Gabe Feldman

Sub Title
Director, Sports Law Program
Sub Title 2
Paul and Abram B. Barron Associate Professor of Law
Email
gfeldman@tulane.edu
Phone
504-865-5948
School or College
School of Law
Twitter URL
Linkedin URL
Website

Gabe Feldman, director of the Tulane Sports Law Program and Tulane University's associate provost for NCAA compliance, is one of the leading voices in the country in the growing field of sports law. Named the Paul and Abram B. Barron Associate Professor of Law in 2015, he also is co-founder and co-director of the Tulane Center for Sport.
Feldman's extensive experience in sports law includes representing a variety of sports entities while he was in private practice, and he continues to act as a consultant for a number of clients in the sports industry.

Feldman joined the Tulane Law faculty in 2005 after nearly five years as an associate with Williams & Connolly in Washington, D.C. Before that, he served as judicial clerk to Judge Susan H. Black of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Jacksonville, Fla.

He is regularly quoted in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other newspapers throughout the country, and he has made numerous appearances on national television and radio. He currently serves as the on-air legal analyst for the NFL Network.

Feldman is editor of The Sports Lawyers Journal, a law journal devoted to the study of sports law, and The Sports Lawyer, a monthly online newsletter, and was a sports law contributor to the now-defunct Grantland.com and the Sports Law Blog. He is director of publications for the Sports Lawyers Association; co-authored of one of the leading sports law casebooks in the country, Sports Law: Cases and Materials; is on the Articles Review Board for the Journal of Legal Aspects of Sport; and has been published in a variety of journals and periodicals. Much of his writing focuses on the intersection of antitrust, labor, intellectual property law and the sports industry. He also serves as a mediator and arbitrator. 

Feldman sits on the board of directors of the Sports Lawyers Association and Athletes for Hope, a nonprofit organization created to harness the power of sports to impact social change. He also is the director of Special Olympics in New Orleans and is a member of the NCAA Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports. In 2017, he was named a 2017 Role Model by the Young Leadership Council for his work in the New Orleans community.

He teaches Antitrust, Sports Law, Negotiation and Mediation and Contracts. In 2013, he received a President's Award for Graduate and Professional Teaching, a Tulane University recognition of excellence in teaching, learning and research.

First Name
Gabe
Last Name
Feldman
Director, Sports Law Program
Paul and Abram B. Barron Associate Professor of Law
gfeldman@tulane.edu
504-865-5948
Tulane Affiliation
Gabe Feldman
Scholarly Works

A New Sea of Doubt: The Modern Rule of Reason (Work in Progress)

The Modern College Athlete and a New Definition of "Amateurism" (Work in Progress)

Antitrust and Labor Law, Oxford University Press Sports Law Treatise (2017)

The NCAA and "Non-Game Related" Student-Athlete Name, Image and Likeness Restrictions, White Paper for the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics (2016)

A Modest Proposal for Taming the Antitrust Beast, 41 Pepp. L. Rev. 240 (2014)

Closing the Floodgates: The Battle over Workers' Compensation Rights in California, 8 F.I.U. Law Rev. 107 (2012)

Brady v. NFL and Anthony v. NBA: The Shifting Dynamics in Labor-Management Relations in Professional Sports, 86 TUL. L. REV. 831 (2012)

Antitrust versus Labor Law in Professional Sports: Balancing the Scales after Brady v. NFL and NBA v. NBPA, 45 UC DAVIS L. REV. 1221 (2012)
The Misuse of the Less Restrictive Alternative Inquiry in Rule of Reason Analysis, 58 Am. U. L. Rev. 561 (2009)

The Single Entity Battle Continues:  American Needle and the Seventh Circuit's Hybrid Approach, Global Competition Policy (May 2009)

More

Go see the Mardi Gras Bead Tree on Gibson Quad.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabe-feldman-932bbb2/
http://twitter.com/SportsLawGuy
Education and Affiliations
JD, Duke University School of Law
MA, Duke University School of Psychology
BA, Duke University
Gabe Feldman
Profile image
Gabe Feldman
Education and Affiliations
JD, Duke University School of Law
MA, Duke University School of Psychology
BA, Duke University
Biography

Gabe Feldman, director of the Tulane Sports Law Program and Tulane University's associate provost for NCAA compliance, is one of the leading voices in the country in the growing field of sports law. Named the Paul and Abram B. Barron Associate Professor of Law in 2015, he also is co-founder and co-director of the Tulane Center for Sport.
Feldman's extensive experience in sports law includes representing a variety of sports entities while he was in private practice, and he continues to act as a consultant for a number of clients in the sports industry.

Feldman joined the Tulane Law faculty in 2005 after nearly five years as an associate with Williams & Connolly in Washington, D.C. Before that, he served as judicial clerk to Judge Susan H. Black of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Jacksonville, Fla.

He is regularly quoted in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other newspapers throughout the country, and he has made numerous appearances on national television and radio. He currently serves as the on-air legal analyst for the NFL Network.

Feldman is editor of The Sports Lawyers Journal, a law journal devoted to the study of sports law, and The Sports Lawyer, a monthly online newsletter, and was a sports law contributor to the now-defunct Grantland.com and the Sports Law Blog. He is director of publications for the Sports Lawyers Association; co-authored of one of the leading sports law casebooks in the country, Sports Law: Cases and Materials; is on the Articles Review Board for the Journal of Legal Aspects of Sport; and has been published in a variety of journals and periodicals. Much of his writing focuses on the intersection of antitrust, labor, intellectual property law and the sports industry. He also serves as a mediator and arbitrator. 

Feldman sits on the board of directors of the Sports Lawyers Association and Athletes for Hope, a nonprofit organization created to harness the power of sports to impact social change. He also is the director of Special Olympics in New Orleans and is a member of the NCAA Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports. In 2017, he was named a 2017 Role Model by the Young Leadership Council for his work in the New Orleans community.

He teaches Antitrust, Sports Law, Negotiation and Mediation and Contracts. In 2013, he received a President's Award for Graduate and Professional Teaching, a Tulane University recognition of excellence in teaching, learning and research.

Courses
Antitrust, Sports Law, Negotiation and Mediation and Contracts
Research

Antitrust, Sports Law, Negotiation, Mediation and Contracts

Scholarly Works

A New Sea of Doubt: The Modern Rule of Reason (Work in Progress)

The Modern College Athlete and a New Definition of "Amateurism" (Work in Progress)

Antitrust and Labor Law, Oxford University Press Sports Law Treatise (2017)

The NCAA and "Non-Game Related" Student-Athlete Name, Image and Likeness Restrictions, White Paper for the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics (2016)

A Modest Proposal for Taming the Antitrust Beast, 41 Pepp. L. Rev. 240 (2014)

Closing the Floodgates: The Battle over Workers' Compensation Rights in California, 8 F.I.U. Law Rev. 107 (2012)

Brady v. NFL and Anthony v. NBA: The Shifting Dynamics in Labor-Management Relations in Professional Sports, 86 TUL. L. REV. 831 (2012)

Antitrust versus Labor Law in Professional Sports: Balancing the Scales after Brady v. NFL and NBA v. NBPA, 45 UC DAVIS L. REV. 1221 (2012)
The Misuse of the Less Restrictive Alternative Inquiry in Rule of Reason Analysis, 58 Am. U. L. Rev. 561 (2009)

The Single Entity Battle Continues:  American Needle and the Seventh Circuit's Hybrid Approach, Global Competition Policy (May 2009)

More

Tulane Tip

Go see the Mardi Gras Bead Tree on Gibson Quad.