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Front Office Sports - The Memo

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December 11, 2025

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The Trump Administration plans to require tourists to turn over five years of their social media history. Forty-two countries are on the list, mainly affecting tourists from Europe. Other World Cup countries, including Japan, Qatar, and New Zealand, are also on the list.

Elsewhere, FOS is first to report that following Elle Duncan’s exit from ESPN, Christine Williamson will be the next lead women’s college basketball host and will co-host the 6 p.m. SportsCenter.

—Margaret Fleming, Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, and Ben Horney

World Cup Tourists Could Have to Show 5 Years of Social Media

Brian Snyder-Reuters via Imagn Images

The U.S. government is proposing new travel changes that would require some visitors to turn over five years’ worth of social media for review before they enter the country.

The announcement comes six months before the U.S., Mexico, and Canada are set to host the FIFA men’s World Cup and welcome fans from around the globe.

President Donald Trump’s Customs and Border Protection agency announced the proposed changes through a notice in the Federal Register. The proposal, which includes a 60-day period seeking public comments, outlines several changes to tourist and visa policies. The one about social media would largely apply to travelers from European countries, many of which are sending teams to the World Cup.

“This is very clearly a ghastly attempt to prevent people from a specific type of politics from entering the United States, even for leisure or to attend the World Cup,” Matthew Guariglia, senior policy analyst at the digital privacy nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation, tells Front Office Sports.

The notice doesn’t lay out which platforms count as social media or what constitutes the “mandatory data element.” It’s not clear what the review would include.

“The ambiguity of language has always been able to help administrations like this because they really are the ones who get to define what the data is, how to turn over their data, and even what is social media,” Guariglia says.

The notice says the “mandatory” social media handover would be required to apply for the Electronic System for Travel Authorization, an existing program set up for visitors from countries that don’t require visas to enter the U.S. for less than 90 days. 

A total of 42 countries are currently on this list, mainly from Europe. Other World Cup participants like Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and Qatar are also on the list.

The current ESTA application, which costs $40, already requires travelers to enter their name, date of birth, and passport information, and answer questions about diseases, past visas, and criminal history. The designation lasts for two years.

In March, a French scientist was denied entry to the U.S. after immigration officers found criticism of the Trump Administration’s research cuts on his phone. In 2019, a Palestinian Harvard student from Lebanon was denied entry at the border after immigration officers found his friends had posted critically about the U.S. on social media, even though he told the officers he didn’t engage with their posts or make any political posts of his own.

In addition to five years of social media history, the new proposed applications would also ask for—“when feasible”—personal and business telephone numbers from the last five years, personal and business email addresses from the last 10 years, “IP addresses and metadata from electronically submitted photos,” biometric data including “face, fingerprint, DNA, and iris,” and the names, birth dates and locations, residences, and past five years of telephone numbers of the traveler’s family members.

All of this surveillance could bar or dissuade fans from attending the World Cup or coming to the United States at all.

“If you’re going to start disallowing people from coming on vacation to the United States because their politics might be a little bit left of center, the economy is going to be hit in a bad way,” Guariglia says. 

International tourism is already down across the U.S. this year and is expected to drop to 85% of 2019 levels, the U.S. Travel Association said in October. As of September, European travel to the United States had dropped by more than 10% compared to last year.

A spokesperson for CBP did not answer questions about the World Cup, but said in a statement: “Nothing has changed on this front for those coming to the United States. This is not a final rule, it is simply the first step in starting a discussion to have new policy options to keep the American people safe.”

FIFA did not respond to questions.

The State Department already began requiring applicants for certain types of visas including students to make their social media profiles public in June, and expanded that policy last week to soon include skilled workers and their dependents.

Given the current proposal, athletes and staff traveling for the World Cup would likely be exempt from the social media rules because they would enter the U.S. through a separate process than an ESTA application, such as a P-1A athlete visa, O-1 extraordinary ability visa, or similar work permit.

The Department of Homeland Security made exceptions for athletes, staff, and their immediate family members coming to the World Cup and other major sporting events from countries on Trump’s banned travel list, which includes tournament participants Haiti and Iran. Fans are not included in those exemptions.

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Christine Williamson Replacing Elle Duncan on ‘SportsCenter,’ ‘College GameDay’

ESPN Images

Christine Williamson is poised to succeed Elle Duncan in several marquee on-air positions at ESPN, the network confirmed Thursday. The news was first reported Wednesday night by Front Office Sports.

The veteran anchor will take over for Duncan as cohost of the 6 p.m. SportsCenter with Kevin Negandhi. Duncan’s final show is set for Dec. 16.

Meanwhile, Williamson will also succeed Duncan as lead host of ESPN’s women’s college basketball coverage on College GameDay. 

“Christine has earned these high-profile roles on two of our most important content areas—SportsCenter and women’s college basketball,” said Burke Magnus, ESPN’s president of content, in a statement. “Christine connects with fans through her energy, personality and knowledge of sports, and she’s proven throughout her ESPN career that she can anchor coverage at the highest level—both on SportsCenter and on the road with GameDay.”

Williamson currently cohosts the 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. editions of SportsCenter with Matt Barrie. It was not immediately known who would replace her on those shows.

Williamson joined ESPN in 2019 after working in digital media for Fox Sports, the Big 12 Network, and the Denver Broncos. 

FOS previously reported that Malika Andrews is the leading candidate to replace Duncan as the lead host of ESPN’s WNBA studio coverage. Duncan had established rapport with Andraya Carter and Chiney Ogwumike on the studio shows for both the WNBA and women’s college basketball. 

The Athletic first reported that Duncan is leaving ESPN to become the face of Netflix’s studio coverage of multiple sports. 

Duncan’s Netflix hire set off a “stampede” of job-seekers inside and outside Bristol seeking her three high-profile jobs, said sources. But with the pending promotions of Williamson and Andrews, it appears ESPN’s search is over. 

Meanwhile, Duncan is expected to serve in a Bob Costas–type role at Netflix, serving as the giant’s streamer host and gatekeeper to multisports coverage.

NFL Owners Vote to Spend $1 Million Per Team on New Flag League

Clayton Freeman/Florida Times-Union

Plans for an NFL-supported flag football league took a major step forward Wednesday, with teams voting to invest up to $32 million in total to support the “development and launch” of a pro flag league.

The vote, held virtually during a league meeting, gives 32 Equity—the NFL’s investment arm—the ability to “enter into an agreement with a partner” to operate the planned league. Approval was unanimous, a source familiar with the matter tells Front Office Sports. There are 32 NFL teams, so the $32 million total is equivalent to each team committing $1 million. 

Troy Vincent Sr., EVP of football operations for the NFL, said in Wednesday’s statement that the vote “represents a critical step in establishing flag football as a premier global sport.” 

“We are developing the infrastructure to accelerate the game’s growth to new heights by creating a clear pathway for aspiring athletes to progress from youth and high school programs through college and now to the professional level,” he added.

Flag football is having a moment. The NFL has been fielding inbound interest from partners for months, and it has been expected that the most likely structure would be an entity that the league supports, but doesn’t operate. A source familiar with the league’s thinking told FOS in May that there were “more than a dozen parties” still in the mix as potential partners. By October, that had narrowed to two, according to Bloomberg: TMRW Sports, the company founded by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy that launched indoor golf league TGL, and a group led by former NFL running back Curtis Martin that also includes former Bucks part-owner Marc Lasry.

A representative for the NFL told FOS Wednesday the league is “not commenting on specific partners at this stage, but there has been tremendous interest in the marketplace in developing a professional flag football league.”

The NFL’s planned push into flag football comes as the sport is gearing up for its Olympic debut during the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. In February, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the league was looking into starting both men’s and women’s pro flag leagues. A source familiar with the matter told FOS Wednesday there will be one league that features both men’s and women’s teams. The NFL also intends to sell media rights for the planned venture.

The league didn’t say when the new flag league might launch, although the expectation is it will begin play sometime after the 2028 Summer Olympics.

Earlier this month, the Jets committed $1 million to a new women’s college flag football venture from the Eastern College Athletic Conference that will begin play in February. That $1 million commitment was made via a grant from The Betty Wold Johnson Foundation—a philanthropic organization named for the mother of Jets owner Woody Johnson.

Participation in youth flag football is booming. The International Federation of American Football—the global governing body responsible for growing American football around the world—reported earlier this year that 2.4 million kids under 17 are playing organized flag football in the U.S., with millions more worldwide.

Overall, there are 20 million flag football players worldwide, the NFL said in Wednesday’s statement. The sport is offered at the high school level in 38 states, and “hundreds of colleges and universities” offer flag football, the league said.

Conversation Starters

  • The Sharks signed Justin Kowalkoski, a 39-year-old geologist who played college hockey for Colgate from 2005 to 2008, to an amateur tryout contract, and he is serving as San Jose’s backup goalie.
  • The top cornerback in Ohio’s 2027 recruiting class, Ace Alston, committed to Notre Dame by pouring himself a bowl of Lucky Charms cereal. Check it out.
  • Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman, fresh off a World Series win over the Blue Jays, got a chilly reception at SickKids in a new commercial for the Toronto hospital. See for yourself.

Question of the Day

Do you think fewer tourists would attend the World Cup due to the possible rule changes?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 6% of respondents think the Eagles will be featured in Super Bowl LX.

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Written by Margaret Fleming, Ryan Glasspiegel, Michael McCarthy, Ben Horney
Edited by Dennis Young, Katie Krzaczek, Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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