Connect with us

Sports

Attending 100 college football games is a lifetime feat. Michael Barker did it in one season

Published

on

Attending 100 college football games is a lifetime feat. Michael Barker did it in one season

Eric Barker has never known his older brother to do anything half-heartedly.

So when Michael informed Eric and the rest of the family that he planned to travel to 100 college football games during the 2024 season — an accepted if not officially recognized world record — Eric wasn’t all that surprised.

“He’s kind of an extreme guy,” Eric said.

“Last year, I did 90 (games),” Michael said. “(This year was) 100 games or bust.”

The elder Barker — who runs the popular X account, “College Football Campus Tour” — hit the century mark earlier this month when he made his way to the Division III national championship game in Houston, fresh off a trip to Nassau for the Bahamas Bowl. He celebrated the milestone with a homemade sign and a late-night trip to Bucee’s, where he grabbed his favorite breakfast burrito and a rhino taco before heading to Frisco for the FCS national championship game the next day. Game No. 101.

Advertisement

On the heels of catching both College Football Playoff semifinal games last week, Barker is finally home in California this week for the first time since catching a 5:30 a.m. flight on Dec. 26. But college football’s most well-traveled fan is headed right back out Sunday for Monday night’s national championship game in Atlanta to put an exclamation point on his 104th game of the season.

“I grew up in a pro (sports) house,” Barker said of cheering for the San Francisco 49ers as a kid. “(But) college football really had all the things I wanted and I just didn’t understand it. And when I did, I went full force — obviously.”

This all started sort of by accident.

Advertisement

In 2017, Barker, looking to embrace solo travel and see more of the United States, booked a trip to Lake Estes, Colo., to stay at The Stanley Hotel, the inspiration for Stephen King’s “The Shining.” Barker told his mom at the time that he was afraid to travel alone but knew the trip would be good for him, so he took the leap.

On the way to the hotel, Barker planned a stop at Colorado State’s campus. Although his father didn’t talk much about his college football career, Curt Barker played one season at BYU and two at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif. Barker remembered his dad telling him that one of the best games he ever played was at Colorado State, so Barker planned to make a pit stop there and at the University of Colorado in Boulder.

“I just really enjoyed going around the campus at each of them,” Barker said. “And when I got to the hotel, it was just on my brain. So I stayed at the hotel for — it was supposed to be two nights and I cut it short and did one night. Before I left the area, I stopped at Wyoming and I stopped at Air Force in Colorado Springs.

“I got home and was like, ‘Man, I really enjoy stopping at campuses.’”

That summer, Barker visited colleges in Arizona, Oregon and Washington before booking a three-week trip to see 99 different campuses from Miami to Maine to Minnesota to Texas and eventually back to California.

Advertisement

It was only natural, he said, that he start checking out football stadiums the following fall.

“He just kind of fell in love with the stadiums themselves, the history, the old ones,” Eric Barker said. “So it was kind of a natural progression.”

Barker, a real estate appraiser, started small (by his standards) and attended 13 games during the 2017 football season, an average of about one a week. He increased it to 30 in 2018 and 50 in 2019. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he still managed to see 42 games. And between the spring and fall seasons of 2021, he made 81 trips.

Last season, he upped the ante to 90 games, pushing himself to what he thought was maximum capacity.

But when his social media followers delivered some good-old-fashioned peer pressure and encouraged him to see if he could hit 100 in 2024, Barker realized that a longer regular season and the expanded College Football Playoff would make the goal feasible.

Advertisement

“The people — Twitter — asked for it,” he said. “And I wanted to deliver.”

Baker has now seen games at all 134 FBS programs and has been to 95 of 129 FCS schools — holding a “soft spot,” for FCS stadiums and teams.

The funding has largely come from his savings account, with Barker admitting that the COVID-19 pandemic hurt his income when interest rates reached such low levels that homeowners had no incentive to refinance their homes. Refinances comprised about 80 percent of his appraisals.

He also has a partnership with TickPick that has helped him land obstructed-view tickets, which is also a beloved part of his brand as he visits various stadiums. He estimates he has spent only $300 on tickets all season thanks to some schools providing a media credential and also the generosity of his followers on social media.

Eventually, he knows he’ll either need to make more money in real estate or beef up his corporate sponsorships if he wants to keep this going.

Advertisement

But for now, it works, thanks to his savings and a very specific set of self-mandated rules.

“No parking, no airport food, no concessions,” he said.

Oh, and this is the big one: no hotels, either.

“If you go to 100 games, $150 a night hotel, let’s say, you save $15,000 if you don’t do a hotel,” he said. “If you can withstand the glamour life, you get the reward.”

Barker said the first thing he does when he arrives in a city is search for “grocery stores near me” on his cell phone so he can load up on protein bars and healthy snacks to avoid having to eat stadium food. He spoke to The Athletic from a Target parking lot in Texas.

Advertisement

If he doesn’t get a media parking pass, he’ll often venture a mile or two away from the stadium and walk to avoid paying for parking. On the nights when he isn’t headed straight to the airport, he’ll often sleep in his rental car in a truck stop parking lot, typically at a Love’s or Buc-ee’s, and walk over to grab a coffee the next morning.

He also has a Planet Fitness membership. For $24 a month, he can keep up with his exercise routine at any facility in the country and also take advantage of the free WiFi and showers.

If and when Barker needs to go directly to the airport after a night game, he’ll often sleep in the terminal before heading to his next stop.

Asked about his favorite atmosphere, Barker gave the nod to Texas A&M but shouted out LSU and Ole Miss for their tailgating, as well as the fine people of Iowa who once invited him to play Giant Jenga and down beers in the parking lot at Kinnick Stadium. Montana’s Washington-Grizzly Stadium is a favorite, too, with the mountains in the background, and the crowds at Penn State and Oregon are undeniable.

Advertisement

As for his most memorable stretch on the road, it had to be this October when he hit six stadiums in five days.

“It was a Tuesday night at New Mexico State, Wednesday night at UTEP — which is about 45 miles south — and then a 5 a.m. flight into Raleigh-Durham,” he said. “Drove three and a half hours and got to Virginia Tech on a Thursday night. Then flew to Chicago for a Friday night game at Wisconsin-Whitewater, which is a D-III power.

“After that, there was a Saturday two-for-one. It was 1 p.m. at North Dakota in Grand Forks and it was 7:30 p.m. at the Fargodome, the (Dakota) Marker game between South Dakota State and North Dakota State. That required an 11-hour drive from Whitewater to Grand Forks in the middle of the night in about a 14-hour window.”

Barker joked that oftentimes when his mother is curious about his whereabouts, she’ll head over to his X page for answers. He keeps his followers updated with photos and videos from his trips.

Advertisement

Just last month, he went from Montana State (Dec. 13) to South Dakota (Dec. 14) to the Frisco Bowl (Dec. 17) to the junior college national championship game in Canyon, Texas, (Dec. 18) to the New Orleans Bowl (Dec. 19) to Notre Dame versus Indiana in the first round of the College Football Playoff (Dec. 20) to Texas versus Clemson on the second day of the first round (Dec. 21) to the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl (Dec. 23) and, finally, to the Hawaii Bowl on Christmas Eve.

After five overtimes and about 10 hours in Hawaii, he hopped on a red-eye back to San Francisco, where he landed at 6:30 a.m. local time on Christmas Day then boarded a train to Oakland at 8 a.m. to be with his family. By 9:30 a.m., he’d made it to the Christmas festivities and stayed with his family for 20 hours before heading out to the Rate Bowl in Phoenix first thing the next morning. Just enough time to dig into Christmas brunch … and do some laundry from the lone suitcase and backpack he travels with.

“(At first, my family members) were like, ‘Mike is finding himself. Let him find himself,’” Barker said. “And I think there was a point almost where they wanted to say, ‘All right, are you gonna be done with this?’ And I would say in the last 18 months, they have bought in.”

Barker typically travels alone due to the physical and financial demands of his itinerary, but Eric went on one trip with his older brother in 2019.

The duo went to the Egg Bowl at Mississippi State on a Thursday night, where they witnessed the infamous fake urination celebration, then headed up to Charlottesville, Va., for a Friday game featuring Virginia and Virginia Tech before scooting over to Western Kentucky the next day for a rivalry matchup against Middle Tennessee State in the “100 Miles of Hate” rivalry. Eric and Michael capped the trip off with a visit to Vanderbilt for a men’s basketball game later that night, where Eric walked to seats at the top of the arena and promptly fell asleep.

Advertisement

“I don’t even know how he does it and how he survives. He’s kind of like a machine,” Eric said.

“He hasn’t come on a trip with me since then,” Michael said.

As the college football season comes to a close next week, when Notre Dame faces Ohio State in Atlanta, Barker will head back to California with mixed emotions.

This was a season he’ll never forget with memories he’ll always cherish. And he’s hoping to stretch this adventure out for at least two more years, possibly more, finances permitting.

But for now, college football is over for the next seven-plus months.

Advertisement

“I’ll go home and pretend like I’m happy and am going to do all the things when I’m back home,” he said.

“But I’m just gonna be thinking about football.”

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos courtesy of Michael Barker)

Advertisement

Sports

Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley get heated with official over pace of play at PGA Championship

Published

on

Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley get heated with official over pace of play at PGA Championship

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

After a slow first round at Aronimink Golf Club in Philadelphia on Thursday, pace of play was a point of emphasis at the PGA Championship on Friday.

However, when an official approached Justin Thomas and Keegan Bradley, they became animated.

Thomas, a longtime Team USA Ryder Cup member, and Bradley, last year’s United States captain, were on the fourth hole when they were approached by an official in a cart, and the conversation quickly turned into finger-pointing.

Advertisement

Justin Thomas and Keegan Bradley watch from the tenth green during the second round of the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown, Pennsylvania, on May 15, 2026. (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

Thomas said after the round that he, Bradley and fellow USA Ryder Cupper Cameron Young, who won the Cadillac Championship earlier this month, were put on the clock, with the official telling them to pick up the pace. However, both Bradley and Thomas appeared to point at the group in front of them.

“We just didn’t really agree with it,” Thomas said, citing course conditions, high winds and tough pins. “We were behind. That wasn’t our issue… It’s just the fact that we weren’t holding up the group behind us.”

Thomas said they were caught up with the pace on the very next hole.

Justin Thomas plays his shot on the 15th tee during the second round of the PGA Championship in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, on May 15, 2026. (Bill Streicher/Imagn Images)

Advertisement

GARRICK HIGGO SHARES BAFFLING COMMENTS WHILE REACTING TO TWO-SHOT PENALTY AT PGA CHAMPIONSHIP

Thomas had a lengthy conversation with the official, while Bradley appeared to make his point short and sweet — though he was definitely not happy with the call.

It is a large PGA Championship field, with 156 golfers at the course and groups even starting their rounds on the back nine. The scores have also been rather high, with just 25 players below par at the time of publishing.

Aronimink also features a shared tee box on 1 and 10, holes 9 and 17 crossing paths, and a lengthy par-3 eighth hole that’s causing problems. Three par-3s are over 200 yards on the course, and there is also a 457-yard par 4 on the fourth.

Keegan Bradley prepares to putt on the 14th green during the first round of the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, on May 14, 2026. (Bill Streicher/Imagn Images)

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

As Chris Gotterup put it on Friday, “You’re not going to get any four-and-a-half hour rounds out here.”

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Sparks hold off late Toronto Tempo rally, earn first win of season

Published

on

Sparks hold off late Toronto Tempo rally, earn first win of season

The Sparks are finally in the win column, but the outcome was in doubt late Friday night.

Behind double-digit scoring from all five starters, the Sparks had by far their best offensive showing of the season, shooting 63.8% during a 99-95 win over the expansion Toronto Tempo.

The Tempo didn’t make things easy, cutting the deficit to two points late and later trailing by just three with 31 seconds remaining and possession of the ball. Marina Mabrey missed a three-point attempt before late Tempo fouls gave the Sparks enough of a cushion to win.

Kelsey Plum nearly claimed a double-double with 27 points and nine assists, while Dearica Hamby had 19 points with seven rebounds and Nneka Ogwumike scored 20 points.

Erica Wheeler, who started in place of Ariel Atkins (concussion), scored 10 points with seven assists and was a plus-16 as the primary ball handler after starting the season two for 16 from the field. That freed up Plum to be in position to score, setting up a much more efficient Sparks offense.

Advertisement

Toronto was shorthanded in the frontcourt without starting center Temi Fagbenle (right shoulder), and the Sparks trio of bigs had a field day with 54 points in the paint.

The Sparks came out firing on Friday, opening with a 17-2 run.

The Tempo went on a 10-0 burst heading into the second quarter but the Sparks countered to maintain momentum and led 46-38 at halftime.

A Wheeler three-pointer early in the third quarter gave the Sparks a 20-point lead. The Tempo cut it to three midway through the fourth while Brittany Sykes (27 points, seven assists) sparked Toronto’s rally. The Tempo put up more shots than the Sparks, 70-58, largely because of a 10-2 offensive-rebounding gap.

Cameron Brink’s 10 points were the only ones provided by the Sparks’ bench, while the Tempo got 42 points from reserves.

Advertisement

Toronto was coming off its first win in franchise history on Wednesday when it defeated Seattle but struggled against a more complete offensive team in the Sparks.

In her return to Los Angeles after winning a national championship with UCLA this spring, Tempo rookie Kiki Rice netted 11 points.

Kate Martin made her Sparks debut as a developmental player with Atkins and Sania Feagin (lower left leg) unavailable and picked up one rebound in six minutes.

The Sparks will face Toronto again on Sunday at Crypto.com Arena.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

Published

on

Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The WNBA season has been in session for about a week, so it is far too early to make assumptions about teams. That doesn’t mean we won’t make them; it’s just too early to really believe it. I lost my first WNBA bet this season, so I’m hoping to avenge that loss here as the Sky take on the Mercury.

The Chicago Sky are one of the most poorly run franchises in basketball. They have had some great names on their team and only one championship to show for it.

Phoenix Mercury forward DeWanna Bonner shoots over Indiana Fever guard Aerial Powers in the first half at PHX Arena. (Rick Scuteri/Imagn Images)

There really isn’t a clear indication of what is wrong with the franchise, but they’ve never been able to retain their talent. Aside from Kamilla Cardoso, I can’t name a player on this team that they’ve actually drafted. They just seem to get good players and then show them the door.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE FOR MORE OUTKICK SPORTS COVERAGE

Even though they’ve had questionable front office decisions, they seem to have put together a solid team for this season – something I didn’t expect before the season started.

They are 2-0, which is too early to really say they are a good team. I also want to reserve judgment until they face a team with a longer history than last year. The Portland Tempo played their first-ever game against the Sky, and Golden State was good last year, but still is in just their second season of existence.

The Phoenix Mercury are actually considered one of the best franchises in the league. I’m sure there are issues that people have reported, but for the most part, they have good facilities, and people want to play for their team. They made it all the way to the WNBA Finals last season before falling to the Las Vegas Aces. This year, they are looking to restart that journey and see if they can win the last game of the year.

Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper dribbles the ball in the second half at CareFirst Arena in Washington, D.C., on July 27, 2025. (Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images)

Advertisement

It will need to come with some better play than they’ve shown through three games this year. They are just 1-2 for the year with a 0-1 home record. The lone win was a blowout victory over the Aces (a clear revenge game if we’ve ever seen one). Then they lost the next two games against Golden State and Minnesota. Losing to the Lynx wouldn’t be a problem, but they didn’t have Napheesa Collier, who still has an ankle injury.

I expect the Mercury to make some adjustments for this game. They haven’t looked very crisp to begin the year, but they’ve been strong on offense, averaging 87 points per game.

The Sky are going to keep relying on their offense to do just enough and their defense to lock in. The Sky do have an edge on the interior, so they can get buckets fairly easily down low. I like the over 166.5 in this game.

Chicago Sky guard Skylar Diggins chases the ball during the fourth quarter against the Golden State Valkyries at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on May 13, 2026. (Bob Kupbens/Imagn Images)

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

I also think it is worth betting on Kahleah Copper to go over her point total. Copper had two rough games before she broke out in the last game. Now she has the same sight lines and can attack the bigs from the Sky with her athleticism. Since going to Phoenix, she has scored 29, 7, 16, 25 and 28 points in five games against them.

For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending