Fear of Flying and NBA Players
Posted by The Situationist Staff on July 1, 2012
Michael McCann recently posted his article, “Do You Believe He Can Fly? Royce White and Reasonable Accommodations Under the Americans with Disabilities Act for NBA Players with Phobias” (to be published in the Pepperdine Law Review, Vol. 41, 20103) on SSRN. The article is about Royce White, who will be entering the NBA next season, and what impact his severe fear of flying will have on his NBA career. The article also considers the legal mechanisms that may be available to White under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Here is an excerpt:
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If fear of flying constitutes a disability for White under the ADA, he could argue that the NBA or his team should accept any reasonable request for accommodation. They may disagree about what constitutes “reasonable”. Allowing White to take a train from Boston to New York City, or even a ship to Europe, would probably be reasonable so long as White does not miss meetings, practices or games. Then again, White as a rookie traveling alone, might not gain valuable insight from conversations with coaches and teammates or develop camaraderie with them.
Seemingly less reasonable would be allowing White to miss a road trip. Unless he is injured, suspended or assigned to the D-League (the NBA’s minor league), White will be contractually obligated to play 82 regular season games, along with four to six pre-season games, up to 28 postseason games, and possibly a handful of summer league games. No player signs a standard contract to play in “some games.” Consider the impact of such an arrangement on White’s coach: if White’s only an occasional player, his coach might struggle to set his rotation. On the other hand, professional leagues have carved out exceptions for players to miss road games. This has been true of NBA players recovering from injury. Gilbert Arenas, returning from a knee injury in 2009, was allowed a flexible schedule whereby he would play in all home games but only some road games. Other circumstances have led to similar arrangements. Last year the Central Hockey League allowed Rapid City Rush forward Brett Nylander, a second lieutenant in the Air Force, to only play home games because his military service limited travel.
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To read the rest, click here.
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This entry was posted on July 1, 2012 at 12:01 am and is filed under Abstracts, Law, Situationist Sports. Tagged: ADA, Americans with Disabilities Act, antitrust law, collective bargaining, contract law, EEOC, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, fear of flying, labor law, litigation process, N.B.A., N.B.A. draft, National Basketball Association, phobias, reasonable accommodations, Royce White, union represenstation. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
dipika said
Hi,
Very helpful article. Thanks for sharing.