• Loading stock data...
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Want a chance to win $250 and free FOS gear? Take our quick reader survey. Take the survey here

‘Deadspin’ Sold to European Start-Up, All Staffers Laid Off

  • The sports media outlet has been sold to Lineup Publishing, which has very little online information.
  • All staffers were let go and immediately shut out of their emails, an employee confirmed with ‘FOS.’
FOS Illustration

The sports media company Deadspin has been sold, and all staffers were let go, employees were told Monday during a company meeting, which Front Office Sports confirmed with one of those workers. 

The European firm Lineup Publishing bought the company from G/O Media. An email obtained by FOS from CEO Jim Spanfeller to G/O Media employees Monday, which misspelled the company’s name, read: “While the new owners plan to be reverential to Deadpin’s unique voice, they plan to take a different content approach regarding the site’s overall sports coverage.” 

About a dozen people were on staff before the meeting, and they were immediately locked out of their emails and company platforms, the employee tells FOS. Employees were told that Lineup Publishing is a start-up and plans to publish the same kind of stories that already run on Deadspin, per that staffer. 

There’s very little info about Lineup Publishing on the company website, which was registered Thursday via a domain registrar based in Iceland. The Lineup Publishing site doesn’t state who runs the company and doesn’t mention the Deadspin acquisition. In the lower-left corner of the landing page, “San Gwann, Malta” is listed. FOS submitted a request for comment via the web form on the page.

“It seemed pretty clear to me this was the only way it could end. It was only a matter of time,” Deadspin’s former editor-in-chief Megan Greenwell tells FOS. Greenwell quit the publication in 2019, shortly before many others followed, and, the next year, nearly 20 former staffers founded Defector Media.

“It is sad when a publication goes under. I think it is also clear that that publication has been struggling since everybody left in 2019. Their readership has long been a tiny fraction of what it was. The quality of journalism clearly hasn’t been what it was,” Greenwell says.

Greenwell blames the “private equity playbook” that “took what was a very healthy and thriving part of the sports media ecosystem, destroyed it, and sold it for parts.”

G/O Media’s parent company, the private equity group Great Hill Partners, bought Deadspin from Gizmodo Media, in 2019, along with other outlets like the feminist site Jezebel and tech site Gizmodo. G/O Media shut down Jezebel in November before selling it later that month to Paste Magazine, and the site has since resumed coverage.

The sale comes a month after G/O Media was sued for defamation in a Delaware state court over Deadspin’s portrayal of a young Kansas City Chiefs fan in a Native American headdress in a November story. The original version of the story, which didn’t name the young fan, described him wearing “Black face” and included a picture of half his face. 

Despite the blowback, Deadspin left the article up for more than a week before a letter from Clare Locke—a law firm that previously represented former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and far-right activist group Project Veritas—led Deadspin to alter the story on Dec. 8.  

The picture of the young fan was subbed out for a picture of NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, and the term “Black face” was removed from both the headline and story. 

“Unfortunately the article drew attention to the fan, though our intended focus was on the NFL and its checkered history on race, an issue which our writer has covered extensively for Deadspin,” Deadspin said in an editor’s note.

Meanwhile, certain Deadspin stories have disappeared from the website, including, ironically, pieces criticizing corporate media owners like Megan Greenwell’s “Adults in the Room” and Laura Wagner’s “This Is How Things Work Now at G/O Media.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Mar 2, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics majority owner Wyc Grousbeck cheers on the Celtics during the during the second half against the Denver Nuggets at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit:

Why Are So Many NBA Teams Selling Now?

Mark Cuban tells FOS his theory on why his peers keep selling.
exclusive

Schools Consider Not Signing House v. NCAA Enforcement Memo

Texas Tech’s general counsel has advised the school not to sign.
Nov 16, 2025; Orlando, Florida, USA; NJ/NY Gotham FC celebrate after scoring during extra time against Orlando Pride at Inter&Co Stadium

The NWSL Is Growing at Breakneck Pace. Can It Keep Surging?

While the league surges, it also must survive two major challenges.
NCAA

Schools Vote Against Rule Allowing College Athletes to Bet on Pro Sports

The NCAA initiated a review process for the rule approved in October.

Featured Today

Trinity Rodman

NWSL Regular-Season Ratings See Big Surge, Playoffs Up 5%

Regular-season viewership grew by over 20%, averaging more than 200,000.
Jul 13, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; FIFA president Gianni Infantino and President Donald Trump carry the FIFA Club World Cup trophy during the presentation after the final of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium.
November 19, 2025

Trump-MBS White House Dinner Showcases Saudi Sports Influence 

Attendees included Ronaldo, Bryson DeChambeau, and the owner of the 76ers.
November 19, 2025

ABC, ESPN Bounce Back With Big CFB Ratings After YouTube TV Deal

Oklahoma-Alabama and Texas-Georgia drew more than 10 million viewers.
Jan 28, 2025; Washington, DC, USA; Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, begins a hearing to examine the Panama Canal and its impact on U.S. trade and national security, focusing on fees and foreign influence on Tuesday, January 28, 2025.
November 18, 2025

Congress Turns Up Heat on Sports Leagues Over Betting Integrity Issues

MLB, the NBA, and the NCAA are all in lawmakers’ crosshairs.
Draymond Green

NBA Ratings Up 30% Through First Month Despite Star Injury Woes

The NBA added NBC and Amazon as new media partners this season.
Joey Votto
November 21, 2025

Joey Votto Could Be MLB Media’s Hottest Prospect: ‘No-Brainer’

NBC and Netflix are now in the mix for MLB talent.
WORCESTER - WWE star Zelina Vega makes her return alongside NXT stars Legado del Fantasma during "WWE Friday Night SmackDown" at the DCU Center, Friday, Oct. 7, 2022.
November 21, 2025

The CW Says Nielsen WWE Ratings Drop ‘Lacks Credibility’

The CW says the new measurement process creates “inexplicable” findings.
Sponsored

NFL QB Christian Ponder Is Preparing Athletes for Business

Former NFL quarterback Christian Ponder discusses the transition from field to boardroom.
Jul 5, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; FC Bayern Munich forward Harry Kane (9) and defender Jonathan Tah (4) react a quarterfinal match of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup against Paris Saint-Germain at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
November 21, 2025

Paramount Is Gunning for ESPN’s Live Sports Crown

Paramount won the media rights to show the UEFA Champions League in the U.K.
Nov 16, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; CBS sports broadcaster Bill Cowher before the game between the Kansas City Chiefs against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High.
November 21, 2025

Paramount, Comcast, Netflix Submit Bids for All or Part of WBD

WBD wants the strategic review process to be done by end of year.
November 20, 2025

NFL Morning Games Break Ratings Record As Global Slate Grows

International games on NFL Network averaged 6.2 million viewers.
Nov 19, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw looks on during the second quarter between the Dallas Mavericks and the New York Knicks at the American Airlines Center.
November 20, 2025

MLB’s TV Hot Stove Market Heating Up

“Suddenly, it’s a great time to be a baseball talent.”