Sports
Calipari: Will retire before becoming ‘transactional’
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — While John Calipari has watched his peers — such as Jay Wright, Tony Bennett and more recently Bruce Pearl — surprisingly exit the game amid major changes to the sport, the 66-year-old coach said he’s not considering a similar early departure.
But he also said he will leave college basketball when he can no longer do the job the way he wants to do the job.
“I want to help 25 to 30 more families,” Calipari said during SEC media day on Tuesday. “The only way you do that is to be transformational as a coach. If you’re not, you’re transactional. If I become transactional — ‘I’m going to pay you this to do this and that’ — then I won’t do this anymore. I don’t need to.”
Although Arkansas added key players — like five-star recruit Darius Acuff — the program also lost standout talents to the portal, including Boogie Fland (Florida) and Zvonimir Ivisic (Illinois). In his attempt to avoid the turnover many teams have experienced, Calipari has warned his players that entering the portal means their time with the Razorbacks is over, even if they have second thoughts.
“That’s why if someone puts their name in the portal, I say, ‘You’re not coming back,’ because it’s not going to be transactional.”
Calipari said he still has the same passion to coach and any observer of his practices at Arkansas would see that he is still “connected” to his players. He also said he plans to stay in college basketball because he wants to make positive changes for the next generation of coaches, which includes his son, Arkansas assistant Brad Calipari.
“Kelvin Sampson and I just talked,” said Calipari about the Houston coach whose son, Kellen, is his top assistant. “I said, ‘We’ve got to fix some of this stuff before we’re out for our own children.'”
Despite the issues, Calipari said he’ll know it’s time for him to retire if he can no longer build genuine relationships with players. The current era has made that ambition more difficult. The portal may offer immediate benefits to those who enter it, Calipari said, but he worries about what comes next for some of those who’ve bounced around to multiple schools and failed to establish those connections.
“I don’t mind kids transferring,” he said. “You just can’t transfer four times, because it’s not good for you. Four schools in four years, you’ll never have a college degree. But that last place you’ll be at, they’ll really be loyal to you? No, you’re a mercenary.”
Sports
More than 500 million request of World Cup tickets, says FIFA – SUCH TV
Football’s global governing body FIFA said Wednesday it had received more than 500 million requests for tickets to this year’s World Cup despite rumbling controversy over sky-high prices to attend the event.
FIFA said in a statement it had received applications from fans in all of its 211 member nations and territories for the tournament staged in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The window for submitting requests to be entered in a lottery which will allocate tickets closed on Tuesday. FIFA said fans would be notified of whether their requests had been successful “no earlier than 5 February.”
Outside of the tournament’s host nations, FIFA said the heaviest demand came from fans in Germany, England, Brazil, Spain, Portugal, Argentina and Colombia.
The most requested ticket was Colombia’s clash with Portugal in Miami on June 27, followed by Mexico’s game against South Korea in Guadalajara on June 18, and the World Cup final in New Jersey on July 19.
“Half a billion ticket requests in just over a month is more than demand – it’s a global statement,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said. “I would like to thank and congratulate football fans everywhere for this extraordinary response.”
“Knowing how much this tournament means to people around the world, our only regret is that we cannot welcome every fan inside the stadiums.”
FIFA has faced sharp criticism over its ticket pricing strategy for the 48-team tournament, with fan groups branding the cost as “extortionate” and “astronomical.”
Football Supporters Europe (FSE) said ticket prices were almost five times higher than at the 2022 tournament in Qatar.
Those criticisms prompted FIFA to introduce a new category of cut-price tickets in December set at 60 US dollars (51 euros) each.
Sports
Sources: Harbaugh, Giants working to finalize deal
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — John Harbaugh and the New York Giants are working to finalize an agreement to make him their next head coach, and barring a setback, a deal is expected, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Wednesday night.
The deal is not final and contract numbers still are being negotiated, with one source telling Schefter: “There still is a lot to work through.”
But barring any setbacks, Harbaugh is ready to accept the Giants’ deal and the team is expected to hire him as soon as possible, sources said.
Sports
NCAA asks CFTC to suspend prediction markets
The NCAA asked a federal regulatory body Wednesday to stop prediction markets from offering trades on college sports until more safeguards are in place.
In a letter addressed to the chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the federal agency that regulates prediction markets, NCAA president Charlie Baker said the growth of prediction markets poses a threat to the well-being of student-athletes as well as the integrity of competition.
“I implore you to suspend collegiate sport prediction markets until a more robust system with appropriate safeguards is in place,” Baker wrote.
Baker identified several areas where he believes prediction markets need additional safeguards: age restrictions, advertising restrictions, robust integrity monitoring, the involvement of national governing bodies such as the NCAA, restrictions on prop bets, harm reduction resources and anti-harassment measures.
Kalshi, a leading prediction market company, uses IC360, a firm that monitors the betting market for irregularities and works with sports leagues, including the NCAA. Baker acknowledged that some prediction markets monitor for integrity concerns but said “heightened levels of review that don’t exist in many prediction markets” are needed, such as tracing the geolocation of bettors. He also said prediction market operators are not required to report integrity concerns to other operators through an intermediary — a requirement for sportsbooks in most states.
He added that the NCAA is willing to work with the CFTC to develop these protections, which exist for legal sportsbooks.
ESPN has reached out to the CFTC and the Coalition for Prediction Markets, which represents many of the largest operators, for comment.
Baker also discussed the request in a speech Wednesday at the 2026 NCAA Convention.
“So-called prediction markets are offering what anyone can see is unregulated betting on college games,” he said. “We need federal regulators to stabilize this market.”
In his speech, Baker referenced the steps Kalshi had taken to offer markets on the transfer portal as an example of why the NCAA needs federal intervention. In December, Kalshi notified the CFTC that it was self-certifying markets on whether college athletes would enter the transfer portal. Though Kalshi said it has no immediate plans to begin offering trading on the portal, the decision drew sharp criticism from the NCAA.
Prediction markets, which allow users to trade on the yes/no outcome of events, including sports, have increased in popularity over the past year. While traditional sportsbooks operate in 39 states and the District of Columbia, where the betting age is usually 21, prediction markets are available in all 50 states to users 18 and older.
Oversight of prediction markets is a hotly contested legal issue. State gambling regulators, which oversee traditional sportsbooks, are locked in legal battles in multiple states with leading prediction market companies.
Those companies say they are not sportsbooks because users are not going up against the house but instead trading contracts with other users on the opposite side of the proposition. While bookmakers charge a vig, or commission, on losing wagers, prediction markets make money from a transaction fee, similar to a broker, and have no stake in the result.
Major sports leagues have so far been split on the question of prediction markets. The NFL has expressed its concern about the industry’s rise to Congress, while the NHL and UFC have inked deals with Kalshi and prediction market company Polymarket.
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