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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

March 11, 2026

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Giants co-owner and chairman Steve Tisch and his siblings have asked the NFL whether they could transfer ownership to their children. Tisch plans to remain chairman of the board. The move comes after he appeared in the latest batch of documents released by the Justice Department related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

—Ben Horney

First Up

  • After an all-night meeting in Manhattan on Tuesday, the WNBA and players’ union weren’t able to reach an agreement on a new CBA. Read the story.
  • The NFL is considering airing a game the night before Thanksgiving in 2026. The move would add to the league’s tripleheader on Thanksgiving Day. Read the story.
  • Some people predicted the revenue-sharing era would change the power dynamics in college basketball. But the advantage for basketball-only schools hasn’t come. Read the story.
  • Iran’s sports minister said “under no circumstances” can his country’s men’s national soccer team participate in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Read the story.

Steve Tisch Passing Giants Stake to Children but Will Still Chair Board

Danielle Parhizkaran/NorthJersey.com

New York Giants co-owner and chairman Steve Tisch is giving up his shares in the NFL team after his close ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were recently revealed, but he will remain chairman of the board.

Tisch and his siblings, Laurie and Jonathan, have asked the league whether they could transfer ownership to their children’s trusts, according to an NFL memo obtained by Front Office Sports. 

ESPN first reported on the memo. 

The transfers would need to be approved by the league’s finance committee, the memo says.

The Tisch siblings will retain their front office roles with the Giants, a person familiar with the matter tells FOS. Steve is EVP and chairman of the board, Laurie is a board director, and Jonathan is the treasurer and a board director, according to the Giants’ website. The Tisch family has been involved with the Giants since the siblings’ father bought a 50% stake in the franchise from the Mara family in 1991. 

The families recently sold 10% of the team to Julia Koch and members of her billionaire family at a $10 billion valuation. Following that deal, the Tisch and Mara families each held 45% of the team. 

Portions of the siblings’ stakes have previously been transferred to the children’s trusts in 2023 and 2024, the memo says, and the elder Tisch siblings currently hold a total 23.1% stake in the team. Following the transfers, the siblings will “no longer own any interest in the club,” according to the memo.

The Tisch siblings are all in their 70s. Steve has had five children across two marriages; one of his daughters died in 2020. Laurie has two children, including Gotham FC owner Carolyn Tisch Blodgett. Jonathan has no publicly reported children; his wife, Lizzie Tisch, has a daughter from a previous marriage. The family’s billions come from the patriarch of the family, Bob Tisch, who acquired Loews Theatres in 1959 with his brother and built it into a massive diversified company that today has businesses in areas like insurance, energy, and packaging.

The news comes less than six weeks after emails between Steve Tisch and Epstein from 2013 were released as part of the U.S. Department of Justice’s latest batch of Epstein documents, as required under a law passed by Congress late last year. 

Some of the emails appeared to discuss Epstein connecting Tisch with women. There were also emails from women to Epstein reporting back about the encounters they supposedly had with Tisch.

Tisch appears in the Epstein files more than 400 times, including one exchange between the two men from May 2013, when Epstein wrote, “I can invite the [Russian] … to meet if you like,” with Tisch responding, “Is she fun?” 

In another set of emails, Tisch said to Epstein: “Is my present in NYC?” Epstein responded, “Yes.” Tisch then asked, “Can I get my surprise to take me to lunch tomorrow?”

When the emails were released, Tisch said in a statement that he and Epstein “had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy and investments. I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island. As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with.”

But the story hasn’t gone away. In 2012, Tufts University outside of Boston—where Tisch graduated from in 1971—opened a 42,000-square-foot facility called the Steve Tisch Sports and Fitness Center, which houses facilities for both general students and members of the Division III athletic program. Tisch had donated $13 million to the school.

When asked by FOS last month whether the university was considering renaming the building, a Tufts athletics spokesperson said: “The University is aware and monitoring the situation.” A representative for Tufts did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

Tisch’s bio on the Giants website also lists him as being a member of the board of trustees for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, a founding trustee of The Geffen Theatre in Los Angeles, and a member of the board of advisors for both the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and The Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke University. Representatives for those entities did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Tisch has also had a successful career in entertainment as an Oscar-winning producer. Films he has worked on include Risky Business and The Pursuit of Happyness. He received an Academy Award for producing Forrest Gump.

Tisch is not the only owner to come up in the Epstein files. A number of other major sports figures appear. Owners Todd Boehly and Josh Harris, for example, met with Epstein, the files show, while others are mentioned in conversations about real estate, such as the Dolphins’ Stephen Ross or Vikings’ Zygi Wilf. 

A photo of Mets owner Steve Cohen with a redacted person appears in the files. A spokesperson for Point72, Cohen’s hedge fund, denied that Cohen knew Epstein in a statement to FOS on Tuesday.

Epstein died in August 2019 while in federal custody on federal sex trafficking charges.

This is not the first time an NFL owner has passed control of the team to a family member amid a scandal. In 1998, former 49ers owner Edward J. DeBartolo Jr. transferred ownership of the franchise to his sister, Denise DeBartolo York, after he was recorded making a cash bribe to the governor of Louisiana. Edward DeBartolo was pardoned by President Donald Trump in 2020, during Trump’s first term.

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STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Mar 3, 2026; Louisville, Kentucky, USA; Syracuse Orange head coach Adrian Autry reacts during the second half against the Louisville Cardinals at KFC Yum! Center. Louisville defeated Syracuse 77-62.

Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images

Syracuse ⬇ Men’s basketball head coach Adrian Autry has been fired after failing to reach the NCAA tournament for the third consecutive season. Autry was the successor to Jim Boeheim, who reached the tournament in 35 of his 47 years at the helm of the Orange, winning the 2003 national championship. 

Matt Vasgersian ⬆ The MLB Network host will be on play-by-play duties for the first two games of MLB’s regular season. Vasgersian is expected to be on the call for Netflix’s Opening Night game between the Yankees and Giants on March 25, before quickly flying to New York to broadcast Pirates-Mets on NBC the following day. He will be joined by MLB Network teammate Lauren Shehadi on the broadcast for the Yankees-Giants game.

Matt Patricia ⬆ Ohio State’s defensive coordinator is the highest-paid assistant coach in college football. Patricia signed a three-year, $11.45 million contract extension with the Buckeyes and will earn $3.75 million in the first year of his deal. His salary is equivalent to that of a top-60 paid college football head coach.

Ka’imi Fairbairn ⬆ The Texans kicker has agreed to a two-year, $13 million extension, which will make him the highest-paid kicker in NFL history. Fairbairn converted 44 of 48 field goal attempts during the 2025–26 season, and he was perfect from inside 50 yards. Harrison Butker was previously the highest-paid kicker, earning $6.4 million annually.

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Loud and Clear

Disorder on the Court

Mar 10, 2026; Kansas City, MO, USA; BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) shoots the ball over Kansas State Wildcats forward Taj Manning (15) during the first half at T-Mobile Center.

William Purnell-Imagn Images

“It’s an eyesore, it’s constantly changing and stuff and flashing different kinds of lights.”

—Kansas State basketball player Taj Manning, after the Wildcats lost to BYU on Tuesday, about the LED floor at the Big 12 tournament. The new LED glass court being used for the Big 12’s basketball tournaments debuted to mixed reviews last week.

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DAILY TRIVIA

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Can you rank the top five highest-paid NHL players by average annual salary in the 2025–26 season?

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Written by Ben Horney
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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