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15 Jul 2011, 4:37 pm by Eugene Volokh
Mitch Berman of the University of Texas School of Law will be guest blogging next week about his new Georgetown Law Journal article, Let ‘em Play: A Study in the Jurisprudence of Sports. [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) Many thanks to Eugene for inviting me to discuss my just-published paper “Let ‘em Play”: A Study in the Jurisprudence of Sport, 99 Geo. [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) I started on Monday with a puzzle – what might be said in favor of enforcing at least some rules of sports less strictly at crunch time? [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) At first blush, we might suppose that the analysis I provided yesterday applies, mutatis mutandis, to foot faults in tennis and therefore that tennis officials should call foot faults less strictly at crunch time. [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) Recall Tuesday’s contention: Competitive sports go better, all else equal, insofar as contest outcomes reflect the competitors’ relative excellence in executing the particular athletic virtues that the sport is centrally designed to showcase, develop and reward. [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) Although the Serena Williams episode provoked my interest in the puzzle of temporal variance, I’ll start not with tennis, but with other sports in which a practice of temporal variance might seem more secure – sports like football, hockey, and basketball. [read post]
Mitch Berman (University of Texas), guest-blogging) First, let me thank the many readers who have commented these past few days. [read post]