TTAB Sustains Nike's Opposition to BLUE RIBBON TEAM for Sports Stores Due to Lack of Bona Fide Intent
Finding that the applicant lacked the requisite bona fide intent at the time it filed the subject Section 1(b) application, the Board sustained Nike's opposition to registration of the mark BLUE RIBBON TEAM & Design for "[o]n-line retail store services” featuring dozens of categories of goods, including sporting equipment and accessories. The Board declined to reach Nike's likelihood of confusion claim based on alleged common law rights in the mark BLUE RIBBON SPORTS for retail store services offering sporting goods and equipment. Nike, Inc. v. Blue Ribbon Team, Opposition No. 91269520 (May 29, 2026) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Thomas L. Casagrande).
Opposer Nike had the burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that applicant lacked a bona fide intention to use the mark in commerce on the goods identified in the involved application when the application was filed. "Because this sort of claim requires a plaintiff to prove a negative, we permit an opposer to make out a facie case by showing the absence of any documentary evidence regarding Applicant’s intent to use the mark." If Opposer satisfies its initial burden, applicant must bring forth rebuttal evidence showing its bona fide intent.
Nike pointed to applicant’s lack of documentary evidence and to the discovery deposition testimony of applicant, and specifically to applicant's failure to produce any documents or things responsive to Nike's FRCP 34 productions requests, including business plans, sales and advertising figures, and store locations. See, e.g., Honda Motor Co. v. Winkelmann, No. 91170552, 2009 WL 962810, at *2 (TTAB 2009) (“The Board has held … that the absence of any documentary evidence regarding an applicant’s bona fide intention to use a mark in commerce is sufficient to prove that an applicant lacks such intention . . . .").
Nike also relied on the deposition testimony of applicant's' founder about his plans to “implement[ ] his business in three, sequenced phases: establishment of the business entity, clearance of the trademarks at the national level, and institution of use of those trademarks in publicly launching the business." Nike noted that not only did applicant have no documents reflecting that it had ever taken any such steps, but also that Applicant had done nothing to accomplish, or even plan, any of those steps. Moreover, all of the prior business experience of applicant's founder was unrelated to the online retail services identified in the application.
Applicant’s failure to produce any documentation concerning the proposed online retail store venture, its admitted failure to take any steps to set up the business, and Mr. Kraus’s nearly-total lack of experience in that field establishes a prima facie case—at minimum—that Applicant lacked a bona fide intent to use its mark in commerce at the time it filed its application.
Applicant's only argument regarding the bona fide intent issue appeared to be that he was waiting to take any steps toward setting up its business, or even develop a written plan, until after this opposition proceeding was over. The Board, however, saw this as an attempt “to reserve a right in the mark” first, see M.Z. Berger, 787 F.3d at 1376, and then plan its business. As Opposer aptly puts it, this is 'the sort of cart-before-the-horse approach to trademark registration that Section 1(b) forbids.'"
Thus, applicant failed to rebut Nike's prima facie case, and so the Board sustained the opposition.
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TTABlogger comment: This opposition lasted five years from start to finish. BTW: According to Wikipedia, Nike was first known as "Blue Ribbon Sports."
Text Copyright John L. Welch 2026.




















