Phil Mushnick

Phil Mushnick

About the Columnist

Phil Mushnick has been the New York Post's television and radio columnist since 1982. His Equal Time column runs twice a week, on Fridays and Sundays. A native of Staten Island, Mushnick joined The Post in 1973 as a copy boy before being promoted to a reporter and covering the New York Cosmos and New Jersey Nets. Mushnick's no-holds barred commentary has taken on some of the biggest individuals, teams and companies in the sports world, most notably Vince McMahon and the WWE and Phil Knight and Nike.

The Archive

Fundamentals becoming relics of the past in MLB — and it may only get worse

Not a day passes without reading the woeful tales of MLB games from devotees throughout the continent and beyond of games risked or lost to the inability or unwillingness to...

The NBA got exactly what it asked for in Jontay Porter gambling scandal

That didn't take long, did it? So now what? Anyone have a copy of the plan?

How Tigers Woods' TV coverage is ruining the Masters

Now? If you don’t buy into TV’s Tiger Woods myopia, you can check your cell phones to see how the other guys are doing.

Kelce brothers' Cincinnati fundraiser more evidence of college sports' NIL ruination

The money will probably be used to entice high school athletes and preexisting college athletes from other schools to play for UC, even if just a few months before seeking...

Hypocritical Roger Goodell went from fierce adversary of sports betting to partner

Now so much of the NFL’s revenue is predicated on gambling — on NFL fans and TV viewers losing their money as the only business mission.

We didn't need Washington Post to tell us Kim Mulkey is bad for college sports

In a world gone nuts, a laugh, now and then, can temporarily deliver us from evil.

Greedy NFL commissioner can't pass up any chance for a few extra dollars

Why devote a column to Roger Goodell at the start of the baseball season and the close of the NCAA Tournament? Because I can’t stow it. He’s infuriating.

Shohei Ohtani mess by-product of MLB embracing betting

They wanted to sow the wind. Now, they can reap the whirlwind.

Dumbing down Opening Day yet another facet of Rob Manfred's MLB lunacy

One wonders if Rob Manfred knows of Opening Day tradition — or just allowed it, as did Bud “Bottom Line” Selig before, to be destroyed for TV money.

High school hoops controversy yet another time adults have failed kids

That special place in hell will be too crowded to remain special.

What makes viewers' March Madness experience painful

The NCAA Tournament now annually comes attached to endless commercials for Capital One credit cards, The Post's Phil Mushnick writes.

Suspicious betting patterns emerging in sports wagering now

Don’t know who Bob Dylan has for his Final Four, but he must’ve had gambling in mind when sang, “It’s a hard rain that’s a-gonna fall.”

Thumbs-down opinion against gambling remains untouched

The most often asked question/accusation I’ve faced is whether, given the content of The Post’s sports section, I’m a hypocrite for taking such a thumbs-down position on sports gambling, before...

NHL’s promotion of fighting is sick and out of touch

If you didn’t know better you’d have thought you collided with one of those blood sports pay-per-view come-ons, perhaps the weigh-in.

Sports is growing more and more insane

Man — provided you identify as one — it grows more insane by the day, Phil Mushnick writes.

ESPN deserves much of blame for boosting court-storming mayhem

It's easy to blame ESPN for so much that has disfigured sports. That’s the problem — it’s too easy.

Sports is falling victim to vulgar behavior, greedy overlords

Ah, but to be taken for granted still means being taken, and golf telecasts sponsored by Rolex and brokerage houses don’t jive with sucker audiences.

NBA All-Star game has regressed into an undignified farce

The only thing it determined for many was that they would never again watch an NBA All-Star Game.

Compromised collegiate standards have corrupted the sports world

After all the calls and conferences that demanded reform, we’re worse — much worse — than ever.

The final review on all things Super Bowl 2024

Super Bowl closeout sale. No offer too low! Everything must go!