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Barstool Sports Cites Fake Regulatory Excuse For Caving To The Woke Mob

Public/Screenshot/Twitter — User: stoolpresidente

Robert McGreevy Contributor
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Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy slammed Penn National’s decision to fire employee Ben Mintz after Mintz repeated a racial slur while rapping along to a song May 1. 

Barstool owners Penn National Gaming cited regulatory pressure behind Mintz’s firing, Portnoy said in a video announcement on Twitter. Portnoy railed against Penn’s decision in the six-minute clip, saying, “There is just no way anyone can look at that clip and think the punishment fits the crime. It makes my skin crawl, thinking a guy would lose their job on an innocent mistake.”

“It’s everything I’ve stood against for 20 years,” he continued.


Portnoy cited Penn’s position as a gambling company and their apparent concern that state regulators would pull their gambling licenses over Mintz’s speech. “They believe there’s a legitimate chance lots of the states would pull their licenses because of this,” Portnoy said. (RELATED: ‘What The F*ck Are You Doing?’: Barstool Sports President Says Biden Got Fleeced Trading The ‘Merchant Of Death’)

“From Penn’s perspective, better than risking the entire livelihood of the company on a fuck-up from Ben Mintz,” he continued.

Trial lawyer Robert Barnes disagreed with that notion and argued it was false. “Whatever lawyer told them that is lying. No state can legally revoke a sportsbook license because of somebody’s speech” he tweeted in response to Portnoy’s announcement.

“Nobody is ever pulling a gambling license for that,” according to JD Sharp, who covers sports betting on his radio show, The Vegas Take.


Penn’s stock price plummeted after the decision, losing over 11% in less than 24 hours. Portnoy said he tried to warn the company: “I told Penn … you risk alienating [our fans] … there may be nothing left to protect if you go through this.”

Penn acquired a 36% stake in Barstool for $163 million in 2020. The company purchased all of the remaining shares for $388 million in February. Portnoy addressed accusations that he sold out in a separate Twitter video May 3. “No fucking doy I sold out,” he said. “Yeah we sold the fuck out, and that’s what you do when you’re an entrepreneur. Still man, this decision sucks, I hate it, makes me want to puke.”

Portnoy said he pulled an anti-cancel culture sweatshirt from the website’s store following Mintz’s firing.

Mintz apologized for the incident Monday. “This morning, I made an unforgivable mistake slipping on air while reading a song lyric. I meant no harm & have never felt worse about anything. I apologize for my actions. I am truly sorry & ashamed of myself,” he tweeted.

Mintz later said he was in good spirits, even revealing he got a phone call from the mayor of his favorite sports team’s home town.