Here's what I don't understand about the players' legal strategy:
They're not pursuing an injunction like the NFL players did. I had assumed that they would at least attempt to convince a more favorable Circuit Court (perhaps the Ninth) that the Eighth Circuit had got it wrong with the NFL players. If successful, they could have lifted the lockout in its entirety. Hearings on injunctions are always expedited
The players aren't going that route. Instead, they're putting their eggs in the basket of "summary judgment", which they hope to get to within 60 days.
Do any of the lawyers in here think that's a winning strategy? How often is summary judgment granted? In 1 in 100 cases, tops? For the non-lawyers, a summary judgment is basically a motion to ask the court to declare that one side has won the case. To grant summary judgment, the court needs to find that even if you accept all of the NBA's factual arguments as true, there is still no way they could prevail. The players need to show that there's no "genuine issue of material fact" that, if decided in the NBA's favor, could lead them to prevail.
Does *anybody* think there aren't legitimate factual issues here? Summary judgment here is the equivalent of a 90 foot buzzer-beating 4-point play. In other words, it's just not going to happen.
So, why waste time, other than that Jeffrey Kessler wants to bring money into his law firm? What's the end game? By not going the injunction route, and instead arguing for SJ -- a very, very difficult legal standard -- the players have essentially given themselves no chance.
Now, who knows, maybe there's something particular to anti-trust law that makes it unique, and perhaps summary judgment is granted all the time. However, that certainly isn't my understanding, and I can tell you from other civil contexts that banking on summary judgment -- especially on a 60 day deadline -- is absolutely fool-hardy.
The popular argument is that this suit is for leverage purposes, but what leverage is gained when the NBA has very intelligent lawyers on its side telling them that summary judgment is a joke?
I feel like this strategy is almost rail-roading us towards a cancelled season. In two months, the owners will have just been awarded a small victory in court, with the court telling the parties that the case isn't ripe for SJ. The parties will be directed to begin discovery. The owners won't have budged, and perhaps will have worsened their offer. What then? Whatever it is, it won't be good for the players or the fans.