Re: Should UND fans wearing Fighting Sioux gear be denied admission to NCAA arenas?
I concede your point but I am not altogether sure what relevance it has to the thread topic.
I only offered this up as a way that you can enforce just about any edict you want to in your sporting event venue, if you are the controller of the venue.
Successfully suing someone means having pockets deep enough to do it/see it through or finding an ambulance chaser willing to take the case on a (likely ridiculous) contingency.
Either way, the event "purveyor" holds most of the cards. Not only can a sports team point to this disclaimer on the back of their tickets, but, they can also point out in any potential trial that the buyer increased his or her risk by buying seats that put them in greater peril than they would have been, otherwise, by buying those particular seats.
Dunno what the chance of success in a suit would be against a sporting entity despite these ticket disclaimers.
What this thread could maybe use right now is a visit by FS 23, lawyer and Fighting Sio....uhhhh Nodaks(?) fan.
I guarantee you that the cops would honor any request by venue management to evict any ticket holder wearing something "against venue policy", though.
Let's take a look at the small print, shall we? It also says that the ticket-buyers hold all responsibility to know what's going on in the game, and that the arena/team/etc hold no responsibility for injury from aspects of the game, like flying pucks or bats (in the case of baseball). How many nets have been put up due to lawsuits? Apparently, fine print means nothing.
I concede your point but I am not altogether sure what relevance it has to the thread topic.
I only offered this up as a way that you can enforce just about any edict you want to in your sporting event venue, if you are the controller of the venue.
Successfully suing someone means having pockets deep enough to do it/see it through or finding an ambulance chaser willing to take the case on a (likely ridiculous) contingency.
Either way, the event "purveyor" holds most of the cards. Not only can a sports team point to this disclaimer on the back of their tickets, but, they can also point out in any potential trial that the buyer increased his or her risk by buying seats that put them in greater peril than they would have been, otherwise, by buying those particular seats.
Dunno what the chance of success in a suit would be against a sporting entity despite these ticket disclaimers.
What this thread could maybe use right now is a visit by FS 23, lawyer and Fighting Sio....uhhhh Nodaks(?) fan.
I guarantee you that the cops would honor any request by venue management to evict any ticket holder wearing something "against venue policy", though.