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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

March 20, 2026

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NIL enforcement is underway, and emails obtained by Front Office Sports show how the first investigations are playing out. At Texas A&M, officials raised concerns about a lack of transparency as the inquiry unfolded. 

—Amanda Christovich

First Up

  • The World Baseball Classic capped a breakout tournament with a record 10.78 million viewers for the Venezuela-U.S. title game. Read the story.
  • Former NBA guard Patty Mills is helping Hawai‘i’s NCAA tournament run as a rare player-turned-college GM. Read the story.
  • Sports bars across the U.S. will have to switch to streaming as NFL Sunday Ticket leaves DirecTV for commercial distribution. Read the story.
  • The Bucks and Giannis Antetokounmpo are at odds over shutting him down, adding to the NBA’s growing tanking concerns. Read the story.

Texas A&M Athlete Targeted in First NIL Investigations, Emails Show

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At least one athlete at Texas A&M was among those investigated by the new college sports enforcement entity, according to emails obtained by Front Office Sports through a public records request.

The College Sports Commission was created in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement to enforce the new revenue-sharing cap, roster limits, and NIL restrictions—which require all Division I athletes to submit deals over $600 for approval to a system called NIL Go; the CSC would then scrutinize them to ensure they offer fair-market value for a valid business purpose, rather than serve as pay-for-play in disguise. 

Earlier this year, the CSC began its first wave of “investigations” into NIL rules violations. The CSC’s initial round of investigations related to alleged unreported deals. 

On Jan. 15, CSC head of investigations Katie Medearis sent an email to Texas A&M director of athletics Trev Alberts informing him of an investigation into whether “a member of one of your institution’s sports teams failed to report one or more third-party Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals in accordance with applicable rules,” the emails show. The email thread shows that several athletic department officials scheduled a call with CSC officials; a separate internal email chain details complaints from athletic department officials regarding a lack of transparency in the CSC’s process. 

“We can confirm the CSC inquiry and have been informed that the answers provided were satisfactory,” a Texas A&M spokesperson said in a statement to FOS.

“The CSC regularly reaches out to schools to inform them of investigations,” a CSC spokesperson told FOS. “We have no further comment.”

The CSC has reached out to several schools across the power conferences; FOS has obtained records for LSU, Nebraska, and Oregon. Athletes at Kansas were also reportedly the subject of inquiries. In multiple cases, these deals have been resolved. 

The emails obtained by Texas A&M follow a pattern of those obtained by FOS at Nebraska and Oregon.

Also on Jan. 15, Medearis sent emails to various other schools’ athletic directors, informing them that the CSC was opening an investigation into a player or players for potentially unreported NIL deals. Then, Medearis would ask to set up a call with athletic department officials. In the cases of Nebraska and Oregon, the CSC and school officials worked together after this call to ensure players had submitted all requisite deal information, rather than issuing punishments. 

Transparency Questions

The Texas A&M emails also revealed that the CSC was cagey about the details of the inquiries before speaking with athletic department officials, marking a departure from the NCAA’s process. 

“I really wish they would at least let us know WHO and WHAT TEAM they’re talking about so that this meeting would be more productive rather than us coming in flat-footed,” wrote Brad Barnes, Texas A&M’s executive associate athletics director for compliance and risk management, to Alberts and Jamie Vaughn, the executive associate AD for internal operations of men’s basketball and football. “FWIW, I’ve asked the SEC what we can expect from these calls and if there’s anyway we can learn WHO they’re inquiring into ahead of time. In NCAA investigations, they give us notice of inquiry at some level of specificity, and in this it would seem we’re getting nothing until the call.”

Subsequent emails from Barnes also guessed at the basis for the CSC’s investigations. 

Zac Phillips, Texas A&M’s senior associate athletic director for NIL strategy and development, wrote to Barnes, Vaughn, and Alberts: “I’m interested to see if it’s based on research (like you said Brad – scouring social media, internet, etc.) for NIL activations that were possibly an activation that was part of the pre-July 1st stuff. I’m sure they are having trouble with that in terms of whether or not a student-athlete received new money or not and therefore the obligation to report.”

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Future Flexibility

Apr 24, 2025; Green Bay, WI, USA; The Atlanta Falcons logo is projected on the video board during the NFL Draft at Lambeau Field.

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5

That’s how many years into the future NFL teams could trade draft picks if owners approve a new proposal at the league’s annual meeting later this month—up from the current three-year limit.

The change, put forward by the Browns, would give GMs more tools to reshape rosters and manage the salary cap, especially as player salaries and the NFL’s $301.2 million cap continue to rise. It could also accelerate a trend already underway, with more draft picks being moved in trades across the league. Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

History Repeating?

Jan 7, 2024; Detroit, Michigan, USA; A fans holds up a sign mocking the refs during second quarter of the game between the Detroit Lions and the Minnesota Vikings at Ford Field.

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“Frankly, I’m surprised they would even consider it after 2012.”

—Scott Green, executive director of the NFL Referees Association, on the league potentially using replacement officials again.

The NFL is preparing contingency plans for replacement referees if a new labor deal isn’t reached before the current CBA expires in May—raising the possibility of a repeat of the league’s chaotic 2012 lockout. That season was marked by widespread officiating issues, most notably the infamous “Fail Mary” game, and remains a cautionary tale as the league weighs its next move. Read the story.

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College Athletes ‘Are Workers’

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The debate over whether college athletes should be considered employees is gaining momentum—and some legal experts say the answer is already clear.

A former executive from the National Labor Relations Board argues that college athletes meet the legal definition of workers and should therefore have the right to unionize. The reasoning: Athletes provide services that generate billions of dollars for universities and conferences while operating under significant control from their programs.

If athletes ultimately gain employee status, it could dramatically reshape the business of college athletics—introducing collective bargaining, labor protections, and a fundamentally different relationship between players and universities.

Check out the college sports content hub, presented by Invesco QQQ, to read the full story and stay up to date on all things college athletics.

FOS NEWS

Sonics Comeback Watch

FOS graphic

Front Office Sports reporter Alex Schiffer has the latest on the NBA’s planned expansion and the potential return of the SuperSonics. The NBA is expected to vote at next week’s Board of Governors meeting to start exploring expansion teams in Seattle and Las Vegas. If approved, both franchises could begin play as early as the 2028–29 season. 

The expansion fee being discussed is $7 billion. Names connected to the Kraken are expected to make a bid for the Seattle franchise, while potential bidders for the Vegas team are unknown. Schiffer also discusses potential conference realignment, along with global expansion plans in Europe and Africa. Watch the full video. 

FOS Exclusives

MLB Makes Multiyear Prediction-Market Deal With Polymarket

by Ben Horney
The league’s stance on prediction markets has rapidly evolved.

Noah Eagle, Michael Grady, Zora Stephenson to Call WNBA on NBC

by Ryan Glasspiegel
WNBA games are returning to NBC for the first time since 2002.

Orel Hershiser, Luis Gonzalez Join NBC MLB Opening Day Coverage

by Michael McCarthy
The World Series legends will join Jason Benetti in the broadcast booth.

Question of the Day

Do you think NIL enforcement should be stricter?

 YES   NO 

Thursday’s result: 84% of respondents think the WNBA players got a fair deal in the tentative new CBA.

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Written by Amanda Christovich
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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