A US judge rejected World Wrestling Entertainment’s effort to dismiss Major League Wrestling’s antitrust lawsuit that accused it of monopolizing the market for professional wrestling media rights.
In a decision on Thursday, US District Judge Edward Davila in San Jose, Calif., said MLW Media had presented enough “circumstantial” evidence that WWE uses its dominance to keep rivals from accessing various distributors and arenas.
MLW said Stamford, Conn.-based WWE commands about 92% of revenue from US media rights for pro wrestling, versus 6% for All Elite Wrestling and less than 2% for everyone else.
The Mamaroneck, NY-based plaintiff also cited WWE’s exclusive rights agreements with Fox and Comcast’s NBCUniversal, which run major cable networks, and said WWE blocks rivals from NBC’s streaming platform Peacock.
MLW sufficiently alleged that WWE’s activities “had a substantial effect in foreclosing competitors from the professional wrestling media rights market,” Davila wrote.
WWE and its lawyers did not immediately respond on Friday to requests for comment.
Marc Kasowitz, a lawyer for MLW, in a statement said the company looked forward to recovering “substantial” damages for WWE’s “many years of egregious anticompetitive behavior.”
The lawsuit began in January 2022.
In seeking a dismissal, WWE had said wrestling promoters “have all the tools needed to succeed” and that MLW could sign up with other channels and platforms, including those run by Amazon, CBS, Disney, Netflix and Warner Bros Discovery.
This story originally appeared on NYPost