NBA Hall of Famer and television analyst Charles Barkley said this week that he would welcome being fired by ESPN, making the comments during a candid appearance on The Dan Le Batard Show, as reported by Outkick.

Barkley, who has been with ESPN for just over a year following the move of Inside the NBA content to the network, addressed his contract status and his willingness to continue speaking openly, regardless of how his comments are received by network executives.

During the interview, Barkley initially discussed the national championship game between Miami and Indiana, calling it a great contest.

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The conversation then shifted toward what Barkley described as problems within sports media, particularly how reporters and commentators respond to emotional moments.

Barkley referenced recent controversy involving Lynn Jones of the Jacksonville Free Press, who praised Liam Coen, the Jacksonville Jaguars’ head coach, during a postgame press conference after the team’s playoff loss to the Buffalo Bills.

“Can I say [Miami] had a great year?” Barkley said. “I don’t want all these punk-ass reporters and clowns talking bad about me like they did that lady in Jacksonville who had a moment of humanity.”

Barkley continued by questioning the broader reaction within sports media.

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“Think about that, Dan. Jacksonville had a great year. They won four games last year,” Barkley said.

“And we got so many punks on television and on radio now, because I don’t get into the social media stuff, but I started looking, and it was a big story brewing. ‘Is this woman serious? She’s supposed to be a journalist.’ Have we got to the point now where you just have to be an idiot or fool or jackass to be on television or podcast or something now?”

Le Batard then asked Barkley how ESPN executives were responding to his continued criticism of reporters and the media industry. Barkley responded directly.

“They can fire me,” Barkley said with a smile. “I got seven years on my contract. I’m 100 percent retired, but if I can do something just a little bit stupid so they have to fire me, they’ll have to pay me for the whole seven years.”

Barkley did not name any ESPN executives during the discussion, nor did he indicate that the network had taken any disciplinary action in response to his remarks. ESPN has not publicly commented on Barkley’s statements.

Barkley, who has worked in television for more than two decades, has built a reputation for openly discussing his contracts, career plans, and disagreements with media norms.

Since transitioning from professional basketball into broadcasting roughly 25 years ago, he has consistently spoken without prepared scripts and has resisted efforts to soften his commentary.

His comments on The Dan Le Batard Show continue a pattern of public remarks in which Barkley has challenged prevailing media narratives while emphasizing that his financial security allows him to speak freely about his views.