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Sports

How Sports Tickets Got So Expensive—Or Did They?

Plus: regulating college sports, forgiving baseball’s legends, and Happy Gilmore 2

Jason Russell | 7.29.2025 10:50 AM

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A distraught fan holds his head in his hands on the left side of the image, with a baseball field and stadium seating in the rest of the image. | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Antonio Guillem | Jason Stitt | Dreamstime.com
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Antonio Guillem | Jason Stitt | Dreamstime.com)

Hello and welcome to another edition of Free Agent! Be sure to park your train in a spot with a great view today—especially if you can find a great view of a game, because we're starting off this newsletter with higher prices for sports tickets. Then we'll talk about regulations on college sports coming out of Washington, D.C., discuss baseball's Hall of Famers with sketchy pasts, and close with a brief review of Happy Gilmore 2. Let's get to it!

Locker Room Links

  • "NYC shooter intended to target the NFL offices; went to the wrong floor. Played high school football; had a note in his pocket about CTE."
  • The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee banned transgender women from women's sports.
  • Venus Williams joked(?) that she made her tennis comeback at 45 years old because she wants the health insurance. But if true, it really means playing was a better option than enrolling in Obamacare, as the Cato Institute's Michael Cannon points out.
  • A Venezuelan baseball team of 13- to 16-year-olds got caught up in the travel ban.
  • Unrelated, I can't believe a Little League suspension ended up in court.
  • Someone is trying to use a 300-year-old law to recoup their sports betting losses in Washington, D.C.
  • RIP Hulk Hogan: A nice remembrance here from a wrestling skeptic, and another one here from a fanatic.
  • Elsewhere in Reason: This week's Reason Roundtable podcast also included some Hulk Hogan discussion.
  • Good news!

    NCAA Tournament expansion 'growing more unlikely,' per report https://t.co/pE78wmfX0F

    — Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) July 25, 2025

The Price Is Right?

Things are getting more expensive, and sports are getting more expensive faster than everything else.

This thread on X is a typical example of the complaints.

Why is it so f*%king expensive to take your family to a Major League Baseball game?

After the tickets, parking, food, and drinks, you could easily spend hundreds, if not a thousand dollars for just one game.

Let's talk about why this has happened to America's pastime:????

— Dan Osborn (@osbornforne) July 4, 2025

As you'd expect, the blame is pinned on greedy billionaires who just want to make as much money as possible, as well as shifting "dynamic prices" that change as demand changes. (People hate prices, but we need them for the economy to function.)

But instead of blaming the billionaires, maybe there's someone else who should take the blame: the fans.

Don't miss sports coverage from Jason Russell and Reason.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

There are more and more of us sports fans, and as we've all collectively gotten richer, we've decided to spend more of our money on watching our favorite sports teams. The number of games and seating capacity at those games (i.e., supply) haven't meaningfully increased in the last 25 years, so as interest (i.e., demand) has gone up, prices have gone up too.

The thread above from Dan Osborn laments ticket prices from 1999 to 2020 growing twice as fast as regular inflation. His data on that, from the federal government's Bureau of Labor Statistics, are sound. But it doesn't consider how much richer we've gotten: Our disposable personal income grew even faster than inflation and ticket prices. We chose to spend some of that extra spending money on sporting events, and ticket prices naturally went up.

Something funny happened after Osborn's 21-year period, from January 2020 to the present: Regular inflation caught up to ticket prices, and ticket prices mostly stayed the same (with a lot of variance in the last five years, but only up 2 percent from January 2020 to June 2025). 

Osborn's data on another complaint are not sound, though. "After the tickets, parking, food, and drinks, you could easily spend hundreds, if not a thousand dollars for just one game." A thousand? Even for baseball's most expensive teams, that's a stretch.

Let's say you want to take your family of four to a Los Angeles Dodgers game this month. They have a Sunday afternoon game against the Toronto Blue Jays (one of the best teams in baseball!). The cheapest tickets right now are roughly $50 a person, or $200 for the family (including fees). Parking for one car adds another $35. Even if you budget $100 for concessions and another $100 for souvenirs, that's still under $450 total for a family of four to see the most expensive team in baseball (obviously you could scrimp even more by not eating at the stadium and/or skipping the merchandise). Prices for the flailing New York Yankees are even cheaper—You can grab four tickets to their home game against the Minnesota Twins on August 11 for under $20 a ticket.

Osborn, though, is from Nebraska (he's an independent running for Senate, again). I'm sorry it's not a big enough market for an MLB team. Lucky for Osborn, tickets to the Omaha Storm Chasers and Lincoln Saltdogs are even cheaper than Dodgers tickets.

College Sports Saved Forever?

Seems like there's big news every week on the regulation of college sports—which says a lot about the mess the NCAA has made. The big news last week was President Donald Trump's executive order "Saving College Sports."

Spoiler alert: The executive order does not save college sports, or do much at all. "It's not a law, it can't replace a law and any new policies that come from agencies will be challenged in court," attorney Michael McCann posted. For example, the order doesn't prohibit pay-for-play payments, it just says it's Trump's opinion that universities shouldn't allow it. Of course, some NCAA members know all too well what can happen when a university doesn't follow Trump's wishes. The order also asks the attorney general and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair to use litigation and "other actions" to "stabilize and preserve college athletics." That could mean litigation against state laws in conflict with NCAA rules, and it's a sign the Trump administration doesn't want the FTC to entertain antitrust challenges to the NCAA.

While the order calls for consultation with the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, it does not call for special rules or even government funding for those sports, despite the wishes of some (the national debt held by the public is $29.4 trillion, people).

It didn't get as much attention, but news about the SCORE Act is what you should keep your eye on. The bill advanced through two House committees (albeit with only Republicans voting in favor) and is on its way to the House floor. It prevents college athletes from being recognized as employees and, hence, collective bargaining is out of the question. It would also override any state laws that restrict name, image, and likeness payments (though schools and conferences could still restrict these). The NCAA and athletic conferences would get antitrust protections.

If the SCORE Act passes the House, it would come up against dueling approaches in the Senate: one from Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.) and another from Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.).

As I wrote last month, we do not, under any circumstances, need politicians more involved in sports (even if that's what keeps this newsletter going).

Highly respected college sports insider to my DM:

Are we supposed to follow state law, the presidential executive order, the House settlement, Federal law, University policies, NCAA bylaws, or the College Sports Commission? Let me know.

GOLD ⚡️

— Mitch Gilfillan (@mitchgilfillan) July 24, 2025

Forgiving Hall of Famers

"Can something so gloriously frivolous as baseball teach us a thing or two about the lost art of forgiveness?"

My colleague Matt Welch, a perennial attendee of the Baseball Hall of Fame's induction weekend, wrote about Dick Allen and Dave Parker, both posthumously enshrined last weekend.

Allen, Welch writes, was known for "regularly skipping practices, showing up late to games, refusing to play when managers asked, boozing and smoking at work, hanging out at the racetrack, and on three separate occasions skipping out on his team," while Parker "developed one of the most consequential cocaine habits in Major League history" and even got his dealer onto team trips.

But they were also well-known for being awesome baseball players. "At their peaks, Allen and Parker were not only in the conversation for best player in the game, they each had a claim on being the sport's biggest badass," as Welch writes. Among other achievements, Allen had 201 hits in 1964 en route to the rookie-of-the-year award and Parker finished five seasons in the top five of MVP voting (with the top spot once). 

Allen and Parker won't be the only players with checkered pasts to get into the Hall of Fame. Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson will surely follow soon, and perhaps steroid-using legends like Barry Bonds after that. Welch quotes the great baseball historian/analyst Bill James: "For very good reasons, we do not nurture hatred. We let things pass. This leads history to be forgiving. Perhaps it is right, perhaps it is wrong, but that is the way it is."

Happy Gilmore Fore 2

If you thought the original Happy Gilmore movie was absurd, the sequel ratchets up the absurdity by three notches, one for each decade since the original came out. But absurdity can also be fun, and I enjoyed two hours of Happy Gilmore 2. Not everyone will like it. But unlike most unnecessary sequels (which this one is, to be sure), it's not overly reliant on callbacks to the original—and I laughed harder at the sequel than the original.

There are an astounding number of celebrity cameos in this movie, so many it was actually distracting. It really has almost every famous golfer a casual fan could think of (except Tiger Woods). Where else are you going to get Travis Kelce, Jack Nicklaus, and Adam Sandler in the same scene? The MVP, though, is Scottie Scheffler for being such a good sport. (I hope those chicken fingers were worth it, Scottie.)

I would not have paid to see Happy Gilmore 2 in a movie theater. Thankfully it's available on Netflix at your convenience. I promise it will be better than Air Bud Returns.

Replay of the Week

Baseball is the best.

HOW?!

You have to see what just happened in the Marlins-Brewers game ???? pic.twitter.com/mKNSP5xSBD

— MLB (@MLB) July 25, 2025

That's all for this week. Let this be your notice that it's ESPN 8: The Ocho weekend with soap hockey, donk toss, T.rex races, and much more on TV. (What in the world is "coffin wars"?)

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

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NEXT: Shooting at Blackstone, NFL, KPMG Building

Jason Russell is managing editor at Reason and author of the Free Agent sports newsletter.

SportsPrice controlsEconomicsFree MarketsCollegeNCAAGenderHigher EducationDonald TrumpTrump AdministrationHealth CareImmigrationRegulationCancel CultureMovies
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  1. Longtobefree   1 day ago

    "The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee banned transgender women from women's sports."

    Truth in reporting:
    The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee banned men from women's sports.

    Log in to Reply
    1. SRG2   1 day ago

      Take the win and STFU

      Log in to Reply
      1. damikesc   1 day ago

        Nah. We need to make them face up to their true advocacy position.

        Rub. The. Left's. Noses. In. It.

        Log in to Reply
      2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 day ago

        Awwww. Someone has sand in his stinkditch this morning. Poor fella.

        Log in to Reply
      3. Bertram Guilfoyle   1 day ago

        Oxford sure toughened you up didn't it?

        Log in to Reply
  2. Chumby   1 day ago

    Attending sportsball events sounds like something possibly white people do.

    Log in to Reply
    1. creech   1 day ago

      And about 85% of the players on the floor are possibly black people.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chumby   1 day ago

        That fan at the baseball game calling out dinger was possibly white.

        Log in to Reply
  3. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 day ago

    No mention of the multimillion dollar player salaries?

    Log in to Reply
  4. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 day ago

    The cheapest tickets right now are roughly $50 a person,

    No mention of the cost of a seat that you can actually see the game.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   1 day ago

      Fifty bucks a seat, but you’ll only need the edge! Come see the excitement. Live!!!!

      Log in to Reply
    2. Warren   1 day ago

      You noticed that too eh?

      Log in to Reply
  5. SRG2   1 day ago

    Seems like a regular case of supply and demand. A Man U supporting friend complained that tickets for the pointless friendly v West Ham at the Meadowlands ran into the hundreds. Well then, don't go. But 82,000 people did go.

    Log in to Reply
  6. Longtobefree   1 day ago

    The best way to discuss the "cost" of things is to use the number of hours at average wage needed to earn the thing discussed.
    How many hours did the average worker need to work to attend a game in 1999 .vs 2020?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   1 day ago

      Yup.

      Log in to Reply
  7. NCMB   1 day ago

    Fans ultimately decide ticket prices, and so does the product offered. A shitty team is not going to command premium ticket prices; well, not for long anyway.

    Log in to Reply
  8. Heraclitus   1 day ago

    $50 baseball tickets? Maybe for crappy tickets for a good team. Want to have a decent view? More like $100 plus. But that's just baseball, NBA and NFL are much higher. And if Caitlyn Clark happens to be playing they go up and you get no discount if she is injured.

    Stadiums are fancier, players get paid more. That's it. We could go back to more basic stadiums and players don't have to be multimillionaires even when losing and mediocre but that's capitalism right? You get millions for sucking. I believe Adam Smith made that point.

    I'm done with it all. College sports and getting worse too. Streaming games is like hunting for snipes. Might as well pirate them all, it's far easier and more reliable.

    Log in to Reply
    1. MasterThief   1 day ago

      I went to a minor league game last week for $14 per ticket. Club seats in air conditioned rooms were $50. I know at a major league stadium I would have paid well over $100 to be as close as we were. Tbh, the minor league game felt exactly the same as any major game I've been to save for the value you get for your dollar.

      Log in to Reply
  9. Miss Ann Thrope (She/It)   1 day ago

    World Superbikes, under $50.00 for day of racing, no parking fee, brought my lunch. No bitches flopping on the ground. Great day of sports!

    Log in to Reply
  10. Uncle Jay   1 day ago

    Whenever I watch a sporting event, I always have the best seat available...my TV in my living room...and guess what?
    It's free!

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 day ago

      Beer is cheap too!

      Log in to Reply
  11. jimc5499   1 day ago

    They left off a couple of big things on sports prices. One is taxes. I go to Pirate games fairly often. (I'm not getting into the sell the team thing) Every year the taxes on the tickets goes up. Since COVID you can't get paper tickets any more. Everything is electronic or print your own. I don't mind that, except they charge you a convenience fee for it then add in the service fees. When it comes to the food, the team doesn't make anything off of it. In Pittsburgh it's the Sports and Exhibition Authority that handles that. I can go on and on. Parking, the City of Pittsburgh takes 40% of that in taxes. Someone needs to do a realistic study on what a ticket actually costs without all of the fees and taxes. Reason always whines about Government funding for stadiums and sports venues. About how the Government always wastes taxpayer money on them. After looking at the taxes and fees they charge, I have to wonder. The City of Pittsburgh makes money off the venues even when there isn't a game. They collect parking taxes year round and the City's Transit system allows them to be used for parking to access Downtown. Nobody ever takes that revenue into consideration.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   1 day ago

      Yinzers pregame it by getting something to eat at Primanti Brothers?

      Log in to Reply
  12. Iwanna Newname   23 hours ago

    Well, if you add the billions of subsidy dollars, that non-attending taxpayers are forced to chip in to build stadiums, into the ticket costs, then yes, attending major league sports is getting very expensive.

    Log in to Reply
  13. Iwanna Newname   23 hours ago

    I'm not a theologist, but don't requirements of forgiveness include confession and restitution? Rose lied about his baseball betting for years, and showed little remorse even at his ending days. Did Jackson ever offer to chip in to refund the 1919 world series spectators' tickets, even though he knew the results were predetermined and Said Nothing.

    Log in to Reply
  14. AT   20 hours ago

    So, we're not even going to talk about the WNBLOL?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Minadin   18 hours ago

      Let she who has not lost a wig and then asked the refs to remove a fan, cast the first brick.

      I realize that 'casting the first brick' might be difficult in your typical WNBA game.

      Log in to Reply
  15. Minadin   18 hours ago

    NCAA Tournament expansion ‘growing more unlikely,’ per report

    I'm not even a big fan of it being '68' teams, currently. But if you're going to have the 'play-in' games, make it all those 10-13 seed 'at large' bids that usually come from the middle of major to mid-major conferences. Automatic qualifiers who win their small to mid-major leagues should never be in that pre-round baloney.

    If you want to use that to settle who is 'on the bubble' and who isn't, as ESPN likes to phrase it, fine. AQ's should all be in the round of 64 at a bare minimum.

    Log in to Reply

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