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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Sunday Edition

March 8, 2026

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Tennis players are sick of backstage cameras catching their post-match meltdowns. February’s ATX Open in Austin went viral for adding a potential solution: a private outburst zone called the “Rage Room.” I’m at Indian Wells, the unofficial fifth Grand Slam, asking players whether they’d use the room to rage.

—Colin Salao

FOS at Indian Wells

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  • Alex Eala, the 20-year-old Filipina, is on the cusp of global stardom with a single Grand Slam match win under her belt. Read the story.
  • There’s a reason why tennis tournaments are increasingly turning to mixed doubles—fans want to see stars. Read the story.
  • Columbia University senior Michael Zheng wasn’t sure he could able to collect his $150,000 Australian Open payday under NCAA rules. Now, he’s walking away with the cash. Read the story.

The ‘Rage Room’ Is the Hottest Place in Tennis

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Coco Gauff thought nobody could see her.

The 21-year-old star had just lost in straight sets at the Australian Open, and she had some frustrations to unload. The target was a classic: her racket, which she smashed against a ramp repeatedly until it was gnarled and unusable. But the entire thing was broadcast on ESPN seconds later, taking Gauff aback.

“Certain moments … I feel like they don’t need to broadcast,” Gauff said after the incident. “I tried to go somewhere where I thought there wasn’t a camera because I don’t necessarily like breaking rackets.”

Shortly afterward, U.S. tennis players Jessica Pegula, Madison Keys, Jennifer Brady, and Desirae Krawczyk discussed the backstage cameras at the Australian Open on their podcast, The Player’s Box. 

“They should just set up a room, like a rage room, and you just hit stuff,” Pegula said with a laugh. Keys, the 2025 Australian Open champion, advocated for additional private areas. “Maybe we can talk to tournaments about it: secluded, private, post-match loss meltdown rooms.” Keys said on the Feb. 3 episode.

At least one tennis tournament was listening, and the idea is catching on. 

The WTA 250 event in Austin launched the “Rage Room” last week, a designated area without cameras where they said players are free to “privately express frustration or emotion in a safe, camera-free environment.” In other words, a place to throw a temper tantrum without risk of judgment.

Front Office Sports asked several players about the concept at Indian Wells this week; they were unanimously in favor of it.

“I should book one of those and actually like break plates and stuff, that would be probably more fun than a racket,” Gauff said.

Women’s world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka called it a “cool” idea, and joked that “there will be nothing to destroy” after she uses the room. “I would be there the whole day.” (Sabalenka had her own infamous racket smash caught on a backstage camera following a loss at the 2023 US Open final.)

Men’s world No. 8 Ben Shelton had not heard of the Rage Room when asked about it at Indian Wells, but he said he’d “probably” use the room if it was available. “Yeah, I’ve got some anger, for sure,” he told FOS.

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

And Pegula confirmed the ATX Open got the idea from her directly.

“The tournament director emailed me and was like, ‘Hey, we have this Rage Room idea from your podcast. Are you interested?’” Pegula told FOS in an interview. Pegula, a member of the WTA Players’ Council who was recently named chair of the Tour Architecture Council, said this somewhat shows that tournament officials are “listening to the players.”

The women’s world No. 5 player was a last-minute withdrawal from the ATX Open, which she won last year, after winning the Dubai Tennis Championships, a WTA 1000 event, days before the Texas tournament.

“Unfortunately, I pulled out of Austin, so I didn’t really experience [the Rage Room], which is probably a good thing,” Pegula said while laughing.

The tournament’s Instagram post of the room appeared to be from inside a tent and showed a poster that read “DON’T SMILE” with a broken racket. It’s unclear whether anyone took advantage of it.

The tournament did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

When Gauff first heard that Austin had a “Rage Room,” she assumed it was fake. “My mom sent it to me, and I told her it was AI. She believes so many AI things.”

Upon finding out the room was the real deal, Gauff said she’d “definitely” use it. 

“They have ones, I think here,” Gauff said in response to a question by FOS. A BNP Paribas Open representative told FOS the tournament does not have an official “Rage Room.” But because the event is not broadcast by ESPN, there are fewer cameras and more quiet areas for players.

Former women’s world No. 3 Maria Sakkari told FOS she’s never broken a racket after a match, but she has other emotions she prefers not to be televised. “You always want to have a little space to maybe either cry or just sit on your own or have a chat with your team. You’re always worried to have cameras around.”

Dr. Teresa Fletcher, program director at Adler University’s Sport and Human Performance program, says the concept would be a welcome addition to the tour.

“Rage is not the only strong emotion they have to use that room,” Fletcher said. “It might be just extreme sadness, and they just break down and cry.”

Though regardless of the room’s name or primary purpose, Fletcher said it’s “healthy” for athletes to have a place away from the spotlight to immediately release their intense emotions.

“Every reaction is kind of normal, right? We feel what we feel when we feel it,” Fletcher said. “These young athletes are trying to be healthy in an environment that’s not conducive to wellness. The last thing we need to do is judge somebody for taking care of themselves.”

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FOS on Golf

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TGL

  • Indoor team golf league TGL is wrapping its second highly eventful season, which included a hole-in-one, and is looking toward expansion. Read the story.
  • Three players ranked inside the Official World Golf Ranking’s top 20 don’t have apparel partnerships, so they’re dabbling in different brands, including upstarts. Read the story.
  • Neal Shipley has learned a lot in his first season as a full-time PGA Tour member, after rising to fame by playing with Tiger Woods and becoming a Netflix star. Read the story.

Inside President Trump’s Roundtable on College Sports

Saving College Sports White House roundtable

Amanda Christovich/Front Office Sports

FOS reporter Amanda Christovich was at President Trump’s “Saving College Sports” roundtable Friday at the White House, where Trump announced that he would write and sign a second executive order regarding college sports within one week.

“The executive order is going to let colleges survive and players survive,” Trump said at the conclusion of the two-hour-long event in the East Room.

Trump tasked New York Yankees president Randy Levine, who served as a vice chair of the event, with putting together a smaller group to make recommendations on the contents of the executive action itself. At the same time, he told House Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) that he could continue with his efforts to bring the beleaguered SCORE Act—the subject of much of the event’s discussion—to the floor of the House of Representatives for a vote. Johnson said he believes he currently has the votes to get the bill through the House.

Read Amanda’s dispatch from the White House.

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Written by Colin Salao
Edited by Dennis Young, Catherine Chen, Meredith Turits

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