December 5, 2025

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Tom Dundon has been holding discussions with potential investors about selling a minority stake in the NHL’s Hurricanes, a deal aimed at providing him with more cash to pay for the Trail Blazers. Dundon agreed to buy the NBA team in August at a valuation north of $4 billion.

—Ben Horney

Dundon in Talks to Sell Hurricanes Stake to Fund Blazers Buy

James Guillory-Imagn Images

Tom Dundon is in talks to sell a minority stake in the NHL’s Hurricanes to raise cash for his purchase of the NBA’s Trail Blazers, Front Office Sports has learned.

Dundon has been holding discussions with potential investors about a minority stake in the Hurricanes, according to two sources familiar with the matter. One source says the stake sale is aimed at providing Dundon with more cash to pay for the Blazers, which he agreed to buy in August at a valuation north of $4 billion. A representative for the Hurricanes declined to comment Wednesday.

Mike Ozanian of CNBC first reported that Dundon is “close to selling a significant LP stake” in the NHL team at a $2 billion valuation. 

If that valuation turns out to be accurate, it would represent one of the highest for an NHL franchise. In 2023, the Canadiens were valued at $2.5 billion when Geoff Molson and his family—already controlling owners of the team—purchased a 10% stake from Michael Andlauer. Andlauer was forced to sell that stake in order to be allowed to complete his $950 million deal to buy the Senators.

The Lightning were valued at $1.8 billion in its 2024 sale to a group of investors led by Doug Ostrover and Marc Lipschultz, who are the co-CEOs of private-equity firm Blue Owl Capital. 

The group that Dundon is buying the Blazers with also includes someone from Blue Owl—its co-president Marc Zahr—as well as the Cherng family, who founded Panda Express, and Collective Global cofounder Sheel Tyle. That deal will take place in several stages over the next few years, FOS previously reported. 

Blue Owl itself is not involved in either ownership group. Separately, through a fund, Blue Owl does own minority stakes in the Hawks, Timberwolves, and Hornets.

Eight days after Dundon’s deal for the Blazers was announced, RAJ Sports—the owners of the WNBA’s Fire and NWSL’s Thorns—sued the Cherng family in an attempt to stop them from being part of Dundon’s ownership group. RAJ alleged the Cherngs had signed a contract to be part of its own bid for the Blazers but ditched it to join Dundon’s group.

RAJ voluntarily withdrew the lawsuit three weeks after filing it, but not before Dundon filed an affidavit saying he doesn’t need the Cherngs’ money to buy the team. RAJ Sports and the Cherngs reached a settlement out of court, which Dundon facilitated. 

Dundon is a major player in U.S. pro sports. In addition to taking a majority stake in the Hurricanes in 2021, he leads investment firms Dundon Capital Partners and Southpaw Capital Partners. He is also among the owners of Major League Pickleball.

Another one of Dundon’s past sports investments—the short-lived Alliance of American Football—recently had its bankruptcy case wrapped up. Late last month, the judge awarded $1 to bankruptcy trustee Randolph Osherow, who had sued Dundon over allegations he fraudulently bought the league in 2019 with a pledge to invest $250 million that he had no intention of spending.

Dundon had in turn sued Charlie Ebersol, the AAF cofounder and son of legendary NBC executive Dick Ebersol, claiming he was fraudulently convinced to buy the floundering league and the AAF was a financial basket case. That suit was dismissed earlier this year.

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Robinhood Exec Says Prediction Markets Don’t Need Sports to Win

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Kalshi and Polymarket have dominated the headlines in the prediction-markets wars, but Robinhood is setting itself up to be the ultimate victor.

The company announced Tuesday a joint venture with market-maker Susquehanna that will acquire crypto exchange MIAXdx, better known as LedgerX, in order to launch a dedicated exchange for prediction markets. Prediction markets have “quickly become Robinhood’s fastest-growing product line by revenue,” and nine billion contracts have been traded in the last year, according to the announcement.

Prediction markets have garnered controversy due to the growing popularity of sports event contracts, which look a lot like traditional sports betting, but they have been getting around state laws through a loophole (companies like Kalshi say there’s a technical distinction between betting on sports and “trading” on the outcome of sporting events). 

JB Mackenzie, VP and GM of futures and international at Robinhood, says prediction markets are here to stay, and he doesn’t think sports are even necessary to sustain the industry’s growth. 

Front Office Sports recently spoke with Mackenzie about the rise of prediction markets, the controversy around sports event contracts, and why he thinks Robinhood is positioned to become the world’s “financial super app.”

Front Office Sports: Sports and politics have dominated the headlines, but there are other sorts of contracts, including on economic and cultural issues. Do you see this evolving to be more well rounded?

JB Mackenzie: I think we’re already there; it’s just that nobody is seeing it out in the marketplace because there is such an emotional attachment to sports and politics. The price of bitcoin is garnering just as much interest, if not more, than the most recent NFL game. The proxy vote on Elon Musk’s pay package for Tesla had a massive peak of people participating.

If you think of everything as a fire, I feel as though the core wood at the bottom—that just burns continuously—that’s the various economic questions, like will there be a federal rate cut, price volatility, economic numbers both domestically and internationally, etcetera. 

That wood is constantly burning, and the fire is very warm and bright. But the emotional issues, like sports, politics, and pop culture, have flare-ups. 

FOS: Polymarket and Kalshi have dominated the headlines, but there’s a new entrant to this world seemingly every day. What is the state of this industry right now, and where does Robinhood sit?

JM: Polymarket and Kalshi are the two incumbents. This market has exploded so quickly; 12 months ago it barely existed. A lot of people are moving into prediction markets now, but no one is really sure where it’s going to end up.

At Robinhood, we saw the opportunity early and have been building out our product offerings. We launched sports—we have the NFL, college football, the NBA, etcetera—and have continued to grow that offering here in the U.S. We’re also expanding globally, not just in sports, but elections, pop culture, economic issues, and more. We have over 1,500 contracts that are live and tradable. We are out to prove the thesis that this is an important asset class. It’s developing and becoming more mainstream.

FOS: With all the players that have entered the industry—from the Trumps to FanDuel and DraftKings—do you see the market being ripe for consolidation? And assuming there is such activity, who will remain when all is said and done?

JM: We’re at a point similar to what options markets went through. At first, there were 13, 14, 15 different companies in that space. Everyone said, “Is there really enough room for this many options markets?” Then you started seeing a period of consolidation, before everything settled for a bit. Once there was an opportunity to change part of the industry, because something overall needed to change based on client behaviors, new players started popping back up.

We’re at the same point with prediction markets. The question of who’s going to win will be based on your ability to have great products, deep liquidity, and engagement with clients. Certain players out there have those three attributes at a higher level than others. At the same time, some groups have built new technology that is more receptive to the fast-moving world we now live in.

The question is, do the older incumbents acquire some of the newer entrants to acquire their technology in order to be able to leapfrog ahead? We’ve already seen some activity, like CME Group—the oldest futures exchange in the U.S.—building a prediction-markets relationship with FanDuel. And you have ICE, the other sort of grandaddy of the exchange world, investing in Polymarket.

For us, we have been able to connect to a variety of the newer entrants and will figure out who we have the best relationship with. There’s a lot of interesting opportunities here. I think we’re at the beginning of the conversation.

FOS: There is potential for certain markets to be manipulated—like whether President Trump will say a particular word during a speech. This issue exists in sports, too, as we’ve seen with recent NBA and MLB scandals around prop bets. How do you protect against that?

JM: Those are called mention markets, and they’re a newer innovation in the overall ecosystem. The first thing I would say is that, with Robinhood, we only offer federally regulated products, and we have requirements with regard to client oversight. We are also very deliberate in the types of products we put out to end customers.

Safety and integrity are our core principles. This stuff concerns me whether you’re looking at prediction markets or the OSB [online sports betting] or traditional finance models. There are always bad actors, so before we put a product out into the world we have to make sure there are controls and oversight.

FOS: Mention markets seem particularly manipulatable. 

JM: I’m not saying someone should, or should not, offer mention markets. I’m also not saying someone should, or should not, offer micro bets, first-pitch bets, etcetera. There’s probably a world for all of this.

But you need controls in place. Offering a market where there’s potential harm, it’s not something we do at Robinhood. So we may be slower to market for something because we want to make sure we are doing it in the right way, and we’re O.K. with that.

FOS: The Trump Administration is friendlier to prediction markets than the Biden Administration was. What happens when there’s another change in administration?

JM: Crypto is a great example for this. At one point, people thought one party was pro-crypto and the other was not. That isn’t quite the case. One party was more concerned about regulation and oversight, while the other party felt existing capabilities were there. There’s been a shift to the middle in crypto.

The CFTC is the federal regulatory agency in control of prediction markets, and they have the right to oversight under the Commodity Exchange Act. The only group that has the ability to change that is Congress, which can either issue a congressional amendment that rewrites that law or enact a new law.

What we do at Robinhood is build products we believe are agnostic to the party in power, because they meet the regulatory requirements. This goes back to what I said about being slower to market at times; speed can be a concern, and sometimes taking the slower road allows us to be more deliberate in decision-making to offer a product we believe will stand the test of time.

FOS: Where does Robinhood see itself in the long term?

JM: We aim to be a financial super app. Prediction markets are one of 11 businesses at Robinhood. We have users who may not be looking at prediction markets right now, but they might be looking at equities, or options, or crypto. Then, suddenly they see a story of interest, and there’s our prediction-markets platform, sitting in our ecosystem, for them to participate in. That’s the strength of Robinhood. We’re a one-stop shop to do all of your investing, whatever that might be. We’ll give you the mechanism.

Deal Flow

A Sports Fund for Individual Investors

May 31, 2023; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers ownership Peter Guber and Todd Boehly watch game action against the Washington Nationals at Dodger Stadium.

Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

  • Eldridge Industries, the investment firm of Dodgers and Lakers co-owner Todd Boehly, is teaming with Arctos Partners to manage a fund that will be open to individuals (who can invest at least $25,000), Bloomberg reported. The fund will look to invest in leagues like the NBA and NFL, as well as TV and film companies.
  • Kalshi sued the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection after the regulator sent a cease-and-desist letter saying the prediction-markets platform’s sports event contracts constitute illegal gambling. Connecticut is the 10th state regulator to issue a cease-and-desist to Kalshi over sports offerings. The regulator also issued cease-and-desists to Robinhood and Crypto.com.
  • Cristiano Ronaldo is investing in artificial intelligence giant Perplexity and entering into a multiyear agreement that will provide users with exclusive content from his “personal archive.” The announcement comes the same week the soccer star invested in Spain-based mixed martial arts promotion Wow FC.
  • Sports and entertainment agency 54 has agreed to buy Sportgate International, which produces polo and equestrian events, in a deal it says will “elevate polo’s global standing” and increase investment in the sport. Both businesses are based in London.
  • Private-equity firm Alterity Capital is investing in a “multimillion-dollar” pickleball facility in New England that sits next to the Patriots’ home field, Gillette Stadium, the firm tells Front Office Sports. The facility, called Eleveno, features nine permanent pickleball courts. The amount Alterity is investing was not disclosed.

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