Feb. 1.
The player's lawyers said in court papers that the NFL supports the NCAA college football system to save the league tens of millions of dollars in development and training.
"College football acts in effect as a minor league, for which the NFL incurs no expenses," the lawyers said. "While major-league baseball teams each spend an average of $9 million annually for the minor-league system, the NFL teams spend virtually nothing on a player-development system."
The court papers called college football "a willing partner in a cozy arrangement as it generates millions of dollars for the colleges without their having to incur the expense of player salaries."
"Players who are otherwise able to compete with the best in their profession must bide their time on the farm working for nothing," the papers said.
Clarett is not eligible for the draft until 2005 under current rules. The NFL, in court papers of its own, said Clarett's lawyers were wrong to assert that blocking Clarett from the draft until 2005 was an unfair restraint of trade.
The league said its market is governed by a contract agreement with a union representing players and that Clarett's claim amounts "to an allegation that the eligibility rule will enable another player to secure a roster position and compensation that, in plaintiff's view, should be his own."
Ohio State suspended Clarett for the season. He is accused of accepting money from a family friend and lying about it to NCAA and university investigators. He ran for 1,237 yards and led Ohio State to a national championship as a freshman last season.
Top of the First
BENGALS
Garcia gives the 49ers all he's got
Parrish needs one more INT vs. Bengals
The isolation booth
Bengals' keys to the game
Jones 'ready to play' despite not practicing, Lewis says
NFL
San Diego's starting quarterback job goes back to Brees
He carried a broom; he carries a ball now
REDS
Reds scour for starting pitching
MORE BASEBALL
Brown gives approval to trade
XAVIER
Muskies recall loss to Bulldogs
COLLEGE SPORTS
Focus on court for UK, MSU
Flyers soaring at 6-0
ADs discuss leaving early
Chippewas earn upset
Clarett: NCAA is a farm system
Mount Union going for 55th straight win
NKU women cruise to victory
Bad games, not good, could decide winner
PREP SPORTS
CovCath proves worthy No. 1
No.5 Princeton wallops Colerain
James' 3-point spree powers Springboro
Tepe's clutch play sends Aviators over Firebirds
Turpin's Rauen honored in N.Y.
Prep results, schedule
NBA
Jones the sparkplug in Indiana's victory
TV
Sports today on TV, radio