Friday, June 19, 2026

Two Billionaire Heiresses Are Tearing Through the US Open

  • One family made its money in fracking, while the other made its in debt. 
  • Emma Navarro and Jessica Pegula are on opposite sides of the women’s singles bracket.
Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports

The US Open will pay its women’s winner a record $3.6 million Saturday. For two of the quarterfinalists, that would be chump change.

Americans Jessica Pegula, ranked sixth in the world, and Emma Navarro, ranked 13th, are on a collision course for the final. They also happen to be the daughters of billionaires. 

(Update: Both Pegula and Navarro won their quarterfinal matches, setting up a potential all-heiress final. Navarro faces world No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka in the first semifinal Thursday night in Queens, while Pegula will be favored against the unseeded Karolína Muchová in the second semifinal Thursday.)

Pegula is the daughter of Terry Pegula, who owns both professional sports teams in Buffalo, the Sabres and the Bills. In a recent press conference, she pushed back on the idea that she lives a cosseted lifestyle. 

“People think I have a butler, that I get chauffeured around,” she said. “I have a private limo, that I fly private everywhere. … I’m definitely not like that. People can think what they want. I don’t know. I just think it’s kind of funny. A butler? I read these comments. … I’m like, no, not at all.”

Navarro’s father, Ben, is a former vice president at the megabank Citigroup. Both players are New York natives; their families made their enormous fortunes very differently. 

Terry Pegula, who is worth nearly $8 billion, according to Forbes, made his money in fracking. In the early 1980s, Pegula founded East Resources, his own natural gas drilling company. In 2010, he became a billionaire when he sold most of the company to Royal Dutch Shell for $4.7 billion and the rest to American Energy Partners four years later for $1.75 billion. 

Shell’s purchase of Pegula’s company gave it more access to shale gas reserves in the United States, while boosting its daily production in the company by 7.5%. Pegula’s second deal, which came while he was bidding for the Bills, gave AEP the drilling rights to roughly 75,000 acres of land in Ohio and West Virginia. Pegula still has oil and gas assets throughout the country. 

Pegula’s sales match up with his professional sports purchases. Shortly after selling to RDS, he bought the Buffalo Sabres in 2011 for $189 million. He bought the Bills in 2014 for $1.4 billion, the same year he sold the rest of East Resources to AEP. Pegula famously outbid rock star Jon Bon Jovi and future President Donald Trump to buy the Bills. 

Since then, Pegula has also developed waterfront properties in Buffalo. Ironically, despite her father being a prominent booster at Penn State, his alma mater, Jessica played tennis at the University of Pittsburgh. 

Ben Navarro, meanwhile, started his career at Chemical Bank and Goldman Sachs, where he made loans to banks and worked in mortgage-backed securities. In the late 1980s, he joined Citigroup, where he rose to the rank of vice president. He left Citi in 1997 and founded his own company, Sherman Financial Group, the following year. The company went on to become one of the largest buyers of consumer debt in the country. The company now operates Credit One Bank, which targets subprime borrowers for credit cards. 

Navarro is considered a pioneer for turning credit-card debt collecting into a multibillion dollar industry. In 2020, when COVID-19 shut down the world and slowed the economy, most debt collectors gave their borrowers a break and avoided taking them to court. Sherman Financial did the opposite. The firm had the largest year-over-year increase in lawsuits of 52% compared to its peers between mid-March when the country shut down, through the rest of the calendar year, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. While Pegula is richer, Navarro is still worth roughly $1.5 billion. 

The two billionaires nearly became peers in 2018, when Navarro unsuccessfully made a bid to buy the Carolina Panthers. Hedge fund manager David Tepper won out, buying the team for $2.2 billion. Most of Navarro’s sports investments are in his daughter’s sport, tennis. His company, Beemok Sports, owns several tournaments, including the Charleston Open, where he lives, and the Cincinnati Open, best known as a final warm-up for the US Open.

Both billionaire scions have already made the deepest major runs of their careers. Pegula had previously made the quarterfinals at majors four times, while Navarro’s quarterfinal appearance at the French Open earlier this year was her previous best showing in a major.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

U.S. Adds Another World Cup Win With 2–0 Victory Over Australia

The U.S. beat Australia without injured star Christian Pulisic.
Women’s National Football Conference

Women’s Football Is Ready for Its Tom Brady Moment

The league hit an inflection point in its just-completed seventh season.

UFC’s Freedom 250 Draws 17 Million Viewers

The event was available exclusively on Paramount+. 
Kalshi's logo is displayed on a smartphone placed on a reflective surface onto which a betting curve is projected in Creteil, France, on March 9, 2026, during a major scandal and a $54 million lawsuit concerning bets related to recent strikes in Iran. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)NO USE FRANCE

Kalshi’s Tarek Mansour Talks Giannis, Don Jr., Supreme Court

The Kalshi cofounder discussed critics, CFTC rulemaking, and more.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

A Conversation With WNBA Expansion Team Portland Fire’s GM Vanja Černivec

0:00

Featured Today

Why U.S. Open Host Sites Are on a 25-Year Plan

The U.S. Open has already picked out 22 future sites through 2051.
Wisconsin Badgers forward Laila Edwards, left, and defender Caroline Harvey celebrate after Edwards scored against the Minnesota Gophers in the first period in a game Saturday, February 8, 2025, at LaBahn Arena in Madison, Wisconsin.
June 15, 2026

Two Rookies Are Rewriting Women’s Hockey Stardom

Their platforms are a mutual boon for the PWHL and its players.
Ai sports slop
June 5, 2026

How Sports Became Ground Zero for AI Slop

The category is the perfect breeding ground for AI content churn.
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group A - Germany v Luxembourg - Rhein-Neckar-Arena, Sinsheim, Germany - October 10, 2025 Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann
June 4, 2026

‘Weird Corners of the World’: How to Find a World Cup Coach

National associations look for a winning record—and also hope for serendipity.
June 3, 2026

The Elite High Schools Hosting World Cup Teams

Spain, Morocco, Croatia, and Switzerland chose schools as their tournament base camps.
Landon Donovan discusses the state of youth soccer with Front Office Sports.

Landon Donovan Sounds Alarm on Youth Soccer Culture

Donovan believes an early emphasis on winning has harmed youth soccer.
Brendan Sorsby runs with the ball during the Texas Tech football team's spring game, Friday, April 17, 2026, at Jones AT&T Stadium.
June 16, 2026

Sorsby Brings Unprecedented Intrigue to NFL Supplemental Draft

No players other than Sorsby have entered the supplemental draft.
June 16, 2026

MLB Warns Giants Pitchers Over Writing on Pride Caps

The Giants celebrated Pride Night on Friday.
Sponsored

Midge Purce Sounds Off on the Trinity Rodman Rule

Midge Purce discusses the Rodman Rule and the future of NWSL.
June 16, 2026

Serena and Venus Williams Will Play Wimbledon Doubles

Williams made her return to doubles action earlier this month.
June 12, 2026

NiJaree Canady Signs AUSL Deal After Brief Holdout

Canady missed her team’s two opening games.
June 12, 2026

Mickelson’s Future In Golf Even Murkier After Latest Incident

The golfer has been kicked out of a California country club.
Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (0) reacts to his score against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second quarter at Xfinity Mobile Arena
June 12, 2026

Tatum Leaves Door Open for St. Louis WNBA Expansion Bid

The Celtics star wouldn’t comment directly, but also didn’t deny his involvement.