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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

March 27, 2026

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Lawmakers are setting their sights on the rapidly growing prediction-market industry. A flurry of legislation has recently been proposed, aimed at banning sports event contracts and installing safeguards against insider trading and market manipulation. The latest bill would prohibit event contracts on elections, sports, and government and military actions.

—Ben Horney

First Up

  • LSU on Thursday rehired NC State coach Will Wade four years after he was fired for recruiting violations. Read the story.
  • FC Dallas chairman and CEO Clark Hunt said MLS’s shift to a fall-to-spring calendar will be “transformative” for the league. Read the story.
  • Lawmakers held a hearing over the future of college sports on Thursday, but athletes’ employment status is a major sticking point. Read the story.
  • The Home Team Act, introduced Thursday by two congressmen, would make it harder for a pro sports team to move out of its existing metro area. Read the story.

The Political Backlash to Prediction Markets Has Arrived

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Congress is increasingly waking up to the rapidly growing prediction-market industry.

Some of the most well-known names in national politics have recently criticized prediction-market platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, from California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) and Mick Mulvaney—the former White House chief of staff under President Donald Trump during his first term who now leads an organization that opposes sports event contracts. 

“Pervasive gambling is not good for society,” Ocasio-Cortez said when Polymarket announced its nine-figure deal with Major League Baseball.

Following the MLB-Polymarket deal, Sen. Chris Murphy (D., Conn.) said on Pablo Torre’s podcast that “if the NBA and the NFL get in bed with these prediction markets, they are knowingly corrupting the sport.” Murphy is involved in a bill introduced earlier this month focused on insider trading on war-related markets.

There has been a flurry of proposed legislation this week aimed at banning sports event contracts and installing safeguards against insider trading and market manipulation. 

The latest and perhaps most sweeping, announced Thursday, is called the STOP Corrupt Bets Act. It will be introduced by Sen. Jeff Merkley (D., Ore.) and is being co-sponsored by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.). A House version of the bill will be introduced by Rep. Jamie Raskin (D., Md.). 

The legislation would prohibit event contracts on elections, sports, and government and military actions.

There have been at least six other bills introduced, including a few bipartisan efforts:

  • The Preventing Real-time Exploitation and Deceptive Insider Congressional Trading Act—or PREDICT Act—from Rep. Adrian Smith (R., Neb.) and Rep. Nikki Budzinski (D., Ill.) would ban government officials and their families from trading on platforms.
  • The Prediction Markets Are Gambling Act from Sens. Adam Schiff (D., Calif.) and John Curtis (R., Utah) would block platforms regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from offering sports event contracts. 
  • Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D., Minn.) put forth a bill targeting insider trading by government officials. 
  • Rep. Ritchie Torres (D., N.Y.) introduced a bill in January focused on insider trading and backed by more than 30 Democratic lawmakers, including former House speaker Nancy Pelosi.
  • A February bill from Rep. Dina Titus (D., Nev.) would prohibit sports event contracts and casino-style games from prediction-market platforms.
  • Reps. Blake Moore (R., Utah) and Salud Carbajal (D., Calif.) earlier this month introduced a bill that would prohibit a number of event contract types, including sports.

Lawmakers have yet to comment on whether they might look to consolidate any of these bills into one larger piece of legislation.

What Kalshi and Polymarket Say

The platforms maintain that sports event contracts fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of the CFTC, whose chairman is supportive of the industry.

Kalshi spokesperson Elisabeth Diana has pointed out that insider trading by government officials is already banned on the platform. In response to the bill from Schiff and Curtis, she said sports event contracts “offer a fairer choice to consumers, with no house that restricts winners and hooks people the more they lose,” and warned that banning those markets would “push this behavior offshore, where no regulation exists.” (Kalshi regularly refers to Polymarket, its hated rival, as an offshore company.)

There have been several high-profile allegations of insider trading as the U.S. has attacked Iran and Venezuela. Israel arrested several people over suspicions they put money on Polymarket’s international platform using classified information related to military operations.

Kalshi has been attempting to show it is serious about policing illicit activity. Last month, it banned and fined two traders who were caught betting on inside information. Earlier this week, it announced an expansion of its policies against insider trading and market manipulation, highlighting “new technological guardrails that preemptively block politicians, athletes, and other relevant people from trading in certain politics and sports markets.”

Polymarket also announced updated market integrity rules and policies this week that “amplify” existing requirements governing insider trading and market manipulation on both its U.S. and international platforms.

“These rule enhancements make our expectations abundantly clear for every participant across both platforms and highlight the compliance infrastructure we have already built,” Polymarket chief legal officer Neal Kumar said in the press release.

What Comes Next?

In addition to all of the proposed bills, there are more than 20 lawsuits winding through the U.S. court system against Kalshi, Polymarket, Robinhood, Crypto.com, and more. Legal experts expect the issue of sports event contracts to eventually reach the Supreme Court.

When it comes to the legislation, there’s still a long road for any of the bills to be passed into actual law. And there’s no guarantee that any given bill would become law even if it gets to the president’s desk.

President Trump, who would have to sign any bill, has significant ties to the industry. His son Donald Trump Jr. is an investor in Polymarket and advisor to Kalshi, and his social media platform, Truth Social, plans to launch a prediction-market platform of its own. 

Trump recently told The Washington Post that prediction-market platforms are better than the “fake polls” and that they “predicted me pretty right” in 2024. He also said he doesn’t pay much attention to prediction markets because he’s “focused on winning battles of every way, shape, and form,” but that he’ll look at platforms “some day in the future—maybe.”

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EXCLUSIVE

Ex-ESPN Reporter Michele Steele Joins Big Ten Network

Nov 8, 2025; Madison, Wisconsin, USA; General view of a Big Ten Network sign on the sidelines during warmups prior to to the game between the Washington Huskies and Wisconsin Badgers at Camp Randall Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

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Former ESPN reporter Michele Steele is joining the Big Ten Network. Her first assignment will be as the sideline reporter for the Nebraska spring football game on Saturday. Read the story.

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ONE BIG FIG

The Price of Admission

Phil Noble/Reuters via Imagn Images

3%

The percentage by which ticket prices will increase next season for Liverpool matches. The soccer club, owned by Fenway Sports Group, announced Thursday that adult general-admission ticket prices will rise between $1.67 and $2.34 (between £1.25 and £1.75) per person, per match day, and that price changes will be in line with the annual inflation rate. Local general tickets remain frozen at about $12 (£9).

LOUD AND CLEAR

A Swing and a Miss?

Mar 25, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) walks to the plate against the San Francisco Giants in the first inning at Oracle Park.

Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

“It was just too much Netflix. It was as if I was tuning in to a PowerPoint on Netflix [and] there was a baseball game inside of that.”

—Dan Patrick on his eponymous show about Wednesday’s MLB Opening Night game. The league made its debut on the streamer, and some fans criticized the production for, among other things, too many promotions of other Netflix shows.

Editors’ Picks

Max Verstappen Ejects Reporter From Press Conference: ‘Get Out’

by Colin Salao
Verstappen sits at No. 8 in the drivers’ championship.

Will Tiger Woods Comeback Drive Up TGL Rights Fees?

by Michael McCarthy and David Rumsey
Woods’s comeback could prove pivotal in TGL’s upcoming negotiations.

Dallas Approves Deal As Wings Take Over $81M Practice Facility

by Colin Salao
The facility was originally scheduled to be completed by the 2026 season.

Question of the Day

Do you think lawmakers should be barred from trading on prediction-market platforms?

 YES   NO 

Thursday’s result: 85% of respondents said it’s getting harder to follow MLB on TV.

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Written by Ben Horney
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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