The Southeastern Conference, whose teams have won the past seven national championships, announced today it will no longer license the use of its symbols and trademarks in EA Sports' college football title, joining the NCAA in leaving the game under a cloud of litigation brought by former players.
Like the NCAA, the SEC noted that its members were free to license their names, symbols and appearances in the game, so the news itself does not mean that any of the SEC's schools—such as Alabama, Auburn, LSU and Florida—have left future editions of the game. It does mean that the SEC's logo and references to the conference in the game's dialogue library must be stripped from future editions. The conference's official championship game also will no longer appear.
"Each school makes its own individual decision regarding whether or not to license their trademarks for use in the EA Sports game(s)," the SEC said in a statement. "The Southeastern Conference has chosen not to do so moving forward."
Like the NCAA, the SEC also repeated the assertion that neither the conference nor its schools "have ever licensed the right to use the name or likeness of any student to EA Sports."
The NCAA, the separate licensing clearance house that handles many of its member schools' business, and EA Sports are all beset by multiple lawsuits alleging, among other things, that the NCAA Football series uses current amateur players' likenesses without their permission or compensating them. The largest of these cases, a potential class action lawsuit brought by the former UCLA standout Ed O'Bannon, involves the sale of memorabilia as well as television contracts.
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In light of this, the NCAA last month said it would no longer license NCAA Football, though its absence would appear to be largely cosmetic. EA Sports said it intended to move forward with the series, likely calling next year's game College Football. That said, losing conferences or, worse, big-name schools definitely strips away the realism which helps give a sports video game its annual relevance.
Kotaku has reached out to EA Sports for comment and will update this post with any statement the label makes.