• Loading stock data...
Thursday, April 18, 2024
  • -
    days
  • -
    hours
  • -
    minutes
  • -
    seconds

NCAA Moves to Trademark ‘Battle in the Bubble’

  • A filing made Aug. 26 suggests the term would be used on apparel and in entertainment services.
  • The trademark could signal the NCAA’s plans for the 2020-21 basketball season.
NCAA Moves to Trademark ‘Battle in the Bubble’
Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

The NCAA has filed a trademark for the phrase “Battle in the Bubble,” signaling what the association’s plans for the 2020-21 Division I basketball season might entail. 

The filing, as first noted by trademark attorney Josh Gerben, was made with the USPTO on Aug. 26 and indicates that the NCAA intends to use the phrase in association with collegiate sports, but doesn’t limit what sports it might apply to. 

In the filing, the NCAA says it plans to use the phrase on clothing and athletic uniforms. It also mentions “entertainment services in the nature of athletic contests, games, tournaments, exhibitions and other athletic events at the college level and “providing an interactive website featuring information relation to entertainment and athletic sporting contests, games, exhibitions and events.”

Other NCAA-owned trademarks include “68 Teams, One Dream,” “And Then There Were Four,” “Elite Eight,” “Final Four,” “History Happens Here,” “March Madness,” “NCAA Sweet 16,” “Road To The Final Four,” “The Road Starts Here” and “The Road Ends Here.”

WNBA is similarly trying to trademark the term “Wubble,” in reference to their season currently going on at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. 

On Aug. 13, ESPN reported that an event operator in Houston turned in a formal proposal to the NCAA for a college basketball event called the “Battle in the Bubble” involving 20 teams that would allow programs to play an entire non-conference schedule in three weeks in December.

Under that plan, schools would pay for entrance into the bubble with money already set aside for buy games. 

The NCAA announced Aug. 17 that it expects a decision on the basketball season start-date by mid-September. As scheduled, the season would begin Nov. 10. 

NCAA President Mark Emmert has said that potentially using the bubble is “perfectly viable in many sports.” 

“Starting with 64 teams is tough. Thirty-two, OK, maybe that’s a manageable number. Sixteen, certainly manageable. But you’ve got to figure out those logistics. There’s doubtlessly ways to make that work,” he said.

It’s near-certain that the NCAA will find a way to host a postseason Division I basketball tournament, one way or another. Broadcast and marketing rights to the men’s event are worth $875 million, and it brings in $177.9 million in ticket sales alone. 

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NCAA Made Empty Threats to Jim Harbaugh over Lawyer’s Twitter Posts

The attorney kept criticizing the NCAA on social media after the October warning.

‘Nothing Is Off the Table’: New AAC Commissioner Isn’t Afraid of the Controversial Ideas

Tim Pernetti told reporters he’s specifically interested in private equity—and didn’t rule out athlete employment or unionization models.

Deion Sanders: NFL Teams Manipulate Draft Positions

Coach Prime joined ‘Front Office Sports Today’ to discuss the state of college football.

John Calipari’s Kentucky Exit Is As Slow and Awkward As a Dog in a Stroller

Calipari steps away from Kentucky with the Arkansas deal still unofficial.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

The Unlikely, Happy Marriage of the NFL and Cornhole

0:00
0:00

Featured Today

Women’s Basketball Finally Has a TV Deal to Match the Excitement. Now What?

A lucrative new media-rights contract could rectify problems of the past, but the future of March Madness media rights is anyone’s guess.
Mar 16, 2024; Washington, D.C., USA; North Carolina State Wolfpack forward DJ Burns Jr. (30) cuts the net after defeating the North Carolina Tar Heels for the ACC Conference Championship at Capital One Arena.
April 6, 2024

How Two College Seniors Helped DJ Burns Cash In on a Final Four Run

Two college seniors are facilitating deals for NC State’s big man.
Mar 31, 2024; Portland, OR, USA; NCAA officials measure the three point line while coaches from the Texas Longhorns and NC State Wolfpack watch with referees in the finals of the Portland Regional of the NCAA Tournament at the Moda Center center.
April 1, 2024

NCAA Has No One to Blame for Latest Women’s March Madness Transgressions

NCAA is still making avoidable mistakes three years after a complete overhaul.
Nov 16, 2015; Bloomington, IN, USA; General view of the championship banners at Assembly Hall prior to the game between Austin Peay and Indiana.
March 31, 2024

How to Make It in Basketball: Become a Manager at Indiana

Inside the Hoosiers’ unglamorous, profoundly rewarding incubator for basketball’s biggest names.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers

Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer Retires With ACC Move Looming

She set the all-time coaching record with 1,216 wins.
April 8, 2024

With Back-To-Back Titles, UConn Proves Basketball Is About More Than Power

Unlike in FBS football, a non-Power 5 basketball school can dominate.
April 9, 2024

Simultaneous Final Fours: An Untenable Logistical Conundrum

The women’s Final Four has gotten much too big to take place at the exact same time—in a different location—as its men’s counterpart.
Sponsored

Rapid Returns: How Technology Is Getting You Back to Your Seat

How Oracle’s POS technology is helping fans get back to their seats faster.
April 8, 2024

South Carolina’s Title Win Smashes Ratings Records in Caitlin Clark’s Finale

The NCAA title game became the most-watched women’s college basketball game.
April 8, 2024

NAIA Votes to Ban Transgender Athletes From Women’s Sports

Could the NCAA follow the NAIA in its transgender women ban?
April 8, 2024

If You Can’t Beat ’Em, John ’Em: Calipari Adapts to NIL Era

Jumping from Kentucky to Arkansas, one of college basketball’s foremost recruiters becomes a prominent face of the sport’s NIL era.
April 8, 2024

Amateurism Is Dying, but It’s Business As Usual at the Men’s Final Four

The story looming over everything is what no one is talking about.