Author: Zen, PANews
On June 6th, the visiting New York Knicks narrowly defeated the San Antonio Spurs 105-104 in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. The Knicks, who were not favored before the series began, had already upset the Spurs 105-95 on the road in Game 1. Winning both road games to start the series was an unexpected outcome for virtually everyone.
For a franchise returning to the Finals for the first time since 1999 and last winning a championship in 1973, this dream 2-0 start, bringing the series back to their home court at Madison Square Garden, has undoubtedly pushed generations of New York fans' fervor to its peak.
According to the latest data from ticket site TickPick, after Game 2, the lowest price for a ticket to Game 3 at Madison Square Garden has exceeded $10,000, with Game 4 prices soaring above $14,000. With the first NBA championship in 52 years seemingly within reach, the frenzy in the 'World's Capital,' New York, has been completely ignited, making this Finals series one of the most expensive live sporting events in NBA history.
What's different this time is the increasingly visible presence of prediction markets in this New York celebration. From prediction market platform Kalshi partnering with Madison Square Garden as an official partner, gaining massive exposure, to widespread fan and merchant participation in betting around probabilities, attention, and entertainment consumption. This NBA Finals is not just a major sporting event; it's also a celebration for prediction market platforms.
Prediction Markets Enter Arenas, Bars, and Fans' Daily Lives
After the Finals began, prediction markets themselves became part of the game's hype. As of June 6th, Polymarket's '2026 NBA Champion' market page shows a cumulative trading volume exceeding $413 million, with a daily volume of around $2 million. Kalshi's trading volume for NBA Finals-related markets reached approximately $274 million. Additionally, derivative markets around Finals MVP, series score, player statistics, celebrity attendance, etc., continue to attract traders.
The influence of prediction markets isn't limited to online. As the Knicks' playoff run heated up, prediction markets also entered bars, arenas, and offline viewing scenarios, becoming new tools for businesses to design promotions and manage cost risks. Before Game 1 of the Finals, the Upper East Side Manhattan bar The Jeffrey launched a promotion: if the Knicks won, drinks for customers that night would be on the house.
For a small business, fulfilling such a major promotion could create significant cost pressure. The Jeffrey's approach was to buy $5,000 worth of Knicks-related contracts on Kalshi. If the Knicks won, the contract payout would cover the cost of the free drinks. Conversely, if the Knicks lost, the bar wouldn't have to provide free drinks, and the customer traffic attracted by the promotion, along with increased consumption, could offset or even cover the cost of the wager.
From an industry perspective, this case demonstrates that prediction markets aren't just tools for fans to trade on game outcomes; they can also serve as a means for businesses to manage event risk. The Jeffrey tied post-win fan enthusiasm and increased traffic to the cost of free drinks, while the Kalshi contract transformed the uncertainty of the promotion into a quantifiable, hedgeable risk. It doesn't change or rely on the game's outcome but alters how businesses design promotions around the game. It also shows the "insurance"-like utility of prediction markets.
Beyond indirect marketing by small businesses, Kalshi's official partnership with Madison Square Garden has placed prediction market platforms in an even more prominent position.
In early May, Kalshi and Madison Square Garden (MSG) announced a multi-year partnership, making Kalshi the official prediction markets partner. Additionally, the MSG Concourse on the 6th floor was named the "Kalshi Concourse," and Kalshi gained exposure on in-arena and out-of-home digital screens, in-arena LEDs, MSG Networks advertising, and branded content.
Kalshi, whose core business is predicting future events, seems to have also 'called' its own offline expansion this time. Securing the MSG partnership rights just weeks ago has now, with the Knicks reaching the Finals, rapidly become a highly representative offline branding investment. Kalshi almost perfectly timed its move. When Madison Square Garden became the focal point of national sports media and the epicenter of New York City's emotions, Kalshi had already secured a position in one of America's most iconic sports venues, moving from online trading pages to a higher-density offline exposure environment.
The Boundaries of Sports Betting Are Being Pushed Further by Prediction Markets
In reality, turning sports hype into a commercial hedging tool is not an original idea from prediction markets.
The most classic precedent is Houston furniture merchant Jim McIngvale, known as "Mattress Mack." His promotional tactic is to offer customers a refund on furniture purchases above a certain amount if a local Houston team wins a championship. Before the games, he places large bets on traditional sportsbooks supporting his hometown team.
The logic behind bar The Jeffrey and Mattress Mack is essentially the same. If the team wins, Mattress Mack refunds customers, but the sportsbook payout covers that cost. If the team loses, he loses his bet, but no refunds are issued for furniture sales, and the promotion itself has already generated sales and media exposure. When the Astros won the World Series in 2022, Mattress Mack received a payout of approximately $75 million, making this model a classic case in American sports marketing.
Compared to traditional sportsbooks, prediction markets also expand the ways fans can engage with games.
Sports markets on Polymarket and Kalshi allow fans to trade around the broader narratives spilling out from a game, covering more entertaining, fragmented topics. Of course, traditional sports betting doesn't only offer win/loss markets. For example, platforms like FanDuel and DraftKings release numerous novelty bets around the Super Bowl each year, including "entertainment props" like the length of the national anthem or songs performed during the halftime show. However, restrictions on such markets vary by state, with some legal sports betting jurisdictions prohibiting them.
The difference with prediction markets is that they further expand this fun, entertainment-focused play. Traditional sportsbooks typically still revolve around the game itself and official statistics; even with novelty props, they're concentrated around a few mega-events like the Super Bowl.
Prediction markets are better at breaking down "verifiable real-world events" into contracts, making "any event priceable." For example, whether Trump will attend NBA Finals Game 3, or whether actor 'Timothee Chalamet' will attend all Knicks home games, clearly pushes the boundaries of novelty markets.
Beyond the variety of events, there are also differences in geographic and user demographic reach between the two types of platforms. Prediction markets in the U.S. can reach users 18 and older, while traditional sports betting typically requires users to be 21+. Simultaneously, prediction markets are available in all 50 states, while sports betting is currently legal in only 39 states. To some extent, the expansion of prediction markets in sports isn't just due to richer market offerings but also their ability to reach demographics and geographies that traditional sportsbooks cannot.
This is also a source of regulatory controversy. Prediction market platforms emphasize they are trading event contracts, with users buying and selling among themselves, a form closer to derivatives trading. Critics argue that when these contracts revolve around the NBA, NFL, elections, or celebrity events, the user experience is already highly similar to gambling. Especially when platforms attract younger users through social media, memes, and sports marketing, the boundaries between financial trading, entertainment, and gambling become increasingly blurred.
Players Get Involved First, NBA League Approaches Cautiously
With the rise of prediction markets, the NBA league has recognized that these platforms are becoming a new variable beyond traditional sports betting. Therefore, for the commercially-driven NBA, its attitude towards prediction markets has historically been ambiguous, characterized by cautious engagement.
At the player level, Giannis Antetokounmpo, who has become a Kalshi shareholder and will participate in the platform's marketing and offline activities, is the most representative case. This has sparked controversy. Fans worry that when an NBA superstar becomes a shareholder in a prediction market platform that can create markets around player trades, team performance, and game outcomes, even if the player themselves cannot trade NBA-related contracts, ethical boundaries are continually being nudged.
Related reading: "After $23.3 Million Bet on His Future, Why Did NBA Star Giannis Investing in Kalshi Spark Outrage?"
At the official league level, the NBA has engaged in in-depth discussions with the CFTC regarding an integrity framework for prediction markets. In its filing to the CFTC, the NBA emphasized that sports event contracts require comprehensive regulation to protect game integrity and public trust. The NBA also argued that athletes, referees, league and team personnel should be prohibited from trading contracts related to their league's games and events, that platforms should provide specific trader identities to the league during suspicious transaction investigations, and that official league data should be used for settlement.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver's public statements reflect this stance. Discussing Giannis's investment in Kalshi during All-Star Weekend, he said the league is viewing prediction markets similarly to how it views sportsbooks. He noted that under the collective bargaining agreement, players can make minimal investment percentages in sports betting companies, and the league applies this rule to prediction markets. Silver further stated that Giannis's investment in Kalshi, being below 1%, did not violate relevant rules. However, he acknowledged that prediction markets are developing rapidly, and their ultimate permissible form may depend on courts and Congress.
But among fan communities, the NBA's increasingly close ties with prediction markets have drawn strong opposition. On the r/nba subreddit, numerous posts about the potential for insider trading risks involving Kalshi, Polymarket, and the NBA have sparked extensive discussion and criticism.
Many fans believe that if player investment or endorsement of prediction markets becomes normalized, future games could become "untrustworthy" due to insider trading and conflicts of interest. Many users also express concerns about league commercialization, younger user addiction, and game integrity. Comments on news about Giannis now almost invariably include fan jabs suggesting he'll participate in betting on prediction markets.
These Reddit discussions don't represent all NBA fans, but they reflect a very real sentiment. Many fans aren't just objecting to 'betting'; they worry that the NBA's official, extensive cooperation with betting companies and prediction markets might increasingly influence games and players through odds and trading contracts.
This concern isn't entirely unfounded. Recently, former U.S. Representative George Santos was investigated for allegedly engaging in suspicious trading on Kalshi related to whether he would attend the State of the Union address. While not a sports case, it highlights the most sensitive risk of prediction markets: when event outcomes can be influenced by a few insiders, market trading is no longer just 'prediction' but can become an incentive for the behavior itself.
And the NBA Finals are becoming a stress test for prediction markets entering mainstream sports. For both the platforms and the NBA, this represents both a new commercial opportunity and a new test of trust.















