NCAA Targets DraftKings in Trademark Lawsuit as Final Four Hits Indianapolis

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on April 6, 2026
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 The NCAA has officially initiated lawsuit against DraftKings, alleging the unauthorized use of trademarked phrases such as "March Madness" and "Sweet Sixteen."

As the men’s NCAA Tournament reaches its zenith at Lucas Oil Stadium this weekend, a high-stakes legal battle is unfolding just blocks away. The NCAA has officially initiated lawsuit against DraftKings, alleging the unauthorized use of trademarked phrases such as “March Madness” and “Sweet Sixteen.”

The lawsuit underscores the growing friction between collegiate sports governing bodies and the multi-billion dollar sports betting industry.

The “Integrity Standard” Stalemate

A year ago, Genius Sports established a framework to provide sportsbooks with official NCAA data and trademark rights, contingent on operators adhering to strict integrity guidelines. These standards include an outright ban on “high-risk prop bets,” such as “under” wagers on specific player statistics, which the NCAA argues heighten the risk of match-fixing and athlete harassment.

Chris Termini, NCAA Vice President for Championship Business Affairs, stated in a March 26 court declaration:

“To date, no sportsbook, including DraftKings, has agreed to the NCAA restrictions and integrity standards… The result is straightforward: sportsbooks must opt into NCAA integrity standards or forgo access to official NCAA data.”

Athlete Abuse and Regulatory Pushback

The legal clash coincides with a vocal campaign by NCAA President Charlie Baker against the online abuse of student-athletes. Baker recently cited a survey showing that 52% of athletes believe sports betting leads to unfair public ridicule.

“The trash being directed at young people via social media is vicious & disgusting,” Baker wrote, slamming the gaming industry’s perceived dismissiveness of the issue.

While a federal judge recently denied the NCAA’s request for a temporary restraining order, the case and lawsuit remains active with a pretrial conference set for June 1. Meanwhile, states like Ohio, Maryland, and Louisiana have already moved to ban collegiate prop bets, signaling a potential nationwide shift toward the NCAA’s preferred regulatory model.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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