Chattanooga Times Free Press

NCAA faces hundreds of concussion lawsuits

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO

NEW YORK — The NCAA faces more than 300 lawsuits from former college football players who claim their concussion­s were mistreated, leading to medical problems spanning from headaches to depression and, in some cases, the early onset of Parkinson’s disease or Alzheimer’s disease.

The first wave of lawsuits hit college sports’ major governing body in 2016, and more than 200 more were filed recently by Edelson PC, a Chicago-based firm that focuses on class-action cases, and Raizner Slania LLP in Houston. Most of the cases were filed in the U.S Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

The sheer volume of the cases seems daunting, but experts say those seeking damages akin to the NFL’s billion-dollar settlement with its former players have a challengin­g argument to make.

“These are very difficult cases,” said Gabe Feldman, director of Tulane University’s sports law program. “They’re difficult because in many of the cases the plaintiff is clearly suffering and the plaintiff has clearly suffered harm. But the challenge is proving that the NCAA, the member institutio­n or the conference or some combinatio­n caused that harm and had some legal duty to the plaintiff and breached that duty. Each factor of the analysis could be difficult for the plaintiff to prove. Perhaps the most difficult is the causation piece.”

The concussion claims come as the NCAA awaits a federal judge’s ruling in an antitrust case that challenges the associatio­n’s right to cap compensati­on to football and basketball players at the value of an athletic scholarshi­p. That case is pending in federal court in California.

Jay Edelson, a lead attorney in the latest concussion­s effort, has been pursuing personal injury damages for former college athletes for several years. Edelson was part of a previous concussion case against the NCAA that resulted in a $75 million settlement. The NCAA agreed to pay $70 million toward medical monitoring for former college athletes, another $5 million toward medical research and payments of up to $5,000 toward individual players who claimed injuries. The settlement included an agreement that a large personal injury class-action lawsuits could not be brought against the NCAA, but individual lawsuits were permitted on a per-school basis.

Edelson has criticized that settlement, and some of the plaintiffs — including former Eastern Illinois defensive back Adrian Arrington, who initiated the case — have fought against its approval in court.

Arrington is among the hundreds of former college football players now bringing personal-injury claims against the NCAA, college conference­s and, in some cases, individual schools. Many public universiti­es cannot be sued under state sovereignt­y laws. Most private universiti­es are not protected by such laws.

In a statement released to The Associated Press, NCAA chief legal officer Donald Remy said the NCAA is undaunted by recent filings.

“These copycat complaints are full of misleading and inaccurate declaratio­ns like the previously filed similar lawsuits and public statements made by the small group of lawyers submitting these claims,” Remy said. “More lawsuits do not change our resolve and will not impact the NCAA’s commitment to student-athlete safety. The NCAA looks forward to correcting the factual and legal record.”

“These are very difficult cases.” – GABE FELDMAN, DIRECTOR OF TULANE UNIVERSITY’S SPORTS LAW PROGRAM

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