In Re National Football League Players Concussion Injury Litigation , 821 F.3d 410 ( 2016 )


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  •                                          PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ________________
    Nos. 15-2206, 15-2217, 15-2230, 15-2234, 15-2272, 15-2273
    15-2290, 15-2291, 15-2292, 15-2294, 15-2304 & 15-2305
    ________________
    IN RE: NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS
    CONCUSSION INJURY LITIGATION
    Craig Heimburger; Dawn Heimburger,
    Appellants (15-2206)
    Cleo Miller; Judson Flint; Elmer Underwood; Vincent
    Clark, Sr.; Ken Jones; Fred Smerlas; Jim Rourke; Lou
    Piccone; James David Wilkins, II,
    Appellants (15-2217)
    Curtis L. Anderson,
    Appellant (15-2230)
    Darren R. Carrington,
    Appellant (15-2234)
    Raymond Armstrong; Nathaniel Newton, Jr.; Larry
    Brown; Kenneth Davis; Michael McGruder; Clifton L.
    Odom; George Teague; Drew Coleman; Dennis
    DeVaughn; Alvin Harper; Ernest Jones; Michael
    Kiselak; Jeremy Loyd; Gary Wayne Lewis; Lorenzo
    Lynch; Hurles Scales, Jr.; Gregory Evans; David
    Mims; Evan Ogelsby; Phillip E. Epps; Charles L.
    Haley, Sr.; Kevin Rey Smith; Darryl Gerard Lewis;
    Curtis Bernard Wilson; Kelvin Mack Edwards, Sr.;
    Dwayne Levels; Solomon Page; Tim McKyer; Larry
    Barnes; James Garth Jax; William B. Duff; Mary
    Hughes; Barbara Scheer,
    Appellants (15-2272)
    Liyongo Patrise Alexander; Charlie Anderson; Charles
    E. Arbuckle; Cassandra Bailey, as Representative of
    the Estate of Johnny Bailey; Ben Bronson; Curtis
    Ceaser, Jr.; Larry Centers; Darrell Colbert; Harry
    Colon; Christopher Crooms; Jerry W. Davis; Tim
    Denton; Michael Dumas; Corris Ervin; Doak Field;
    Baldwin Malcolm Frank; Derrick Frazier;
    Murray E. Garrett; Clyde P. Glosson; Roderick W.
    Harris; Wilmer K. Hicks, Jr.; Patrick Jackson; Gary
    Jones; Ryan McCoy; Jerry James Moses, Jr.;
    Anthony E. Newsom; Rance Olison; John Owens;
    Robert Pollard; Derrick Pope; Glenell Sanders;
    Thomas Sanders; Dwight A. Scales; Todd Scott;
    Frankie Smith; Jermaine Smith; Tyrone Smith; James
    A. Young, Sr.,
    Appellants (15-2273)
    Scott Gilchrist, individually and on behalf of the Estate
    of Carlton Chester “Cookie” Gilchrist,
    Appellant (15-2290)
    Jimmie H. Jones; Ricky Ray; Jesse Solomon,
    Appellants (15-2291)
    2
    Andrew Stewart,
    Appellant (15-2292)
    Willie T. Taylor,
    Appellant (15-2294)
    Alan Faneca; Roderick “Rock” Cartwright;
    Jeff Rohrer; Sean Considine,
    Appellants (15-2304)
    James Mayberry,
    Appellant (15-2305)
    ________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civil Action Nos. 2-12-md-02323 and 2-14-cv-00029)
    District Judge: Honorable Anita B. Brody
    ________________
    Argued November 19, 2015
    Before: AMBRO, HARDIMAN,
    and NYGAARD, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: April 18, 2016)
    3
    TerriAnne Benedetto, Esquire
    Seeger Weiss
    1515 Market Street
    Suite 1380
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    David R. Buchanan, Esquire
    Diogenes P. Kekatos, Esquire
    Christopher A. Seeger, Esquire
    Seeger Weiss LLP
    77 Water Street, 26th Floor
    New York, NY 10005
    Samuel Issacharoff, Esquire (Argued)
    New York University Law School, Room 411J
    40 Washington Square South
    New York, NY 10012
    Gene Locks, Esquire
    David D. Langfitt, Esquire
    Locks Law Firm
    601 Walnut Street
    The Curtis Center, Suite 720 East
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Dianne M. Nast, Esquire
    NastLaw
    1101 Market Street, Suite 2801
    Philadelphia, PA 19107
    Stephen F. Rosenthal, Esquire
    Steven C. Marks, Esquire
    Podhurst Orseck
    4
    25 West Flager Street, Suite 800
    Miami, FL 33130
    Arnold Levin, Esquire
    Frederick S. Longer, Esquire
    Levin, Fishbein, Sedran & Berman
    510 Walnut Street, Suite 500
    Philadelphia, PA 19106
    Brad S. Karp, Esquire
    Theodore V. Wells, Jr., Esquire
    Lynn B. Bayard, Esquire
    Bruce A. Birenboim, Esquire
    Walter R. Reiman, Esquire
    Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
    1285 Avenue of the Americas
    New York, NY 10019
    Beth A. Wilkinson, Esq.
    Wilkinson Walsh & Eskovitz
    1900 M Street, N.W.
    Suite 800
    Washington, DC 20036
    Paul D. Clement, Esquire (Argued)
    Andrew N. Ferguson, Esquire
    David Zachary Hudson, Esquire
    Robert M. Bernstein, Esquire
    Bancroft PLLC
    500 New Jersey Avenue, N.W.
    Seventh Floor
    Washington, DC 20001
    5
    Robert C. Heim, Esquire
    Dechert
    2929 Arch Street
    18th Floor, Cira Centre
    Philadelphia, PA 19104
    Sol H. Weiss, Esquire
    Anapol Schwartz
    1710 Spruce Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellees
    Alan B. Morrison, Esquire
    George Washington University
    2000 H Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20052
    Scott L. Nelson, Esquire
    Public Citizen Litigation Group
    1600 20th Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20009
    Counsel for Amicus Appellant
    Public Citizen Inc.
    Shana De Caro, Esquire
    Michael V. Kaplen, Esquire
    De Caro & Kaplan
    427 Bedford Road, Suite 360
    Pleasantville, NY 10570
    6
    Counsel for Amicus Curiae
    Brain Injury Association of America
    Christopher A. Bandas, Esquire
    Bandas Law Firm
    500 North Shoreline, Suite 1020
    Corpus Christi, TX 78401
    Howard J. Bashman, Esquire       (Argued)
    Suite G-22
    2300 Computer Avenue
    Willow Grove, PA 19090
    Gary P. Lightman, Esquire
    Glenn A. Manochi, Esquire
    Lightman & Manochi
    1520 Locust Street, 12th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Counsel for Appellants
    Craig and Dawn Heimburger
    Edward W. Cochran, Esquire
    Cochran & Cochran
    20030 Marchmont Road
    Shaker Heights, OH 44122
    John J. Pentz, Esquire
    19 Widow Rites Lane
    Sudbury, MA 01776
    7
    Counsel for Appellants
    Cleo Miller; Judson Flint; Elmer Underwood; Vincent
    Clark, Sr.; Ken Jones; Fred Smerlas; Jim Rourke; Lou
    Piccone; James David Wilkins, II
    George W. Cochran, Esquire
    1385 Russell Drive
    Streetsboro, OH 44241
    Counsel for Appellant
    Curtis L. Anderson
    Joseph Darrell Palmer, Esquire
    2244 Faraday Avenue, Suite 121
    Carlsbad, CA 92008
    Jan L. Westfall, Esquire
    29896 Blue Water Way
    Menifee, CA 92584
    Counsel for Appellant
    Darren R. Carrington
    Richard L. Coffman, Esquire
    The Coffman Law Firm
    505 Orleans Street, Suite 505
    Beaumont, TX 77701
    8
    Deepak Gupta, Esquire (Argued)
    Matthew W.H. Wessler, Esquire
    Jonathan E. Taylor, Esquire
    Gupta Wessler PLLC
    1735 20th Street, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20009
    Mitchell A. Toups, Esquire
    Weller Green Toups & Terrell
    2615 Calder Street, Suite 400
    Beaumont, TX 77704
    Jason C. Webster, Esquire
    The Webster Law Firm
    6200 Savoy, Suite 640
    Houston, TX 77036
    Counsel for Appellants
    Raymond Armstrong; Nathaniel Newton, Jr.; Larry
    Brown; Kenneth Davis; Michael McGruder; Clifton L.
    Odom; George Teague; Drew Coleman; Dennis
    DeVaughn; Alvin Harper; Ernest Jones; Michael
    Kiselak; Jeremy Loyd; Gary Wayne Lewis; Lorenzo
    Lynch; Hurles Scales, Jr.; Gregory Evans; David
    Mims; Evan Ogelsby; Phillip E. Epps; Charles L.
    Haley, Sr.; Kevin Rey Smith; Darryl Gerard Lewis;
    Curtis Bernard Wilson; Kelvin Mack Edwards, Sr.;
    Dwayne Levels; Solomon Page; Tim McKyer; Larry
    Barnes; James Garth Jax; William B. Duff; Mary
    Hughes; Barbara Scheer; Willie T. Taylor
    9
    Lance H. Lubel, Esquire
    Adam Q. Voyles, Esquire
    Lubel Voyles
    5020 Montrose Boulevard, Suite 800
    Houston, TX 77006
    Mickey L. Washington, Esquire
    1314 Texas Avenue, Suite 811
    Houston, TX 77002
    Charles L. Becker, Esquire (Argued)
    Kline & Specter
    1525 Locust Street, 19th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Counsel for Appellants
    Liyongo Patrise Alexander; Charlie Anderson; Charles
    E. Arbuckle; Cassandra Bailey, as Representative of
    the Estate of Johnny Bailey; Ben Bronson; Curtis
    Ceaser, Jr.; Larry Centers; Darrell Colbert; Harry
    Colon; Christopher Crooms; Jerry W. Davis; Tim
    Denton; Michael Dumas; Corris Ervin; Doak Field;
    Baldwin Malcolm Frank; Derrick Frazier; Murray E.
    Garrett; Clyde P. Glosson; Roderick W. Harris;
    Wilmer K. Hicks, Jr.; Patrick Jackson; Gary Jones;
    Ryan McCoy; Jerry James Moses, Jr.; Anthony E.
    Newsom; Rance Olison; John Owens; Robert Pollard;
    Derrick Pope; Glenell Sanders: Thomas Sanders;
    Dwight A. Scales; Todd Scott; Frankie Smith;
    Jermaine Smith; Tyrone Smith; James A. Young, Sr.
    Jared H. Beck, Esquire
    10
    Elizabeth Lee Beck, Esquire
    Beck & Lee Trial Lawyers
    Corporate Park at Kendall
    12485 Southwest 137 Avenue, Suite 205
    Miami, FL 33186
    Antonino G. Hernandez, Esquire
    4 Southeast 1st Street, 2nd Floor
    Miami, FL 33131
    Cullin A. O’Brien, Esquire (Argued)
    6541 Northeast 21st Way
    Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308
    Jeffrey J. Cairlanto, Esquire
    Profy Promisloff & Ciarlanto
    100 North 22nd Street
    Unit 105
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellant
    Scott Gilchrist, individually and on behalf of the Estate
    of Carlton Chester “Cookie” Gilchrist
    Dwight P. Bostwick, Esquire
    Zuckerman Spaeder LLP
    1800 M Street, N.W., Suite 1000
    Washington, DC 20036
    Cyril V. Smith, Esquire
    Zuckerman Spaeder LLP
    100 East Pratt Street, Suite 2440
    Baltimore, MD 21202
    11
    Ramya Kasturi, Esquire
    Zuckerman Spaeder LLP
    399 Park Avenue, 14th Floor
    New York, NY 10022
    Counsel for Appellants
    Jimmie H. Jones; Ricky Ray; Jesse Solomon
    Stuart D. Lurie, Esquire
    Rosenthal Lurie
    102 Pickering Way
    Suite 200
    Exton, PA 19341
    Michael H. Rosenthal, Esquire
    Rosenthal Lurie
    1500 John F. Kennedy Boulevard, Suite 1230
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Counsel for Appellant
    Andrew Stewart
    Steven F. Molo, Esquire (Argued)
    Thomas J. Wiegand, Esquire
    Kaitlin R. O’Donnell, Esquire
    MoloLamken LLP
    540 Madison Avenue
    New York, NY 10022
    Eric R. Nitz, Esquire
    Rayiner I. Hashem, Esquire
    Jeffrey M. Klein, Esquire
    12
    MoloLamken LLP
    The Watergate, Suite 660
    600 New Hampshire Avenue, NW
    Washington, DC 20037
    William T. Hangley, Esquire
    Michele D. Hangley, Esquire
    Hangley Aronchick Segal Pudlin & Schiller
    One Logan Square
    18th & Cherry Streets, 27th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Linda S. Mullenix, Esquire
    2305 Barton Creek Blvd, Unit 2
    Austin, TX 78735
    Counsel for Appellants
    Alan Faneca; Roderick “Rock” Cartwright;
    Jeff Rohrer; Sean Considine
    David S. Coale, Esquire
    Edward J. Dennis, Esquire
    Kent D. Krabill, Esquire
    Lynn Tillotson Pinker and Cox
    2100 Ross Avenue, Suite 2700
    Dallas, TX 75201
    Counsel for Appellant
    James Mayberry
    ________________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    13
    ________________
    AMBRO, Circuit Judge
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    I.       INTRODUCTION ..............................................................15
    II.      BACKGROUND ................................................................15
    A.      Concussion Suits Are Brought Against the NFL ........... 15
    B.      The Parties Reach a Settlement ...................................... 19
    C.      The Proposed Settlement ................................................ 20
    1.     Monetary Award Fund................................................ 21
    2.     Baseline Assessment Program .................................... 23
    3.     Education Fund ........................................................... 23
    4.     The Proposed Class .................................................... 24
    III.     JURISDICTION & STANDARD OF REVIEW................25
    IV.      CLASS CERTIFICATION.................................................26
    A.      Numerosity ..................................................................... 27
    B.      Commonality .................................................................. 27
    C.      Typicality ....................................................................... 29
    D.      Adequacy of Representation .......................................... 31
    1.     Class Counsel ............................................................. 31
    2.     Class Representatives ................................................. 35
    3.     Conflicts of Interest .................................................... 36
    E.      Predominance ................................................................. 42
    F.      Superiority ...................................................................... 44
    V.       CLASS NOTICE ................................................................44
    VI.      CLASS SETTLEMENT .....................................................46
    A.      Presumption of Fairness ................................................. 47
    B.      Girsh & Prudential Factors ............................................ 48
    C.      Settlement’s Treatment of CTE...................................... 56
    VII. ATTORNEYS’ FEES .........................................................63
    A.      Deferral of Fee Petition .................................................. 63
    B.      Clear Sailing Provision................................................... 68
    VIII. CONCLUSION ..................................................................69
    14
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    The National Football League (“NFL”) has agreed to
    resolve lawsuits brought by former players who alleged that
    the NFL failed to inform them of and protect them from the
    risks of concussions in football. The District Court approved
    a class action settlement that covered over 20,000 retired
    players and released all concussion-related claims against the
    NFL. Objectors have appealed that decision, arguing that
    class certification was improper and that the settlement was
    unfair. But after thorough review, we conclude that the
    District Court was right to certify the class and approve the
    settlement. Thus we affirm its decision in full.
    II.   BACKGROUND
    A.     Concussion Suits Are Brought Against the
    NFL
    In July 2011, 73 former professional football players
    sued the NFL and Riddell, Inc. in the Superior Court of
    California. Compl., Maxwell v. Nat’l Football League, No.
    BC465842 (Cal. Super. Ct. July 19, 2011). The retired
    players alleged that the NFL failed to take reasonable actions
    to protect them from the chronic risks of head injuries in
    football.    The players also claimed that Riddell, a
    manufacturer of sports equipment, should be liable for the
    defective design of helmets.
    The NFL removed the case to federal court on the
    ground that the players’ claims under state law were
    preempted by federal labor law. More lawsuits by retired
    players followed and the NFL moved under 28 U.S.C. § 1407
    15
    to consolidate the pending suits before a single judge for
    pretrial proceedings. In January 2012, the Judicial Panel on
    Multidistrict Litigation consolidated these cases before Judge
    Anita B. Brody in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania as a
    multidistrict litigation (“MDL”). In re: Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury Litig., 
    842 F. Supp. 2d 1378
    (J.P.M.L. 2012). Since consolidation, 5,000 players
    have filed over 300 similar lawsuits against the NFL and
    Riddell.1 Our appeal only concerns the claims against the
    NFL.
    To manage the litigation, the District Court appointed
    co-lead class counsel, a Steering Committee, and an
    Executive Committee. The Steering Committee was charged
    with performing or delegating all necessary pretrial tasks and
    the smaller Executive Committee was responsible for the
    overall coordination of the proceedings. The Court also
    ordered plaintiffs to submit a Master Administrative Long-
    Form Complaint and a Master Administrative Class Action
    Complaint to supersede the numerous then-pending
    complaints.
    The Master Complaints tracked many of the
    allegations from the first lawsuits. Football puts players at
    1
    There is also a pending class action against the National
    Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) over its handling
    of head injuries. In January 2016, the District Court
    overseeing the action preliminarily certified the class and
    approved a settlement subject to certain revisions. In re:
    Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n Student-Athlete Concussion
    Injury Litig., No. 13-9116, 
    2016 WL 305380
    (N.D. Ill. Jan.
    26, 2016). Under the settlement, the NCAA will pay $70
    million to create a medical monitoring fund to screen current
    and former collegiate athletes for brain trauma.
    16
    risk of repetitive brain trauma and injury because they suffer
    concussive and sub-concussive hits during the game and at
    practice (sub-concussive hits fall below the threshold for a
    concussion but are still associated with brain damage).
    Plaintiffs alleged that the NFL had a duty to provide players
    with rules and information to protect them from the health
    risks—both short and long-term—of brain injury, including
    Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, depression, deficits in
    cognitive functioning, reduced processing speed, loss of
    memory, sleeplessness, mood swings, personality changes,
    and a recently identified degenerative disease called chronic
    traumatic encephalopathy (commonly referred to as “CTE”).
    Because CTE figures prominently in this appeal, some
    background on this condition is in order. It was first
    identified in 2002 based on analysis of the brain tissue of
    deceased NFL players, including Mike Webster, Terry Long,
    Andre Waters, and Justin Strzelczyk. CTE involves the
    build-up of “tau protein” in the brain, a result associated with
    repetitive head trauma. Medical personnel have examined
    approximately 200 brains with CTE as of 2015, in large part
    because it is only diagnosable post-mortem. That diagnosis
    requires examining sections of a person’s brain under a
    microscope to see if abnormal tau proteins are present and, if
    so, whether they occur in the unique pattern associated with
    CTE. Plaintiffs alleged that CTE affects mood and behavior,
    causing headaches, aggression, depression, and an increased
    risk of suicide. They also stated that memory loss, dementia,
    loss of attention and concentration, and impairment of
    language are associated with CTE.
    The theme of the allegations was that, despite the
    NFL’s awareness of the risks of repetitive head trauma, the
    League ignored, minimized, or outright suppressed
    information concerning the link between that trauma and
    cognitive damage. For example, in 1994 the NFL created the
    17
    Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Committee to study the effects
    of head injuries. Per the plaintiffs, the Committee was at the
    forefront of a disinformation campaign that disseminated
    “junk science” denying the link between head injuries and
    cognitive disorders. Based on the allegations against the
    NFL, plaintiffs asserted claims for negligence, medical
    monitoring, fraudulent concealment, fraud, negligent
    misrepresentation, negligent hiring, negligent retention,
    wrongful death and survival, civil conspiracy, and loss of
    consortium.
    After plaintiffs filed the Master Complaints, the NFL
    moved to dismiss, arguing that federal labor law preempted
    the state law claims. Indeed, § 301 of the Labor Management
    Relations Act preempts state law claims that are
    “substantially dependent” on the terms of a labor agreement.
    Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers v. Hechler, 
    481 U.S. 851
    , 852–53
    (1987). The NFL claimed that resolution of plaintiffs’ claims
    depended upon the interpretation of Collective Bargaining
    Agreements (“CBAs”) in place between the retired players
    and the NFL.2 If the CBAs do preempt plaintiffs’ claims,
    they must arbitrate those claims per mandatory arbitration
    provisions in the CBAs. Plaintiffs responded that their
    2
    After the NFL removed some of the early concussion-
    related lawsuits from state courts, several district courts
    accepted this preemption argument as a basis for denying
    requests to remand the cases. See, e.g., Smith v. Nat’l
    Football League Players Ass’n, No. 14-1559, 
    2014 WL 6776306
    , at *9 (E.D. Mo. Dec. 2, 2014); Duerson v. Nat’l
    Football League, Inc., No. 12-2513, 
    2012 WL 1658353
    , at *6
    (N.D. Ill. May 11, 2012); but see Green v. Arizona Cardinals
    Football Club LLC, 
    21 F. Supp. 3d 1020
    , 1030 (E.D. Mo.
    2014) (finding that concussion-related claims did not depend
    on interpretation of CBAs and granting motion to remand).
    18
    negligence and fraud claims would not require federal courts
    to interpret the CBAs and in any event the CBAs did not
    cover all retired players.
    B.     The Parties Reach a Settlement
    On July 8, 2013, while the NFL’s motion to dismiss
    was pending, the District Court ordered the parties to mediate
    and appointed a mediator. On August 29, 2013, after two
    months of negotiations and more than twelve full days of
    formal mediation, the parties agreed to a settlement in
    principle and signed a term sheet. It provided $765 million to
    fund medical exams and offer compensation for player
    injuries. The proposed settlement would resolve the claims of
    all retired players against the NFL related to head injuries.
    In January 2014, after more negotiations, class counsel
    filed in the District Court a class action complaint and sought
    preliminary class certification and preliminary approval of the
    settlement. The Court denied the motion because it had
    doubts that the capped fund for paying claims would be
    sufficient. In re Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion
    Injury Litig., 
    961 F. Supp. 2d 708
    , 715 (E.D. Pa. 2014). It
    appointed a Special Master to assist with making financial
    forecasts and, five months later, the parties reached a revised
    settlement that uncapped the fund for compensating retired
    players.
    Class counsel filed a second motion for preliminary
    class certification and preliminary approval in June 2014.
    The District Court granted the motion, preliminarily approved
    the settlement, conditionally certified the class, approved
    classwide notice, and scheduled a final fairness hearing. In re
    Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury Litig., 
    301 F.R.D. 191
    (E.D. Pa. 2014). Seven players petitioned for
    interlocutory review. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(f) (“A court of
    19
    appeals may permit an appeal from an order granting or
    denying class-action certification under this rule if a petition
    for permission to appeal is filed with the circuit clerk within
    14 days after the order is entered.”). In September 2014, we
    denied the petition, later explaining over a dissent that we
    lacked jurisdiction because the District Court’s order
    preliminarily certifying the class was not an “order granting
    or denying class-action certification.” In re Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury Litig., 
    775 F.3d 570
    , 571–
    72 (3d Cir. 2014).
    Following preliminary certification, potential class
    members had 90 days to object or opt out of the settlement.
    Class counsel then moved for final class certification and
    settlement approval. On November 19, 2014, the District
    Court held a day-long fairness hearing and heard argument
    from class counsel, the NFL, and several objectors who
    voiced concerns against the settlement. After the hearing, the
    Court proposed several changes to benefit class members.
    The parties agreed to the proposed changes and submitted an
    amended settlement in February 2015. On April 22, 2015, the
    Court granted the motion for class certification and final
    approval of the amended settlement, that grant explained in a
    123-page opinion. In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury Litig., 
    307 F.R.D. 351
    (E.D. Pa. 2015).
    Objectors filed 12 separate appeals that were consolidated
    into this single appeal before us now.
    C.     The Proposed Settlement
    The settlement has three components: (1) an uncapped
    Monetary Award Fund that provides compensation for retired
    players who submit proof of certain diagnoses; (2) a $75
    million Baseline Assessment Program that provides eligible
    retired players with free baseline assessment examinations of
    their objective neurological functioning; and (3) a $10 million
    20
    Education Fund to instruct football players about injury
    prevention.
    1.     Monetary Award Fund
    Under the settlement, retired players or their
    beneficiaries are compensated for developing one of several
    neurocognitive and neuromuscular impairments or
    “Qualifying Diagnoses.” By “retired players,” we mean
    players who retired from playing NFL football before the
    preliminary approval of the class settlement on July 7, 2014.
    The settlement recognizes six Qualifying Diagnoses: (1)
    Level 1.5 Neurocognitive Impairment; (2) Level 2
    Neurocognitive Impairment;3 (3) Alzheimer’s Disease; (4)
    Parkinson’s Disease; (5) Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
    (“ALS”); and (6) Death with CTE provided the player died
    before final approval of the settlement on April 22, 2015. A
    retired player does not need to show that his time in the NFL
    caused the onset of the Qualifying Diagnosis.
    A Qualifying Diagnosis entitles a retired player to a
    maximum monetary award:
    Qualifying Diagnosis                      Maximum Award
    Level 1.5 Neurocognitive Impairment       $1.5 Million
    Level 2 Neurocognitive Impairment         $3 Million
    Parkinson’s Disease                       $3.5 Million
    3
    Levels 1.5 and 2 Neurocognitive Impairment require a
    decline in cognitive function and a loss of functional
    capabilities, such as the ability to hold a job, and correspond
    with clinical definitions of mild and moderate dementia.
    21
    Alzheimer’s Disease                       $3.5 Million
    Death with CTE                            $4 Million
    ALS                                       $5 Million
    This award is subject to several offsets, that is, awards
    decrease: (1) as the age at which a retired player is diagnosed
    increases; (2) if the retired player played fewer than five
    eligible seasons; (3) if the player did not have a baseline
    assessment examination; and (4) if the player suffered a
    severe traumatic brain injury or stroke unrelated to NFL play.
    To collect from the Fund, a class member must register
    with the claims administrator within 180 days of receiving
    notice that the settlement has been approved. This deadline
    can be excused for good cause. The class member then must
    submit a claims package to the administrator no later than two
    years after the date of the Qualifying Diagnosis or within two
    years after the supplemental notice is posted on the settlement
    website, whichever is later. This deadline can be excused for
    substantial hardship. The claims package must include a
    certification by the diagnosing physician and supporting
    medical records. The claims administrator will notify the
    class member within 60 days if he is entitled to an award.
    The class member, class counsel, and the NFL have the right
    to appeal an award determination. To do so, a class member
    must submit a $1,000 fee, which is refunded if the appeal is
    successful and can be waived for financial hardship. A fee is
    not required for the NFL and class counsel to appeal, though
    the NFL must act in good faith when appealing award
    determinations.
    The Monetary Award Fund is uncapped and will
    remain in place for 65 years. Every retired player who timely
    registers and qualifies during the lifespan of the settlement
    will receive an award. If, after receiving an initial award, a
    22
    retired player receives a more serious Qualifying Diagnosis,
    he may receive a supplemental award.
    2.     Baseline Assessment Program
    Any retired player who has played at least half of an
    eligible season can receive a baseline assessment
    examination. It consists of a neurological examination
    performed by credentialed and licensed physicians selected
    by a court-appointed administrator. Qualified providers may
    diagnose retired players with Level 1, 1.5, or 2
    Neurocognitive Impairment. The results of the examinations
    can also be compared with any future tests to determine
    whether a retired player’s cognitive abilities have
    deteriorated.
    Baseline Assessment Program funds will also provide
    Baseline Assessment Program Supplemental Benefits.
    Retired players diagnosed with Level 1 Neurocognitive
    Impairment—evidencing some objective decline in cognitive
    function but not yet early dementia—are eligible to receive
    medical benefits, including further testing, treatment,
    counseling, and pharmaceutical coverage.
    The Baseline Assessment Program lasts for 10 years.
    All retired players who seek and are eligible for a baseline
    assessment examination receive one notwithstanding the $75
    million cap. Every eligible retired player age 43 or over must
    take a baseline assessment examination within two years of
    the Program’s start-up. Every eligible retired player younger
    than age 43 must do so before the end of the program or by
    his 45th birthday, whichever comes first.
    3.     Education Fund
    23
    The Education Fund is a $10 million fund to promote
    safety and injury prevention in football. The purpose is to
    promote safety-related initiatives in youth football and
    educate retired players about their medical and disability
    benefits under the CBA. Class counsel and the NFL, with
    input from the retired players, will propose specific
    educational initiatives for the District Court’s approval.
    4.     The Proposed Class
    All living NFL football players who retired from
    playing professional football before July 7, 2014, as well as
    their representative claimants and derivative claimants,
    comprise the proposed class. Representative claimants are
    those duly authorized by law to assert the claims of deceased,
    legally incapacitated, or incompetent retired players.
    Derivative claimants are those, such as parents, spouses, or
    dependent children, who have some legal right to the income
    of retired players. Even though the proposed class consists of
    more than just retired players, we use the terms “class
    members” and “retired players” interchangeably.
    The proposed class contains two subclasses based on a
    retired players’ injuries as of the preliminary approval date.
    Subclass 1 consists of retired players who were not diagnosed
    with a Qualifying Diagnosis prior to July 7, 2014, and their
    representative and derivative claimants. Put another way,
    subclass 1 includes retired players who have no currently
    known injuries that would be compensated under the
    settlement. Subclass 2 consists of retired players who were
    diagnosed with a Qualifying Diagnosis prior to July 7, 2014,
    and their representative claimants and derivative claimants.
    Translated, subclass 2 includes retired players who are
    currently injured and will receive an immediate monetary
    award under the settlement. The NFL estimates that the total
    population of retired players is 21,070. Of this, 28% are
    24
    expected to be diagnosed with a compensable disease. The
    remaining 72% are not expected to develop a compensable
    disease during their lifetime.
    Class members release all claims and actions against
    the NFL “arising out of, or relating to, head, brain and/or
    cognitive injury, as well as any injuries arising out of, or
    relating to, concussions and/or sub-concussive events,”
    including claims relating to CTE. The releases do not
    compromise the benefits that retired players are entitled to
    receive under the CBAs, nor do they compromise their
    retirement benefits, disability benefits, and health insurance.
    Of the over 20,000 estimated class members (the NFL
    states that the number exceeds 21,000), 234 initially asked to
    opt out from the settlement and 205 class members joined 83
    written objections submitted to the District Court. Before the
    fairness hearing, 26 of the 234 opt-outs sought readmission to
    the class. After the District Court granted final approval,
    another 6 opt-outs sought readmission. This leaves 202
    current opt-outs, of which class counsel notes only 169 were
    timely filed.
    III.   JURISDICTION & STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The District Court had jurisdiction over this class
    action settlement under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2).4 We have
    4
    One objector argues that the District Court failed to
    determine whether it had subject matter jurisdiction over the
    class action because it never decided the NFL’s motion to
    dismiss. But the NFL’s motion to dismiss would have no
    effect on subject matter jurisdiction because the plaintiffs
    properly alleged jurisdiction based on the diversity of the
    parties and the amount in controversy. 28 U.S.C. §
    25
    appellate jurisdiction to review its final order approving the
    settlement and certifying the class under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
    We review the decision to certify a class and approve a
    classwide settlement for abuse of discretion. In re Blood
    Reagents Antitrust Litig., 
    783 F.3d 183
    , 185 n.1 (3d Cir.
    2015); In re Cendant Corp. Litig., 
    264 F.3d 201
    , 231 (3d Cir.
    2001). It exists “if the district court’s decision rests upon a
    clearly erroneous finding of fact, an errant conclusion of law
    or an improper application of law to fact.” In re Hydrogen
    Peroxide Antitrust Litig., 
    552 F.3d 305
    , 312 (3d Cir. 2008)
    (internal quotation omitted).
    This appeal principally presents two questions—
    whether the District Court abused its discretion (1) in
    certifying the class of retired NFL players and (2) in
    concluding that the terms of the settlement were fair,
    reasonable, and adequate. Objectors (95 in all) have filed 11
    separate briefs totaling some 500 pages addressing these
    questions. We address each of these arguments, but refer to
    objectors collectively throughout our opinion rather than
    cross-referencing particular objectors with particular
    arguments.
    IV.    CLASS CERTIFICATION
    Rule 23(a) lays out four threshold requirements for
    certification of a class action: (1) numerosity; (2)
    commonality; (3) typicality; and (4) adequacy of
    representation. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a). “The parties seeking
    class certification bear the burden of establishing by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the requirements of Rule
    23(a) have been met.” In re Cmty. Bank of N. Virginia
    1332(d)(2). There was thus no error in declining to decide
    the motion to dismiss.
    26
    Mortg. Lending Practices Litig., 
    795 F.3d 380
    , 391 (3d Cir.
    2015). If that occurs, we consider whether the class meets the
    requirements of one of three categories of class actions in
    Rule 23(b). This is a Rule 23(b)(3) class action under which
    we consider whether (1) common questions predominate over
    any questions affecting only individual class members
    (predominance) and (2) class resolution is superior to other
    available methods to decide the controversy (superiority).
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3).
    A.      Numerosity
    Rule 23(a)(1) requires that a class be “so numerous
    that joinder of all members is impracticable.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    23(a)(1). There is no magic number of class members needed
    for a suit to proceed as a class action. We have set a rough
    guidepost in our precedents, however, and stated that
    numerosity is generally satisfied if there are more than 40
    class members. Marcus v. BMW of N. Am., LLC, 
    687 F.3d 583
    , 595 (3d Cir. 2012) (citing Stewart v. Abraham, 
    275 F.3d 220
    , 226–27 (3d Cir. 2001)). The District Court found that a
    class of 20,000 retired players would be sufficient for
    numerosity. In re Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion
    Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 371
    . No objector challenges this
    finding on appeal.
    B.      Commonality
    “A putative class satisfies Rule 23(a)’s commonality
    requirement if the named plaintiffs share at least one question
    of fact or law with the grievances of the prospective class.”
    Rodriguez v. Nat’l City Bank, 
    726 F.3d 372
    , 382 (3d Cir.
    2013) (internal quotation marks omitted). “Their claims must
    depend upon a common contention . . . that it is capable of
    classwide resolution—which means that determination of its
    truth or falsity will resolve an issue that is central to the
    27
    validity of each of the claims in one stroke.” Wal-Mart
    Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, 
    131 S. Ct. 2541
    , 2545 (2011). Meeting
    this requirement is easy enough: “[W]e have acknowledged
    commonality to be present even when not all members of the
    plaintiff class suffered an actual injury, when class members
    did not have identical claims, and, most dramatically, when
    some members’ claims were arguably not even viable.” In re
    Cmty. 
    Bank, 795 F.3d at 397
    (internal citations omitted).
    The District Court concluded that “critical factual
    questions” were common to all class members, including
    “whether the NFL Parties knew and suppressed information
    about the risks of concussive hits, as well as causation
    questions about whether concussive hits increase the
    likelihood that [r]etired [p]layers will develop conditions that
    lead to Qualifying Diagnoses.” In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 371
    . It also
    found common legal questions, including the “nature and
    extent of any duty owed to [r]etired [p]layers by the NFL
    Parties, and whether [labor] preemption, workers’
    compensation, or some affirmative defense would bar their
    claims.” 
    Id. Some objectors
    argue that commonality was lacking.
    Citing the Supreme Court’s decision in Wal-Mart, they
    contend that the retired players do not share common issues
    of fact or law because they were injured in different ways and
    over different periods of time. For example, the claims of a
    lineman who played fifteen seasons in the NFL, so goes the
    argument, will share little in common with those of a back-up
    quarterback who played two seasons.
    These objections miss the mark. In Wal-Mart, the
    Supreme Court held that commonality was lacking when a
    putative class of 1.5 million female employees alleged sex
    discrimination by their local 
    supervisors. 131 S. Ct. at 2547
    .
    28
    The local supervisors had discretion in making employment
    decisions and the class of female employees faced different
    managers making different employment decisions (some
    presumably nondiscriminatory). 
    Id. The proposed
    class thus
    could not identify common questions capable of classwide
    resolution. 
    Id. at 2553–55.
    The concerns in Wal-Mart do not apply here because
    the NFL Parties allegedly injured retired players through the
    same course of conduct. See In re Cmty. 
    Bank, 795 F.3d at 399
    (“Unlike the Wal-Mart plaintiffs, the Plaintiffs in this
    case have alleged that the class was subjected to the same
    kind of illegal conduct by the same entities, and that class
    members were harmed in the same way, albeit to potentially
    different extents.”). Even if players’ particular injuries are
    unique, their negligence and fraud claims still depend on the
    same common questions regarding the NFL’s conduct. For
    example, when did the NFL know about the risks of
    concussion? What did it do to protect players? Did the
    League conceal the risks of head injuries? These questions
    are common to the class and capable of classwide resolution.
    C.      Typicality
    Rule 23(a)(3) requires that the class representatives’
    claims be “typical of the claims . . . of the class.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 23(a)(3). This “ensures the interests of the class and
    the class representatives are aligned ‘so that the latter will
    work to benefit the entire class through the pursuit of their
    own goals.’” Newton v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
    Smith, Inc., 
    259 F.3d 154
    , 182–83 (3d Cir. 2001) (quoting
    Barnes v. Am. Tobacco Co., 
    161 F.3d 127
    , 141 (3d Cir.
    1998)). We also have set a “low threshold” for typicality. 
    Id. at 183.
    “‘Even relatively pronounced factual differences will
    generally not preclude a finding of typicality where there is a
    strong similarity of legal theories’ or where the claim arises
    29
    from the same practice or course of conduct.” In re
    Prudential Ins. Co. Am. Sales Practice Litig. Agent Actions,
    
    148 F.3d 283
    , 311 (3d Cir. 1998) (quoting Baby Neal v.
    Casey, 
    43 F.3d 48
    , 58 (3d Cir. 1994)) (alteration omitted).
    The class representatives, Shawn Wooden and Kevin
    Turner, were named in the class action complaint and were
    selected by class counsel.5 Wooden is a retired player with
    no Qualifying Diagnosis. Like other retired players without a
    current diagnosis, he sought a baseline assessment
    examination to determine whether he had shown signs of
    cognitive decline and, in the unfortunate event that he
    developed one of the Qualifying Diagnoses, he would seek a
    monetary award. Turner was a retired player living with
    ALS.6 Like other retired players with currently known
    injuries, he sought a monetary award. The District Court
    concluded that the claims of Wooden and Turner were
    “typical of those they represent.” In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 372
    . We
    agree.
    5
    In September 2013, one month after the parties signed the
    settlement term sheet, the initial subclass representative for
    players with no currently known injuries, Corey Swinson,
    passed away. One month later, Wooden took Swinson’s
    place.
    6
    We note that Kevin Turner passed away on March 24, 2016.
    Class counsel has moved to substitute as a party Turner’s
    father, Paul Raymond Turner, a motion we will grant. See
    Fed. R. App. P. 43(a)(1). For purposes of deciding this
    appeal, it is unnecessary to substitute a new class member as
    subclass representative and we shall continue to refer to
    Kevin Turner as the subclass representative in this opinion.
    30
    Some objectors argue that the claims of the class
    representatives are not typical because of factual differences
    between the representatives and other class members,
    including the number of seasons played and injuries caused
    by head trauma. But class members need not “share identical
    claims,” and “cases challenging the same unlawful conduct
    which affects both the named plaintiffs and the putative class
    usually satisfy the typicality requirement irrespective of the
    varying fact patterns underlying the individual claims.” Baby
    
    Neal, 43 F.3d at 56
    , 58. What matters is that Wooden and
    Turner seek recovery under the same legal theories for the
    same wrongful conduct as the subclasses they represent.
    Even if the class representatives’ injuries are unique to their
    time in football, the NFL’s alleged fraudulent concealment of
    the risks of head injuries is the same.
    D.     Adequacy of Representation
    Rule 23(a)(4) requires class representatives to “fairly
    and adequately protect the interests of the class.” Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 23(a)(4). It tests the qualifications of class counsel and the
    class representatives. It also aims to root out conflicts of
    interest within the class to ensure that all class members are
    fairly represented in the negotiations. Several objectors
    challenge the District Court’s adequacy-of-representation
    finding, but we conclude that it was not an abuse of
    discretion.
    1.     Class Counsel
    When examining settlement classes, we “have
    emphasized the special need to assure that class counsel: (1)
    possessed adequate experience; (2) vigorously prosecuted the
    action; and (3) acted at arm’s length from the defendant.” In
    re Gen. Motors Corp. Pick-Up Truck Fuel Tank Prods. Liab.
    Litig., 
    55 F.3d 768
    , 801 (3d Cir. 1995) (“GM Trucks”). Rule
    31
    23(g) also sets out a non-exhaustive list of factors for courts
    to consider when appointing class counsel. They include
    counsel’s work in the pending class action, experience in
    handling class actions or other complex litigation, knowledge
    of the applicable law, and the resources available for
    representing the class. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(g).
    When class counsel and the NFL began mediation,
    there was only one proposed class of all retired players. Class
    counsel, in consultation with members of the Steering
    Committee and the Executive Committee, decided early in the
    negotiations that creating two separate subclasses “would best
    serve all [c]lass [m]embers’ interests and meet with Due
    Process.” To that end, class counsel designated lawyers from
    the Steering Committee to serve as subclass counsel.
    In its final certification and approval order, the District
    Court found that class counsel and subclass counsel were
    experienced in litigating mass torts and personal injury
    actions, vigorously prosecuted the action at arm’s length from
    the NFL, and were able to extract substantial concessions in
    the process. In re Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion
    Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 373
    . The Court thus concluded
    that class counsel adequately protected the interests of the
    class. 
    Id. No objectors
    challenge the experience or
    qualifications of class and subclass counsel. They do make
    two related arguments regarding the adequacy of the subclass
    representation, though neither convinces us that the District
    Court abused its discretion.
    Objectors first assert that the procedure for selecting
    subclass counsel did not ensure adequate representation
    because subclass counsel came from the team of lawyers
    already negotiating with the NFL. We agree that class
    counsel could have gone to the District Court and asked it to
    appoint counsel from the outside. Yet objectors point us to
    32
    no precedent requiring such a procedure. Moreover, the
    District Court assured itself that counsel were adequate
    representatives. They were selected early in the negotiations,
    had already been approved by the District Court to serve on
    the Steering Committee, and were by all accounts active
    participants in the settlement negotiations.         In these
    circumstances, the District Court did not abuse its discretion
    in accepting subclass counsel as adequate representatives.
    Objectors next press that the subclass counsel for
    future claimants, Arnold Levin, was not an adequate
    representative, as he represented nine players who alleged
    current symptoms in two lawsuits against the NFL. Levin
    disclosed to the District Court in an application for the
    Steering Committee that he has agreed to fees in these cases
    on a one-third contingency basis. Objectors argue to us that
    Levin’s representation of these players created a conflict with
    his duties to represent the subclass of retired players with no
    Qualifying Diagnoses. Yet objectors failed to raise this
    contention in the District Court and did not meaningfully
    assert it on appeal until their reply brief.7 If they had raised
    concerns over Levin’s representation of other players, we
    have no doubt the District Court could ably have addressed
    this argument. This is part of the reason why we do not
    normally consider arguments not raised in the District
    Court—even in class actions—and deem them waived. In re
    7
    Alongside the reply brief, objectors also filed a motion
    asking that we take judicial notice of complaints filed by
    retired players where Levin was counsel of record. The
    motion for judicial notice is unnecessary. The complaints
    were part of the MDL proceeding and were accessible on the
    MDL docket. Even if not in the joint appendix, they are part
    of the record on appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 10 (record on
    appeal includes papers filed in the District Court).
    33
    Ins. Brokerage Antitrust Litig., 
    579 F.3d 241
    , 261 (3d Cir.
    2009) (“‘Absent exceptional circumstances, this Court will
    not consider issues raised for the first time on appeal.’”
    (quoting Del. Nation v. Pennsylvania, 
    446 F.3d 410
    , 416 (3d
    Cir. 2006)).
    That said, some courts have relaxed the standards for
    waiver in class actions. See, e.g., In re Sw. Airlines Voucher
    Litig., 
    799 F.3d 701
    , 714 (7th Cir. 2015) (“Class members
    were not obliged, on penalty of waiver, to search on their own
    for a conflict of interest on the part of a class
    representative.”). We agree that the usual waiver rules should
    not be applied mechanically in class actions. We have an
    independent obligation to protect the interests of the class,
    and in many instances class members are far removed from
    the litigation and lack the information and incentive to object.
    See GM 
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 784
    (“[T]he court plays the
    important role of protector of the absentees’ interests, in a sort
    of fiduciary capacity, by approving appropriate representative
    plaintiffs and class counsel.”). Accordingly, we retain
    discretion to consider arguments that go to the heart of the
    class settlement’s adequacy and fairness. Out of caution, we
    decline to apply the penalty of waiver in this instance.
    Turning to the merits, we do not see how
    representation by Levin created a conflict of interest. He
    disclosed his representation of the players to the District
    Court, and it was still satisfied that he was an adequate
    representative. Beyond this, there is no evidence in the
    record before us that the players named in the complaints
    have a current Qualifying Diagnosis. Rather, they simply
    allege current symptoms that are not themselves Qualifying
    Diagnoses, including memory loss, headaches, mood swings,
    and sensitivity to light. Many players without a current
    Qualifying Diagnosis presumably have similar symptoms.
    34
    Accordingly, this is not a situation where subclass counsel
    has clients in both subclasses and there is a risk of a conflict.
    2.     Class Representatives
    A class representative must represent a class capably
    and diligently. “[A] minimal degree of knowledge” about the
    litigation is adequate. New Directions Treatment Servs. v.
    City of Reading, 
    490 F.3d 293
    , 313 (3d Cir. 2007) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The District Court found that the
    class representatives ably discharged their duties by closely
    following the litigation, authorizing the filing of the Class
    Action Complaint, and approving the final settlement. In re
    Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 375
    .
    Some objectors argue that the Court abused its
    discretion in approving Wooden as representative for the
    subclass of players with no Qualifying Diagnoses because he
    did not claim the risk of developing CTE. This is incorrect.
    In the Class Action Complaint Wooden alleged that he is “at
    increased risk of latent brain injuries caused by . . . repeated
    traumatic head impacts.” 
    Id. (citing Master
    Administrative
    Class Action Complaint ¶ 7). This allegation covers the risk
    of CTE, which is associated with repeated head impacts.
    Moreover, what matters more than the words Wooden used to
    describe his current health are the interests he would have in
    representing the subclass. Given what we know about CTE,
    Wooden, and all retired NFL players for that matter, are at
    risk of developing the disease and would have an interest in
    compensation for CTE in the settlement.8
    8
    Objectors also argue in passing that the other subclass
    representative, Turner, failed to allege a risk of CTE. This
    35
    3.     Conflicts of Interest
    “The adequacy inquiry under Rule 23(a)(4) serves to
    uncover conflicts of interest between named parties and the
    class they seek to represent.” Amchem Prods., Inc. v.
    Windsor, 
    521 U.S. 591
    , 625 (1997). The “linchpin of the
    adequacy requirement is the alignment of interests and
    incentives between the representative plaintiffs and the rest of
    the class.” Dewey v. Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft, 
    681 F.3d 170
    , 183 (3d Cir. 2012). But not all intra-class conflicts
    are created equal. If they concern “specific issues in
    controversy,” they are called “fundamental.” 
    Id. at 184
    (quoting Newberg on Class Actions § 3:26 (4th ed. 2002)).
    This hits the heart of Rule 23(a)(4) and will defeat a finding
    of adequacy. 
    Id. A recurring
    fundamental conflict is the divide between
    present and future injury plaintiffs identified in Amchem.
    Counsel in that case sought to approve a class settlement and
    certify a nationwide class of persons—numbering between
    250,000 and 2,000,000—who shared an unfortunate fact in
    common: they were all exposed to asbestos-containing
    products manufactured by 20 companies. Georgine v.
    Amchem Prods., Inc., 
    83 F.3d 610
    , 617 (3d Cir. 1996), aff’d
    sub nom. Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 
    521 U.S. 591
    (1997). The class settlement purported to resolve the claims
    of persons who had already sustained injuries as a result of
    asbestos exposure (those with present injuries) and those who
    had been exposed to asbestos but had not yet developed any
    injury (those with future injuries, if any injury at all). The
    District Court approved the settlement and certified the class,
    but we reversed because, among other things, conflicts of
    interest within the class precluded a finding of adequacy.
    argument fails for the same reason that it failed with respect
    to Wooden—all players are at risk of CTE.
    36
    Judge Becker explained that the “most salient” conflict of
    interest was between those with present and future injuries:
    As rational actors, those who are not yet injured
    would want reduced current payouts (through
    caps on compensation awards and limits on the
    number of claims that can be paid each year).
    The futures plaintiffs should also be interested
    in protection against inflation, in not having
    preset limits on how many cases can be
    handled, and in limiting the ability of defendant
    companies to exit the settlement. Moreover, in
    terms of the structure of the alternative dispute
    resolution mechanism established by the
    settlement, they should desire causation
    provisions that can keep pace with changing
    science and medicine, rather than freezing in
    place the science of 1993. Finally, because of
    the difficulty in forecasting what their futures
    hold, they would probably desire a delayed opt
    out . . . .
    In contrast, those who are currently injured
    would rationally want to maximize current
    payouts.       Furthermore, currently injured
    plaintiffs would care little about inflation-
    protection. The delayed opt out desired by
    futures plaintiffs would also be of little interest
    to the presently injured; indeed, their interests
    are against such an opt out as the more people
    locked into the settlement, the more likely it is
    to survive. In sum, presently injured class
    representatives cannot adequately represent the
    futures plaintiffs’ interests and vice versa.
    37
    
    Id. at 630–31
    (internal footnote omitted). The Supreme Court
    affirmed on this point and agreed that “the interests of those
    within the single class are not aligned.” 
    Amchem, 521 U.S. at 626
    .
    To overcome a conflict of interest within a proposed
    class, there must be “structural protections to assure that
    differently situated plaintiffs negotiate for their own unique
    interests.” 
    Georgine, 83 F.3d at 631
    . A common structural
    protection is the creation of discrete subclasses, each with its
    own independent representation. See Ortiz v. Fibreboard
    Corp., 
    527 U.S. 815
    , 856 (1999) (“[A] class divided between
    holders of present and future claims . . . requires division into
    homogenous subclasses . . . with separate representation to
    eliminate conflicting interests of counsel.”).9
    The District Court found no fundamental conflict of
    interest in this class. In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 376
    . It explained the
    incentives of class members were aligned because they
    “allegedly were injured by the same scheme: the NFL . . .
    negligently and fraudulently de-emphasized the medical
    effects of concussions to keep [r]etired [p]layers in games.”
    
    Id. Moreover, the
    two subclasses of players guarded against
    any Amchem conflict of interest.          
    Id. Turner, the
    9
    Amicus Public Citizen, Inc. argues that the District Court
    should have created additional subclasses to represent each of
    the five Qualifying Diagnoses, the mood and behavior
    symptoms associated with CTE, and spouses of retired
    players with consortium claims. We agree with the District
    Court that additional subclasses were unnecessary and risked
    slowing or even halting the settlement negotiations. In re
    Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 379
    .
    38
    representative for those with current injuries, “is interested in
    immediately obtaining the greatest possible compensation for
    his injuries and symptoms.” 
    Id. Wooden, the
    representative
    for those who may develop injuries that manifest in the
    future, “is interested in monitoring his symptoms,
    guaranteeing that generous compensation will be available far
    into the future, and ensuring an agreement that keeps pace
    with scientific advances . . . [while] compensat[ing] as many
    conditions as possible.” 
    Id. The District
    Court also cited
    other structural protections, including uncapped and inflation-
    adjusted monetary awards, the guarantee of a baseline
    assessment examination, and the presence of a mediator and
    special master. 
    Id. at 376–77.
    The Court’s analysis was on point. Some objectors
    argue that this class action suffers from a conflict of interest
    between present and future injury plaintiffs. But simply put,
    this case is not Amchem. The most important distinction is
    that class counsel here took Amchem into account by using
    the subclass structure to protect the sometimes divergent
    interests of the retired players.       The subclasses were
    represented in the negotiations by separate class
    representatives with separate counsel, and, as discussed, each
    was an adequate representative. This alone is a significant
    structural protection for the class that weighs in favor of
    finding adequacy.
    Moreover, the terms of the settlement reflect that the
    interests of current and future claimants were represented in
    the negotiations. The Monetary Award Fund will start paying
    out claims immediately, providing relief to those currently
    living with injuries. The Fund is uncapped and inflation-
    adjusted, protecting the interests of those who worry about
    developing injuries in the future. The NFL and class counsel
    must meet every ten years and confer in good faith about
    “prospective modifications to the definitions of Qualifying
    39
    Diagnoses and/or the protocols for making Qualifying
    Diagnoses, in light of generally accepted advances in medical
    science.” This allows the settlement to keep pace with
    changing science regarding the existing Qualifying
    Diagnoses. As observed in Georgine, these are the sorts of
    settlement terms that rational actors from both subclasses
    would be interested in when negotiating the resolution of their
    claims.
    Finally, one of the principal concerns driving
    Amchem’s strict analysis of adequacy of representation was
    the worry that persons with a nebulous risk of developing
    injuries would have little or no reason to protect their rights
    and interests in the settlement. We have evidence that in this
    case the concern is misplaced because many retired players
    with no currently compensable injuries have already taken
    significant steps to protect their rights and interests. Of the
    5,000 players who sued the NFL in the MDL proceedings,
    class counsel estimated that 3,900 have no current Qualifying
    Diagnosis. These 3,900 players are represented, in turn, by
    approximately 300 lawyers. And with so many sets of eyes
    reviewing the terms of the settlement, the overwhelming
    majority of retired players elected to stay in the class and
    benefit from the settlement. We thus have little problem
    saying that their interests were adequately represented.
    Objectors further claim that the settlement’s treatment
    of CTE demonstrates a fundamental conflict of interest
    between present and future injury class members. Under the
    settlement, retired players who died before final approval of
    the settlement and received a post-mortem CTE diagnosis are
    entitled to an award. For any player who died after final
    approval, a post-mortem CTE diagnosis is not compensable.
    Objectors cite this difference in recovery as evidence that the
    subclass of players with a Qualifying Diagnosis may have
    bargained away the CTE claims of other players. GM Trucks,
    
    40 55 F.3d at 797
    (“[A] settlement that offers considerably more
    value to one class of plaintiffs than to another may be trading
    the claims of the latter group away in order to enrich the
    former group.”).
    This argument misunderstands the role of the monetary
    award for CTE. As the District Court noted in discussing the
    fairness of the settlement, the monetary award “serves as a
    proxy for Qualifying Diagnoses deceased [r]etired [p]layers
    could have received while living.” In re Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 401
    –
    02 (emphasis in original). Retired players who were living
    with symptoms associated with one of the other Qualifying
    Diagnoses, but died before approval of the settlement, may
    not have had sufficient notice of the need to be diagnosed. To
    provide some compensation to these players, the parties
    created an award for the post-mortem diagnosis of CTE. The
    NFL’s own estimate is that 46 players out of a class
    exceeding at least 20,000 will fall into this category and will
    receive an average award, after offsets, of $1,910,000. The
    monetary award for CTE is thus an attempt to compensate
    deceased players who would otherwise be unable to get the
    benefits available to the class going forward. It is not
    evidence of a debilitating conflict of interest in the class
    settlement.10
    10
    Some objectors claim that the District Court erred in
    denying their motion to intervene in May 2014. In the class-
    action context, potential interveners must overcome a
    presumption of adequate representation and “must ordinarily
    demonstrate adversity of interest, collusion, or nonfeasance
    on the part of a party to the suit.” In re Cmty. Bank of N.
    Virginia, 
    418 F.3d 277
    , 315 (3d Cir. 2005). Objectors have
    not overcome the presumption in this case because, as just
    41
    E.     Predominance
    Turning to the additional requirements for certifying a
    class action under Rule 23(b)(3), the class may be maintained
    if “the court finds that the questions of law or fact common to
    class members predominate over any questions affecting only
    individual members.”           Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3).
    Predominance “tests whether proposed classes are sufficiently
    cohesive to warrant adjudication by representation.”
    
    Amchem, 521 U.S. at 623
    . “We have previously noted that
    the Rule 23(b)(3) predominance requirement, which is far
    more demanding, incorporates the Rule 23(a) commonality
    requirement.” In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig., 
    391 F.3d 516
    , 528 (3d Cir. 2004) (citing In re LifeUSA Holding,
    Inc., 
    242 F.3d 136
    , 144 (3d Cir. 2001)). We are nonetheless
    “more inclined to find the predominance test met in the
    settlement context.” Sullivan v. DB Investments, Inc., 
    667 F.3d 272
    , 304 n.29 (3d Cir. 2011) (en banc) (internal
    quotation marks and alteration omitted).
    The District Court found that this class action
    presented predominate factual questions regarding the NFL’s
    knowledge and conduct as well as common scientific
    questions regarding causation. In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 380
    –81. The
    negligence claims “depend on establishing that the NFL . . .
    knew of the dangers of concussive hits, yet failed to modify
    the rules of NFL Football to mitigate them, or even to warn
    [r]etired [p]layers that they were risking serious cognitive
    injury by continuing to play.” 
    Id. at 380.
    The fraud claims
    “suggest a similarly far-reaching scheme, alleging that the . . .
    MTBI Committee repeatedly obfuscated the link between
    explained, the class representatives and class counsel were
    adequate.
    42
    football play and head trauma.” 
    Id. We agree
    with the
    District Court that predominance is satisfied in this case.
    Objectors argue that damage claims in a mass-tort
    class action such as this are too individualized to satisfy the
    requirements of predominance. They cite to Amchem where,
    as we have discussed, a nationwide class of persons exposed
    to asbestos could not meet the predominance 
    requirement. 521 U.S. at 624
    . But Amchem itself warned that it does not
    mean that a mass tort case will never clear the hurdle of
    predominance. 
    Id. at 625
    (“Even mass tort cases arising from
    a common cause or disaster may, depending upon the
    circumstances, satisfy the predominance requirement.”).
    Moreover, this class of retired NFL players does not present
    the same obstacles for predominance as the Amchem class of
    hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of persons exposed
    to asbestos.
    43
    F.     Superiority
    Rule 23(b)(3)’s superiority requirement “asks the court
    to balance, in terms of fairness and efficiency, the merits of a
    class action against those of alternative available methods of
    adjudication.” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 533
    –34 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). We consider the class members’
    interests in individually controlling litigation, the extent and
    nature of any litigation, the desirability or undesirability of
    concentrating the litigation, and the likely difficulties in
    managing a class action. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3)(A)–(D).
    The District Court found superiority satisfied because “the
    [s]ettlement avoids thousands of duplicative lawsuits and
    enables fast processing of a multitude of claims.” In re Nat’l
    Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 382
    .
    No objectors challenge this conclusion, and we have
    no disagreements with the District Court’s analysis. At the
    time the settlement was reached, 5,000 players had filed over
    300 lawsuits in the MDL. Assuming the retired players’
    claims survived the NFL’s motions to dismiss, the resolution
    of so many individual lawsuits would have presented serious
    challenges for the District Court. Given our experience with
    similar MDLs, we expect the proceedings would result in
    years of costly litigation and multiple appeals, all the while
    delaying any potential recovery for retired players coping
    with serious health challenges.
    V.     CLASS NOTICE
    When the District Court preliminarily certified the
    class and approved the settlement in July 2014, it directed that
    notice be given to all potential class members. Notice “is
    designed to summarize the litigation and the settlement and to
    apprise class members of the right and opportunity to inspect
    44
    the complete settlement documents, papers, and pleadings
    filed in the litigation.” 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 327
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). “Generally speaking, the notice
    should contain sufficient information to enable class members
    to make informed decisions on whether they should take steps
    to protect their rights, including objecting to the settlement or,
    when relevant, opting out of the class.” In re Baby Prods.
    Antitrust Litig., 
    708 F.3d 163
    , 180 (3d Cir. 2013).
    In our case, the notice informed retired players that a
    settlement was reached and explained what relief the players
    might be eligible for. The notice also outlined the rights of
    players to object to the settlement and potentially opt out. If a
    retired player chose to opt out, he would not benefit from the
    settlement but would not release his claims against the NFL.
    Approximately 1% of retired players filed objections to the
    settlement and another 1% elected to opt out.11
    For a class certified under Rule 23(b)(3), “the court
    must direct to class members the best notice that is
    practicable under the circumstances, including individual
    notice to all members who can be identified through
    reasonable effort.” Fed R. Civ. P. 23(c)(2)(B). In addition to
    the requirements of Rule 23, due process further requires that
    notice be “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances,
    to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and
    afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”
    Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
    ,
    314 (1950).
    11
    Some argue that the District Court abused its discretion in
    striking as untimely certain objections to the settlement. But
    these actions were within the Court’s broad discretion to
    manage the proceedings in a class action. Hydrogen
    
    Peroxide, 552 F.3d at 310
    .
    45
    The District Court found that the content of the class
    notice and its distribution to the class satisfied Rule 23 and
    due process.       In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 383
    . One objector
    argues that the notice materials were inadequate because they
    insufficiently disclosed that monetary awards for players are
    subject to reduction on account of applicable Medicare and
    Medicaid liens against a player’s assets. But the Long-Form
    Notice did discuss possible reductions based on “[a]ny legally
    enforceable liens on the award.” 
    Id. at 384
    n.43 (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The Court found this language
    sufficient because the notice alerts class members to the
    possibility of lien reduction and refers them to the settlement
    where this topic is discussed in detail. 
    Id. We agree
    .
    VI.    CLASS SETTLEMENT
    A class action cannot be settled without court approval
    based on a determination that the proposed settlement is fair,
    reasonable, and adequate. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(e)(2). The
    inquiry into the settlement’s fairness under Rule 23(e)
    “protects unnamed class members from unjust or unfair
    settlements affecting their rights when the representatives
    become fainthearted before the action is adjudicated or are
    able to secure satisfaction of their individual claims by a
    compromise.” 
    Amchem, 521 U.S. at 623
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    “The decision of whether to approve a proposed
    settlement of a class action is left to the sound discretion of
    the district court.” 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 299
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).         It “bear[s] the important
    responsibility of protecting absent class members, ‘which is
    executed by the court’s assuring that the settlement represents
    adequate compensation for the release of the class claims.’”
    In re Pet Food Prods., 
    629 F.3d 333
    , 349 (3d Cir. 2010)
    46
    (quoting GM 
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 805
    ). In cases of settlement
    classes, where district courts are certifying a class and
    approving a settlement in tandem, they should be “even ‘more
    scrupulous than usual’ when examining the fairness of the
    proposed settlement.” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 534
    (quoting
    GM 
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 805
    ).
    A.     Presumption of Fairness
    We apply an initial presumption of fairness in
    reviewing a class settlement when: “(1) the negotiations
    occurred at arms length; (2) there was sufficient discovery;
    (3) the proponents of the settlement are experienced in similar
    litigation; and (4) only a small fraction of the class objected.”
    
    Cendant, 264 F.3d at 232
    n.18. The District Court found each
    of these elements satisfied and applied the presumption. In re
    Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 387
    –88. Objectors argue that the presumption
    should not have applied at all because class counsel did not
    conduct formal discovery into the fraud and negligence
    claims against the NFL before reaching the settlement. We
    conclude that the Court did not abuse its discretion in finding
    class counsel’s informal discovery to be sufficient.
    By the time of the settlement, class counsel had
    undertaken significant informal discovery. For instance, they
    had obtained a comprehensive database of the claims and
    symptoms of retired players and had enlisted the assistance of
    medical experts. They also had a grasp of the legal hurdles
    that the retired players would need to clear in order to succeed
    on their fraud and negligence claims, in particular the
    potentially dispositive issue of federal labor law preemption.
    Thus, in negotiations with the NFL class counsel “were aware
    of the strengths and weaknesses of their case.” In re Nat’l
    Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 387
    . To the extent objectors ask us to require
    47
    formal discovery before presuming that a settlement is fair,
    we decline the invitation. In some cases, informal discovery
    will be enough for class counsel to assess the value of the
    class’ claims and negotiate a settlement that provides fair
    compensation. See In re Processed Egg Prods. Antitrust
    Litig., 
    284 F.R.D. 249
    , 267 (E.D. Pa. 2012) (applying
    presumption in part because, “although no formal discovery
    was conducted . . . , [class counsel] conducted informal
    discovery, including, inter alia, independently investigating
    the merits”).
    B.     Girsh & Prudential Factors
    In Girsh v. Jepson, we noted nine factors to be
    considered when determining the fairness of a proposed
    settlement:
    (1) the complexity, expense and likely duration
    of the litigation; (2) the reaction of the class to
    the settlement; (3) the stage of the proceedings
    and the amount of discovery completed; (4) the
    risks of establishing liability; (5) the risks of
    establishing damages; (6) the risks of
    maintaining the class action through the trial;
    (7) the ability of the defendants to withstand a
    greater judgment; (8) the range of
    reasonableness of the settlement fund in light of
    the best possible recovery; and (9) the range of
    reasonableness of the settlement fund to a
    possible recovery in light of all the attendant
    risks of litigation.
    
    521 F.2d 153
    , 157 (3d Cir. 1975) (internal quotation marks
    and ellipses omitted). “The settling parties bear the burden of
    proving that the Girsh factors weigh in favor of approval of
    the settlement.” In re Pet Food 
    Prods., 629 F.3d at 350
    . A
    48
    district court’s findings under the Girsh test are those of fact.
    Unless clearly erroneous, they are upheld. 
    Id. Later, in
    Prudential Insurance we held that, because of
    a “sea-change in the nature of class actions,” it might be
    useful to expand the Girsh factors to include several
    permissive and non-exhaustive factors:
    [1] the maturity of the underlying substantive
    issues, as measured by experience in
    adjudicating      individual      actions,     the
    development of scientific knowledge, the extent
    of discovery on the merits, and other factors
    that bear on the ability to assess the probable
    outcome of a trial on the merits of liability and
    individual damages; [2] the existence and
    probable outcome of claims by other classes
    and subclasses; [3] the comparison between the
    results achieved by the settlement for individual
    class or subclass members and the results
    achieved—or likely to be achieved—for other
    claimants; [4] whether class or subclass
    members are accorded the right to opt out of the
    settlement; [5] whether any provisions for
    attorneys’ fees are reasonable; and [6] whether
    the procedure for processing individual claims
    under the settlement is fair and 
    reasonable. 148 F.3d at 323
    . “Unlike the Girsh factors, each of which the
    district court must consider before approving a class
    settlement, the Prudential considerations are just that,
    prudential.” In re Baby 
    Prods., 708 F.3d at 174
    .
    The District Court in our case went through the Girsh
    factors and the relevant Prudential factors in great detail
    before concluding that the terms of the settlement were fair,
    49
    reasonable, and adequate. In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 388
    –96.
    Objectors try to challenge the District Court’s analysis in
    several ways, but none convinces us.
    1.     Complexity, Expense, and Likely
    Duration of the Litigation
    “The first factor ‘captures the probable costs, in both
    time and money, of continued litigation.’” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 535
    –36 (quoting 
    Cendant, 264 F.3d at 233
    ). The
    District Court concluded that the probable costs of continued
    litigation in the MDL were significant and that this factor
    weighed in favor of approving the settlement. In re Nat’l
    Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 388
    –89. Some objectors assert that the District
    Court overestimated the costs of continued litigation because
    the negligence and fraud claims were “straightforward.” This
    is not the case. Over 5,000 retired NFL players in the MDL
    alleged a multi-decade fraud by the NFL, and litigating these
    claims would have been an enormous undertaking. The
    discovery needed to prove the NFL’s fraudulent concealment
    of the risks of concussions was extensive. The District Court
    would then resolve many issues of causation and medical
    science. Finally, if the cases did not settle or were not
    dismissed, individual suits would be remanded to district
    courts throughout the country for trial. We agree with the
    District Court that the expense of this process weighs strongly
    in the settlement’s favor.
    2.     Reaction of the Class to the Settlement
    “The second Girsh factor ‘attempts to gauge whether
    members of the class support the settlement.’” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 536
    (quoting 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 318
    ). As noted,
    the case began with a class of approximately 20,000 retired
    50
    players, of which 5,000 are currently represented by counsel
    in the MDL proceedings. Notice of the settlement reached an
    estimated 90% of those players through direct mail and
    secondary publications (in addition to the extensive national
    media coverage of this case). As of 10 days before the
    fairness hearing, more than 5,200 class members had signed
    up to receive additional information about the settlement and
    the settlement website had more than 64,000 unique visitors.
    With all this attention, only approximately 1% of class
    members objected and approximately 1% of class members
    opted out. We agree with the District Court that these figures
    weigh in favor of settlement approval. In re Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 389
    .
    Some note that the percentage of objectors was even
    lower in GM Trucks, a case where we declined to approve a
    settlement. There, “[o]f approximately 5.7 million class
    members, 6,450 owners objected and 5,203 opted out.” GM
    
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 813
    n.32. But in GM we looked past the
    low objection rate because there were “other indications that
    the class reaction to the suit was quite negative,” including
    our concern that the passive victims of a product defect
    lacked “adequate interest and information to voice
    objections.” 
    Id. at 813.
    Those concerns are not present here.
    By the time of the settlement, many of the retired players in
    this class already had counsel and had sued the NFL,
    suggesting that their claims were valuable enough to pursue
    in court and that the players were informed enough to
    evaluate the settlement.12
    12
    Others argue that we cannot rely on the reaction of the class
    because the class notice was “problematic.” They claim that
    the notice may have misled class members about
    compensation for those with a post-mortem CTE diagnosis.
    51
    3.     Stage of the Proceedings and Amount of
    Discovery Completed
    “The third Girsh factor ‘captures the degree of case
    development that class counsel [had] accomplished prior to
    settlement. Through this lens, courts can determine whether
    counsel had an adequate appreciation of the merits of the case
    before negotiating.’” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 537
    (quoting
    
    Cendant, 264 F.3d at 235
    ).
    The District Court concluded that class counsel
    adequately evaluated the merits of the preemption and
    causation issues through informal discovery, and, after ten
    months of settlement negotiations, the stage of the
    proceedings weighed in favor of settlement approval. In re
    Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 390
    . Objectors claim that the lack of formal
    discovery in this matter should have weighed more heavily
    against settlement. As with the presumption of fairness,
    formal discovery is not a requirement for the third Girsh
    factor. What matters is not the amount or type of discovery
    class counsel pursued, but whether they had developed
    enough information about the case to appreciate sufficiently
    the value of the claims. Moreover, requiring parties to
    conduct formal discovery before reaching a proposed class
    settlement would take a valuable bargaining chip—the costs
    of formal discovery itself—off the table during negotiations.
    This could deter the early settlement of disputes.
    4.     Risks of Establishing Liability and
    Damages
    But the District Court explained that the class notice was
    clear that only some cases of CTE would be compensated. In
    re Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 383
    –84.
    52
    “The fourth and fifth Girsh factors survey the possible
    risks of litigation in order to balance the likelihood of success
    and the potential damage award if the case were taken to trial
    against the benefits of an immediate settlement.” 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 319
    . We concur with the District Court that this
    factor weighed in favor of settlement because class members
    “face[d] stiff challenges surmounting the issues of preemption
    and causation.” In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 391
    .
    To start, if the NFL were to prevail in its motion to
    dismiss on the issue of federal labor law preemption, “many,
    if not all,” of the class members’ claims would be dismissed.
    
    Id. Objectors claim
    the District Court misjudged the risks of
    establishing liability and damages on this front. They argue
    that the NFL’s preemption defense would not apply to all
    class members because there were no CBAs in effect before
    1968 and between 1987 and 1993. But even if there were a
    small subset of players unaffected by the preemption defense,
    the defense still had the capability of denying relief to the
    majority of class members and this weighs in favor of
    approving the settlement.
    As for causation, the District Court noted that retired
    players would need to show both general causation (that
    repetitive head trauma is capable of causing ALS,
    Alzheimer’s, and the like), and specific causation (that the
    brain trauma suffered by a particular player in fact caused his
    specific impairments). In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 393
    . With general
    causation, the Court found that even though “[a] consensus is
    emerging that repetitive mild brain injury is associated with
    the Qualifying Diagnoses,” the “available research is not
    nearly robust enough to discount the risks” of litigation. 
    Id. And specific
    causation would be even more troublesome
    because a player would need to distinguish the effect of hits
    53
    he took during his NFL career from the effect of those he
    received in high school football, college football, or other
    contact sports. Objectors argue that the District Court put too
    little faith in the ability of the class to show causation because
    the NFL has admitted that concussions can lead to long-term
    problems and formal discovery could disclose that it
    fraudulently concealed the risks of concussions. But neither
    of these points is particularly helpful for overcoming the
    general and specific causation hurdles the District Court
    identified.
    5.      Risks of Maintaining Class Action
    Through Trial
    The District Court found that the likelihood of
    obtaining and keeping a class certification if the action were
    to proceed to trial weighed in favor of approving the
    settlement, but it deserved only minimal consideration. 
    Id. at 394.
    This was correct. In a settlement class, this factor
    becomes essentially “toothless” because “‘a district court
    need not inquire whether the case, if tried, would present
    intractable management problems[,] . . . for the proposal is
    that there be no trial.’” 
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 321
    (quoting
    
    Amchem, 521 U.S. at 620
    ).
    6.      Ability of Defendants to Withstand a
    Greater Judgment
    The seventh Girsh factor is most relevant when the
    defendant’s professed inability to pay is used to justify the
    amount of the settlement. In the case of the NFL, the District
    Court found this factor neutral because the NFL did not cite
    potential financial instability as justification for the
    settlement’s size. In re Nat’l Football League Players’
    Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 394
    . In fact, it agreed
    54
    to uncap the Monetary Award Fund and is thus duty bound to
    pay every compensable claim.
    Some objectors complain that the settlement, which
    may cost the NFL $1 billion over its lifetime, represents a
    “fraction of one year’s revenues.” Even so, that does not
    change the analysis of this Girsh factor. Indeed, “‘in any
    class action against a large corporation, the defendant entity is
    likely to be able to withstand a more substantial judgment,
    and, against the weight of the remaining factors, this fact
    alone does not undermine the reasonableness of the . . .
    settlement.’” 
    Sullivan, 667 F.3d at 323
    (quoting Weber v.
    Gov’t Empl. Ins. Co., 
    262 F.R.D. 431
    , 447 (D.N.J. 2009)).
    7.     Range of Reasonableness of the
    Settlement in Light of the Best Possible
    Recovery and All Attendant Risks of
    Litigation
    In evaluating the eighth and ninth Girsh factors, we
    ask “whether the settlement represents a good value for a
    weak case or a poor value for a strong case.” 
    Warfarin, 391 F.3d at 538
    . “The factors test two sides of the same coin:
    reasonableness in light of the best possible recovery and
    reasonableness in light of the risks the parties would face if
    the case went to trial.” 
    Id. “[T]he present
    value of the
    damages plaintiffs would likely recover if successful,
    appropriately discounted for the risk of not prevailing, should
    be compared with the amount of the proposed settlement.”
    
    Prudential, 148 F.3d at 322
    (quotation omitted).
    If the retired players were successful in their fraud and
    negligence claims, they would likely be entitled to substantial
    damages awards. But we must take seriously the litigation
    risks inherent in pressing forward with the case. The NFL’s
    pending motion to dismiss and other available affirmative
    55
    defenses could have left retired players to pursue claims in
    arbitration or with no recovery at all. Hence we agree with
    the District Court that the settlement represents a fair deal for
    the class when compared with a risk-adjusted estimate of the
    value of plaintiffs’ claims. In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 395
    .
    Objectors claim that the District Court should have
    taken into account the costs to class members of the
    registration and claims administration process because they
    decrease the “real value” for the class. But these costs are not
    relevant to the eighth and ninth Girsh factors. And in any
    event the Court assured itself that the claims process was
    “reasonable in light of the substantial monetary awards . . .
    and imposes no more requirements than necessary.” 
    Id. at 396.13
    8.     Prudential Factors
    The District Court found that the relevant Prudential
    factors also weighed in favor of approving the settlement. 
    Id. at 395–96.
    No objectors engage with the Court’s findings on
    this front. But briefly, we agree that class counsel was able to
    assess the probable outcome of this case, class members had
    the opportunity to opt out, and the claims process is
    reasonable. The provision of attorneys’ fees was a neutral
    factor because class counsel has not yet moved for a fee
    award.
    C.     Settlement’s Treatment of CTE
    13
    The argument that the settlement’s failure to compensate
    CTE makes it a poor value for the class we discuss separately
    below.
    56
    Objectors raise other arguments about the fairness of
    the settlement that do not necessarily fall neatly within one of
    the Girsh factors. The most common of those arguments is
    that the exclusion of CTE as a Qualifying Diagnosis for
    future claimants is unfair. Objectors note that CTE, the
    “industrial disease of football,” was at the center of the first
    concussion lawsuits and argue that claims for CTE
    compensation are released by the settlement in return for
    nothing. The District Court carefully considered this
    argument before deciding that the settlement’s treatment of
    CTE was reasonable. It made detailed factual findings about
    the state of medical science regarding CTE—findings that we
    review for clear error—in support of this conclusion.
    The Court first determined that “[t]he study of CTE is
    nascent, and the symptoms of the disease, if any, are
    unknown.” 
    Id. at 397.
    Surveying the available medical
    literature, it found that researchers have not “reliably
    determined which events make a person more likely to
    develop CTE” and “have not determined what symptoms
    individuals with CTE typically suffer from while they are
    alive.” 
    Id. at 398.
    At the time of the Court’s decision, only
    about 200 brains with CTE had been examined, and the only
    way currently to diagnose CTE is a post-mortem examination
    of the subject’s brain. 
    Id. Citing studies
    by Dr. Ann McKee and Dr. Robert
    Stern, objectors argued that CTE progresses in four stages. In
    Stages I and II, the disease affects mood and behavior while
    leaving a retired player’s cognitive functions largely intact.
    Headaches, aggression, depression, explosive outbursts, and
    suicidal thoughts are common. Later in life, as a retired
    player progresses to Stages III and IV, severe memory loss,
    dementia, loss of attention and concentration, and impairment
    of language begin to occur. The District Court explained,
    however, that these studies suffer from several limitations and
    57
    cannot generate “[p]redictive, generalizable conclusions”
    about CTE. 
    Id. at 399.
    The studies suffered from a selection
    bias because they only examined patients with a history of
    repetitive head injury. They had to rely on reports by family
    members to reconstruct the symptoms patients showed before
    death. And they did not take into account other potential risk
    factors for developing CTE, including a high Body Mass
    Index (“BMI”), lifestyle change, age, chronic pain, or
    substance abuse. 
    Id. at 398–99.
    With this science in mind, the Court next determined
    that certain symptoms associated with CTE, such as memory
    loss, executive dysfunction, and difficulty with concentration,
    are compensated by the existing Qualifying Diagnoses. 
    Id. And many
    persons diagnosed with CTE after death suffered
    from conditions in life that are compensated, including ALS,
    Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease. Relying on
    expert evidence, the Court estimated that “at least 89% of the
    former NFL players” who were examined in CTE studies
    would have been compensated under the settlement. 
    Id. To be
    sure, the mood and behavioral symptoms
    associated with CTE (aggression, depression, and suicidal
    thoughts) are not compensated, but this result was reasonable.
    Mood and behavioral symptoms are common in the general
    population and have multifactor causation and many other
    risk factors. 
    Id. at 401.
    Retired players tend to have many of
    these risk factors, such as sleep apnea, a history of drug and
    alcohol abuse, a high BMI, chronic pain, and major lifestyle
    changes. 
    Id. Class members
    would thus “face more
    difficulty proving that NFL Football caused these mood and
    behavioral symptoms than they would proving that it caused
    other symptoms associated with Qualifying Diagnoses.” 
    Id. The District
    Court also reviewed the monetary award
    for post-mortem diagnoses of CTE. It found “[s]ound
    58
    reasons” for limiting the award to players who died before
    final approval of the settlement. 
    Id. As we
    have summarized
    elsewhere, this compensation for deceased players is a proxy
    for Qualifying Diagnoses a retired player could have received
    while living. After final approval, players “should be well
    aware of the [s]ettlement and the need to obtain Qualifying
    Diagnoses,” and “there no longer is a need for Death with
    CTE to serve as a proxy for Qualifying Diagnoses.” 
    Id. at 402.
    Finally, the Court addressed the potential development
    of scientific and medical knowledge of CTE. Objectors
    argued that the settlement’s treatment of CTE was
    unreasonable in light of the expected developments in CTE
    research. But even if a diagnosis of CTE during life will be
    available in the next five or ten years, “the longitudinal
    epidemiological studies necessary to build a robust clinical
    profile will still take a considerable amount of time.” 
    Id. The Court
    also noted that the settlement has some mechanism for
    keeping pace with science, in that the parties must meet and
    confer every ten years in good faith about possible
    modifications to the definitions of Qualifying Diagnoses. 
    Id. at 403
    Objectors have not shown any of the District Court’s
    findings to be clearly erroneous, which exists when,
    “although there is evidence to support [the finding], the
    reviewing court, based on the entire evidence, concludes with
    firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” GM 
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 783
    . Objectors argue that the Court overlooked
    certain expert evidence, but the record does not support this
    contention. They also complain that it failed to weigh the
    credibility of the different experts when the objectors’ experts
    were not paid for their services. We do not see how the Court
    could have made a proper credibility determination on the
    basis of written declarations alone, and, in any event, we have
    59
    never required those determinations when considering the
    fairness of a settlement.
    Others claim that the expert evidence on CTE should
    have been analyzed under Daubert v. Merrell Dow
    Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    (1993), which
    established threshold standards for the admissibility of expert
    scientific testimony at trial. Objectors failed to present this
    argument to the District Court, and we deem it waived. In re
    Ins. 
    Brokerage, 579 F.3d at 261
    . Moreover, we have never
    held that district courts considering the fairness of a class
    action settlement should consider the admissibility of expert
    evidence under Daubert. And at least one court of appeals
    has rejected the argument objectors are making because, “[i]n
    a fairness hearing, the judge does not resolve the parties’
    factual disputes but merely ensures that the disputes are real
    and that the settlement fairly and reasonably resolves the
    parties’ differences.” Int’l Union, United Auto., Aerospace,
    & Agr. Implement Workers of Am. v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    497 F.3d 615
    , 636–37 (6th Cir. 2007).
    Finding no clear errors in the District Court’s findings
    on CTE, we are also convinced that the Court was well within
    its discretion in concluding that the settlement’s treatment of
    this condition was reasonable. Most importantly, objectors
    are not correct when they assert that CTE claims are released
    by the settlement in return for “nothing.” A primary purpose
    of the settlement is to provide insurance for living players
    who develop certain neurocognitive or neuromuscular
    impairments linked to repetitive head trauma (in addition to
    the benefits provided by the Baseline Assessment Program).
    Given what we know about CTE, many of the symptoms
    associated with the disease will be covered by this insurance.
    And compensation for players who are coping with these
    symptoms now is surely preferable to waiting until they die to
    pay their estates for a CTE diagnosis. Moreover, we agree
    60
    with the District Court that it would be an uphill battle to
    compensate for the mood and behavioral symptoms thought
    to be associated with CTE.
    Before concluding, we address developments during
    the pendency of this appeal. In a March 2016 roundtable
    discussion on concussions organized by the House Energy &
    Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight & Investigations, the
    NFL’s Executive Vice President cited the research of Dr.
    McKee and agreed that there was a link between football and
    degenerative brain disorders like CTE. The NFL’s statement
    is an important development because it is the first time, as far
    as we can tell, that the NFL has publicly acknowledged a
    connection between football and CTE. On the other hand, the
    NFL is now conceding something already known. The sheer
    number of deceased players with a post-mortem diagnosis of
    CTE supports the unavoidable conclusion that there is a
    relationship, if not a causal connection, between a life in
    football and CTE.
    Objectors cite the NFL’s concession as further
    evidence that this settlement should be rejected. They argue
    that the NFL has now admitted there is a link between
    football and CTE, yet refused to compensate the disease.
    Again, we note that the settlement does compensate many of
    the impairments associated with CTE, though it does not
    compensate CTE as a diagnosis (with the exception of players
    who died before final approval of the settlement). Moreover,
    even if the NFL has finally come around to the view that
    there is a link between CTE and football, many more
    questions must be answered before we could say that the
    failure to compensate the diagnosis was unreasonable. For
    example, we still cannot reliably determine the prevalence,
    symptoms, or risk factors of CTE. The NFL’s recent
    acknowledgment may very well advance the public
    discussion of the risks of contact sports, but it did not advance
    61
    the science. Accordingly, the NFL’s statement is not a
    ground for reversal of the settlement’s approval.
    In the end, this settlement was the bargain struck by
    the parties, negotiating amid the fog of litigation. If we were
    drawing up a settlement ourselves, we may want different
    terms or more compensation for a certain condition. But our
    role as judges is to review the settlement reached by the
    parties for its fairness, adequacy, and reasonableness. And
    when exercising that role, we must “guard against demanding
    too large a settlement based on [our] view of the merits of the
    litigation; after all, settlement is a compromise, a yielding of
    the highest hopes in exchange for certainty and resolution.”
    GM 
    Trucks, 55 F.3d at 806
    . This settlement will provide
    significant and immediate relief to retired players living with
    the lasting scars of a NFL career, including those suffering
    from some of the symptoms associated with CTE. We must
    hesitate before rejecting that bargain based on an unsupported
    hope that sending the parties back to the negotiating table
    would lead to a better deal. Accordingly, we conclude that
    the settlement’s treatment of CTE does not render the
    agreement fundamentally unfair.14
    14
    We address a few remaining objections to the District
    Court’s fairness inquiry. Some claim that the offsets in the
    settlement that reduce a player’s monetary award were
    unreasonable. The Court explained why each offset had
    scientific support and we are content to say that objectors
    have not shown its findings to be clearly in error or its
    conclusions an abuse of discretion. In re Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 407
    –
    11. Others argue that the settlement should have used the
    definition of “eligible season” set forth in the NFL retirement
    plan. We concur with the District Court that the definition of
    62
    VII.   ATTORNEYS’ FEES
    Class counsel and the NFL did not negotiate the issue
    of fees until after the initial term sheet was signed. After
    negotiations, the NFL agreed not to contest any award of
    attorneys’ fees and costs up to $112.5 million. Any fee award
    will be separate from the NFL’s obligations under the
    settlement to pay monetary awards to the retired players.
    Class counsel may also petition the District Court to set aside
    5% of each monetary award to administer the settlement. The
    petition for a fee award will be submitted to the Court at a
    later date. Objectors will then be able to present arguments as
    to why the requested award is improper, and the Court will
    have discretion to modify the award in whatever way it sees
    fit. Even though the issue of attorneys’ fees remains
    undecided, some object that the settlement’s treatment of fees
    is a reason for reversal.
    A.     Deferral of Fee Petition
    Objectors first argue that the District Court abused its
    discretion in approving the procedure for attorneys’ fees. As
    noted, class counsel will request a fee award after the class
    action is certified and the class settlement is approved.
    Objectors claim that the “attorney-fee-deferral procedure”
    violated Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 23(h) and
    deprived class members of due process. We note at the outset
    that objectors failed to present most of the elements of this
    argument to the Court at the final fairness hearing. The
    closest anyone came was when amicus Public Citizen, Inc.
    claimed that the absence of a fee petition “prevents a
    complete evaluation of the fairness of the settlement at this
    point.” In response, the Court noted that interested parties
    eligible season in the settlement was reasonable because it is
    a proxy for the number of head injuries. 
    Id. at 410.
    63
    would have an opportunity to object to the fee petition when
    filed and that the separation of settlement approval from fee
    approval was an “accepted approach.” In re Nat’l Football
    League Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 396
    .
    As discussed elsewhere, the standards for waiver may
    be relaxed somewhat in the class action context because we
    have an independent obligation to protect the rights of absent
    class members. Applying this principle, we will reach the
    objections concerning attorneys’ fees because, if the
    objections are persuasive, class members were denied a
    meaningful chance to object or opt out from the settlement.
    Our review, however, confirms that the procedure for
    awarding fees in this settlement was neither an unlawful
    procedure nor an obstacle to approval. We have no doubt
    that, at the specified time, class counsel’s fee petition will be
    subject to careful review by the District Court and objectors
    will present challenges to the fee petition if warranted.
    To start, the practice of deferring consideration of a fee
    award is not so irregular.           We have seen the same
    arrangement in the settlement of a products liability class
    action related to diet drugs. In re Diet Drugs Prods. Liab.
    Litig., 
    582 F.3d 524
    , 534–35 (3d Cir. 2009) (settlement
    approved in 2002, interim and final fee awards approved in
    2009). Other courts have also used the same procedure. E.g.,
    In re Oil Spill by Oil Rig Deepwater Horizon in Gulf of
    Mexico, 
    910 F. Supp. 2d 891
    , 918 (E.D. La. 2012), aff’d sub
    nom. In re Deepwater Horizon, 
    739 F.3d 790
    (5th Cir. 2014);
    see also Newberg on Class Actions § 14:5 (5th ed.) (“In some
    situations, the court will give final approval to a class action
    settlement and leave fees and costs for a later
    determination.”).
    Moreover, the separation of a fee award from final
    approval of the settlement does not violate Rule 23(h), which
    64
    allows a court to award reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs
    in a certified class action subject to certain requirements.
    Nowhere does the provision require that class counsel move
    for its fee award at the same time that it moves for final
    approval of the settlement. Under the Rule, a fee petition
    must be made by motion served on all parties and, when the
    motion is made by class counsel, notice must be “directed to
    class members in a reasonable manner.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    23(h)(1). Class members may then object and the court may
    hold a hearing. Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h)(2)–(3). And the court
    “must find the facts and state its legal conclusions” and “may
    refer issues related to the amount of the award to a special
    master.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h)(3)–(4). So long as these
    conditions are met, the procedure for awarding attorneys’ fees
    that the District Court approved in this case will not run afoul
    of subsection (h).
    Objectors point us to the Advisory Committee Notes to
    Rule 23, which seem to contemplate combining class notice
    of the fee petition with notice of the terms of the settlement.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h)(1), 2003 advisory committee’s note
    (“For motions by class counsel in cases subject to court
    review of a proposed settlement under Rule 23(e), it would be
    important to require the filing of at least the initial motion in
    time for inclusion of information about the motion in the
    notice to the class about the proposed settlement that is
    required by Rule 23(e).”) & (“In cases in which settlement
    approval is contemplated under Rule 23(e), notice of class
    counsel’s fee motion should be combined with notice of the
    proposed settlement, and the provision regarding notice to the
    class is parallel to the requirements for notice under Rule
    23(e).”); see also Newberg on Class Actions § 8.24 (5th ed.)
    (Rule 23 envisions “linking together settlement notice and
    objections with fee notices and objections”). But even if we
    were willing to read the Advisory Committee’s suggestion
    that fee petitions be filed alongside the settlement as a
    65
    requirement, “it is the Rule itself, not the Advisory
    Committee’s description of it, that governs.” Dukes, 131 S.
    Ct. at 2559.
    Objectors also cite as support two cases from other
    circuits that found a violation of Rule 23(h). See Redman v.
    RadioShack Corp., 
    768 F.3d 622
    , 638 (7th Cir. 2014), cert.
    denied sub nom. Nicaj v. Shoe Carnival, Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 1429
    (2015); In re Mercury Interactive Corp. Sec. Litig., 
    618 F.3d 988
    , 993 (9th Cir. 2010). They are not, however, as helpful
    as objectors might think. In those cases, the district courts
    denied class members the opportunity to object to the
    particulars of counsel’s fee request because counsel were not
    required to file a fee petition until after the deadline for class
    members to object expired. By the time they were served
    with notice of the fee petition, it was too late for them to
    object. We have little trouble agreeing that Rule 23(h) is
    violated in those circumstances. But in our case the fee
    petition has not yet been filed, the District Court has not set a
    deadline for objections to the fee petition, and the issue of
    whether class members will have an opportunity to object is
    hypothetical. Accordingly, we decline to hold that Rule 23(h)
    mandates the simultaneous notice of a class action settlement
    and notice of the fee petition.
    The final argument raised by objectors on this point is
    that the decision to delay ruling on the fee award deprived
    class members of due process. As we discussed in evaluating
    classwide notice, constitutional due process requires that
    notice be “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances,
    to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and
    afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”
    
    Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314
    . Put another way, the notice of a
    class settlement “should contain sufficient information to
    enable class members to make informed decisions on whether
    they should take steps.” In re Baby 
    Prods., 708 F.3d at 180
    .
    66
    The class notice here was sufficient to comply with
    due process. The notice advised that the NFL would pay
    attorneys’ fees from a separate fund and not object to an
    award up to $112.5 million and that the District Court would
    consider fees after final approval and afford retired players an
    opportunity to object. From this, class members knew from
    where the fees for class counsel were coming (a separate
    fund), what the NFL’s position on fees would be (no
    objection up to $112.5 million), and could ballpark the size of
    class counsel’s eventual fee request (a betting person would
    say it will be close to $112.5 million). Even if the class
    members were missing certain information—for example, the
    number of hours class counsel worked and the terms of any
    contingency fee arrangements class counsel have with
    particular retired players—they still had enough information
    to make an informed decision about whether to object to or
    opt out from the settlement.
    To be sure, we are sympathetic to concerns that others
    have raised over the practice of delaying consideration of a
    fee motion. As one treatise put it,
    [a] primary concern about class action
    settlements is that unmonitored class counsel
    may have incentives to sell out the class’s
    interests in return for a large fee. To assess
    whether such a sell-out has occurred, class
    members need information both about the
    content of the settlement and about the scope of
    the fee. In this sense, fee notice not only may
    accompany settlement notice; it likely should
    accompany settlement notice.
    Newberg on Class Actions § 8:22 (5th ed.) (emphases in
    original). Delaying the fee petition denies class members
    information about what their counsel did in negotiating the
    67
    settlement. And, all else being equal, the more information
    available the better. Moreover, class members may have less
    incentive to object to the fee award at a later time because
    approval of the settlement will have already occurred. But
    the procedure is not necessarily a violation of Rule 23(h), and
    in this instance it did not violate due process.
    B.     Clear Sailing Provision
    Objectors next challenge the provision in the
    settlement agreement that the NFL would not object to a fee
    award up to $112.5 million. This is often referred to as a
    “clear sailing provision” (probably because the implication is
    that the fee request stands a much better chance of court
    approval if the defendant is not objecting). The concern with
    a clear sailing provision is collusion. The defendant is
    indifferent to the allocation of its liability between the class
    and counsel; all that matters is the total liability. To forgo the
    opportunity to object to the fee award, the defendant will
    presumably want something in return because it is giving up
    the chance to reduce its overall liability. We thus might fear
    that class counsel has given away something of value to the
    class in return for the defendant’s agreement not to contest a
    fee request below a certain level.
    Despite these concerns, “numerous cases . . . have
    approved agreements containing such clear-sailing clauses.”
    In re Oil Spill by Oil Rig Deepwater Horizon, 
    295 F.R.D. 112
    , 138 (E.D. La. 2013). We join our sister circuits in
    declining to hold that clear sailing provisions are per se bars
    to settlement approval while nonetheless emphasizing that
    they deserve careful scrutiny in any class action settlement.
    See In re Sw. Airlines Voucher Litig., 
    799 F.3d 701
    , 712 (7th
    Cir. 2015); Gooch v. Life Inv’rs Ins. Co. of Am., 
    672 F.3d 402
    , 426 (6th Cir. 2012); In re Bluetooth Headset Prods.
    Liab. Litig., 
    654 F.3d 935
    , 949 (9th Cir. 2011); Blessing v.
    68
    Sirius XM Radio Inc., 507 F. App’x 1, 4 (2d Cir. 2012);
    Weinberger v. Great N. Nekoosa Corp., 
    925 F.2d 518
    , 525
    (1st Cir. 1991). A district court faced with such a provision
    in a class action settlement should review the process and
    substance of the settlement and satisfy itself that the
    agreement does not indicate collusion or otherwise pose a
    problem.
    The District Court here found the clear sailing
    provision unobjectionable. It emphasized that the issue of
    fees was not discussed until after the principal terms of the
    settlement were agreed to, the fee award will not diminish
    class recovery, and the agreed amount is just over 10% of the
    estimated class recovery. In re Nat’l Football League
    Players’ Concussion Injury 
    Litig., 307 F.R.D. at 374
    –75. We
    discern no abuse of discretion. There is simply no evidence
    in the negotiation process or the final terms of the settlement
    that class counsel bargained away the claims of retired
    players in return for their own fees.
    VIII. CONCLUSION
    It is the nature of a settlement that some will be
    dissatisfied with the ultimate result. Our case is no different,
    and we do not doubt that objectors are well-intentioned in
    making thoughtful arguments against certification of the class
    and approval of this settlement. They aim to ensure that the
    claims of retired players are not given up in exchange for
    anything less than a generous settlement agreement
    negotiated by very able representatives. But they risk making
    69
    the perfect the enemy of the good. This settlement will
    provide nearly $1 billion in value to the class of retired
    players. It is a testament to the players, researchers, and
    advocates who have worked to expose the true human costs
    of a sport so many love. Though not perfect, it is fair.
    In sum, we affirm because we are satisfied that the
    District Court ably exercised its discretion in certifying the
    class and approving the settlement.
    70
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-2206, 15-2217, 15-2230, 15-2234, 15-2272, 15-2273, 15-2290, 15-2291, 15-2292, 15-2294, 15-2304, 15-2305

Citation Numbers: 821 F.3d 410, 94 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 615, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6908, 2016 WL 1552205

Judges: Ambro, Hardiman, Nygaard

Filed Date: 4/18/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (25)

in-re-the-prudential-insurance-company-of-america-sales-practices , 148 F.3d 283 ( 1998 )

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , 113 S. Ct. 2786 ( 1993 )

Ortiz v. Fibreboard Corp. , 119 S. Ct. 2295 ( 1999 )

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes , 131 S. Ct. 2541 ( 2011 )

In Re Insurance Brokerage Antitrust Litigation , 579 F.3d 241 ( 2009 )

in-re-general-motors-corporation-pick-up-truck-fuel-tank-products-liability , 55 F.3d 768 ( 1995 )

Archdiocese of Milwaukee Supporting Fund, Inc. v. Mercury ... , 618 F.3d 988 ( 2010 )

In Re: Lifeusa Holding Inc., Lifeusa Holding, Inc. , 242 F.3d 136 ( 2001 )

International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v. Hechler , 107 S. Ct. 2161 ( 1987 )

robert-stewart-on-behalf-of-himself-and-all-others-similarly-situated-v , 275 F.3d 220 ( 2001 )

new-directions-treatment-services-on-its-own-behalf-and-on-behalf-of-its , 490 F.3d 293 ( 2007 )

Dewey v. Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft , 681 F.3d 170 ( 2012 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-95258-meyers-l-girsh-v-robert-s-jepson-jr-lynn , 521 F.2d 153 ( 1975 )

In Re Diet Drugs , 582 F.3d 524 ( 2009 )

robert-a-georgine-laverne-winbun-of-the-estate-of-joseph-e-winbun , 83 F.3d 610 ( 1996 )

prodliabrep-cch-p-15407-william-barnes-ciaran-mcnally-catherine-potts , 161 F.3d 127 ( 1998 )

In Re Bluetooth Headset Products Liability , 654 F.3d 935 ( 2011 )

in-re-warfarin-sodium-antitrust-litigation-seymour-eagel-in-no-02-3603 , 391 F.3d 516 ( 2004 )

Gooch v. Life Investors Insurance Co. of America , 672 F.3d 402 ( 2012 )

International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace, & ... , 497 F.3d 615 ( 2007 )

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