Baseball Is Being Watched More Than Ever. But Fewer People Are Falling in Love With It.
Is baseball’s new audience more interested in prop bets or pennant races?
Is baseball’s new audience more interested in prop bets or pennant races?
A combination of travel restrictions and anti-American sentiment has led to a decrease in international tourism during Trump's second term.
His proposal to limit the next-game consequences of yellow cards and red cards deserves serious attention. But his proposals for awarding two points for a run-of-play goal and only one for a PK is flawed, as is his idea for changing soccer's overtime rule.
Plus: a survey on fixing soccer, the Home Run Derby’s format changes again, and a goal you have to see to believe
The obvious answer is no. Title IX's application to college soccer is essentially irrelevant to the talent pipeline for the men's international team. And it is also increasingly irrelevant for the women's team. Professional training now produces America's elite international athletes.
Plus: Should Folarin Balogun have been allowed to play? The simple fix for red card suspensions.
In sports as in foreign policy, he treats cheating as a virtue. And it doesn’t even work.
The father of the World Sports Exchange tells his story.
Plus: World Cup tourists embrace America, the Supreme Court expands gun rights, and Europe's resistance to air conditioning
The next Folarin Balogun could be in a field that matters much more than a soccer pitch. America should not handicap its access to such talent.
I've seen some carping about the process. But getting to the right result is the ultimate goal.
A lawyer's—and former trial judge's—perspective.
This year's World Cup has largely avoided the stadium subsidies, forcible displacement of people, human rights violations, and other evils historically associated with the event.
Plus: A 29-year-old DSAer wins, San Francisco's disappearing babies, and more...
Plus: How sportsbooks moved online and changed sports betting forever.
How sports betting moved online and started a debate about its benefits and negatives.
It's a temporary reprieve for a sector that has been struggling for years. But the fight is just getting started.
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss a misleading Atlantic article about World Cup visitors.
Plus: the worst rule at the World Cup, and the worst person in golf?
The league’s conduct is indisputably protected by the First Amendment. But that doesn't make it wise.
FIFA can restrict political messaging inside its stadiums, but there is no stopping English football fans from mocking their prime minister elsewhere.
Matt Welch discusses the forgotten reality of the bicentennial, the cultural impact of Roots, and why America doesn't need a single national story.
Critics of high-skilled immigration should take note.
Plus: How the UFC and MMA went from outsiders to the sporting and political establishment—to the point where they’re being used for “diplomacy.”
Epstein's proposal for limiting the next-game consequences of yellow and red cards makes sense. But his idea of awarding two points for a goal in the run of play and only for one for a penalty kick is flawed. And there is a better way to end tied games than continuing overtime.
A cage fight on the South Lawn may be an unusual choice to celebrate the Founding. But it is a mirror of our political moment.
America pushed to host the international tournament. Now the government is hassling fans, official guests, and even players who want to come.
Instead of dismantling the cultural exchange bureau, the State Department wants it to sponsor sports leagues.
Plus: Should politicians talk more sports on the campaign trail, Formula 1’s Monaco mess, and who people are rooting for in the NBA and NHL finals
But many older enhanced athletes did achieve better results than their younger selves.
Everything in the bipartisan bill to “save” the NCAA, how the law would work, and whether it can pass Congress
Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy says that capitalism is killing youth hockey and fueling a "crisis of resentment." But who exactly is pissed?
A new Bears stadium and Gov. J.B. Pritzker himself stand to gain if the legislation passes.
I watched hours and hours of the Enhanced Games so you didn’t have to.
Plus: NCAA reform legislation on hold in Congress, the Senate discusses betting and sporting integrity, and private equity in youth sports
With March Madness expansion and a possible College Football Playoff expansion, the NCAA is ignoring fans right when its popularity matters most in Congress.
Plus: The NFL has no easy response to the Dianna Russini–Mike Vrabel affair, and how ketamine may have helped the Sixers upset the Celtics
(Don't) hold your genetically enhanced horses.
Plus: governments get deeper and deeper into horse racing, fiscally conservative Republicans keep subsidizing stadiums, and Full Swing is in a doom spiral
Small-government conservatives are tripping over themselves to give millions of taxpayer dollars to billionaires.
Plus: NFL draft rookies get screwed by the players union, and governments are charging a ton to get to the World Cup
Plus: the insanity of investigating the NFL on antitrust grounds, and should golf be harder?
Plus: Fox and Sinclair go crying to the FCC over sports streaming, and the Masters ticket lottery makes it too hard to get in
Plus: The NBA has more overcomplicated anti-tanking plans, and why Formula 1’s Drive to Survive is the best sports docuseries
"Performance enhancements are actually, contrary to what many people think, not that dangerous," the Enhanced CEO tells Reason.
Colorado lawmakers are considering a bill that would make it illegal to broadcast sports betting ads between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m.
Plus: Tournament expansion looks like a terrible idea, enjoy baseball while you can, and the newest season of Shoresy
Plus: a journalist-turned-gambler opens up, legendary sports moments, and sexy sports.
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