
Activision Blizzard’s Overwatch and Call of Duty Leagues are reportedly abolishing its maximum salary cap and competitive balance (luxury) tax. This is believed to be the result of a federal antitrust investigation.In July 2021, it was revealed that the Overwatch League and Call of Duty League were both being investigated by the US Department of Justice over antitrust laws. These stemmed from concerns that the leagues’ “soft caps” violated rules pertaining to players’ unions and worker bargaining power. About three months later, Sports Business Journal’s Kevin Hitt reports that both the OWL and CDL plan to eliminate those cap and tax systems.As such, both leagues may head into their 2022 seasons without a maximum salary cap or a tax applied to teams who go above the “soft” salary cap. This is yet to be confirmed by Activision Blizzard.
OWL and CDL eliminate salary cap & luxury tax after player’s union investigation?

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Salary caps are theoretically instituted to ensure competitive integrity and parity by restricting teams from outspending others. The only North American sport without one is the MLB, where there’s still a luxury cap that punishes teams who go above a certain payment threshold.
What is a salary cap or a competitive balance tax?

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The timing of the CDL and OWL’s decision is interesting. The DOJ investigated the salary cap and luxury tax in the absence of a player’s union and, within months, the former systems are reportedly being abolished.
This is a developing story and we will update with more details as they become available.