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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 2, 2026

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When FIFA opened a “last-minute” World Cup ticket window, some tickets in the highest-tier seat category for the men’s tournament’s final eclipsed $10,000 for the first time. While not all tickets are that expensive, prices did rise across the board. 

—Margaret Fleming

First Up

  • Tickets to the Masters, already hard to get, are even more difficult to come by this year as Augusta National ramps up enforcement against reselling. Read the story.
  • MLB’s opening night game on Netflix averaged 3 million viewers, a strong start despite production issues and competition from March Madness. Read the story.
  • The NCAA is reviewing a set of proposed rule changes aimed at ​​fixing the issue of NBA draftees returning to college. Read the story.
  • The Trump Administration is suing three states for attempting to prohibit prediction-market platforms from offering sports-event contracts in their states. Read the story.

World Cup Final Tickets Cross $10,000 Mark

Yukihito Taguchi-Imagn Images

Want to see the World Cup final? Do you have $10,000 to spare?

One day after the six national teams secured the remaining spots in the World Cup, FIFA opened a “last-minute” ticket window Wednesday that listed the highest prices yet on the tournament’s official ticketing platform.

Tickets in the highest-tier seat category for the tournament’s final on July 19 in New Jersey eclipsed $10,000 for the first time. The most expensive ticket listed by FIFA was $10,990. The most expensive ticket for the 2022 final in Qatar went for around $1,600.

Ticket prices rose across the board. As costs for big matchups soared, tickets for matches featuring lower-ranked teams also reached several hundred dollars a pop. FIFA is using a dynamic pricing model for the first time at a World Cup, citing high demand and norms in the North American market.

This week’s rollout was the first time that FIFA opted for an open public ticketing model for the 2026 tournament instead of releasing tickets to smaller batches of fans selected in a lottery or through their supporters groups. With each release, prices for many matches have gone up.

On Thursday, fans waited for hours in the digital queue. FIFA in error sent some fans the wrong link, and they waited before realizing the mistake and jumping to the back of the proper line.

FIFA has delivered mixed messaging throughout the ticket process. President Gianni Infantino told CNBC in February: “Every match is already sold out. We keep some tickets back for some last-minute sales, of course, but every match is sold out.” Later that month, the global governing body emailed fans about a ticket window without telling them when it would be.

FIFA has said fans submitted more than 500 million ticket requests. But it’s still selling tickets, with high prices for games across the tournament.

World Cup tickets have been released in a number of windows since the fall, including a Visa presale in September, an early draw in October, another window in December and January, and the unexpected drop in February. The window opened Wednesday will remain in place through the end of the tournament.

The tickets made available for the final on Wednesday sold out. In addition to the nearly $11,000 Category 1 ticket, FIFA also included tickets for $7,380 and $5,785 for the next two lower tiers. Many knockout games saw price increases, as did the tournament opener in Mexico, which rose to nearly $3,000 for a Category 1 ticket, as well as several group-stage matches.

FIFA originally said that group-stage tickets would start at $60, and after backlash over their availability, opened up a $60 ticket tier routed to supporters through national federations. Even then, options were limited, with each federation getting only about 500 tickets at the $60 level per match.

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EXCLUSIVE

Talent Changes Coming to ESPN Radio

ESPN

Matt Jones and Myron Medcalf are the leading candidates to replace Clinton Yates on ESPN Radio, sources told Front Office Sports.

A deal has not been finalized, and negotiations are still ongoing, sources said. An ESPN spokesperson declined to comment.

Yates hosted Clinton & Friends on ESPN Radio, plus SiriusXM and the ESPN app, from 10 a.m. to noon ET, in between UnSportsmanLike and The Rich Eisen Show. His final day with the network was last Friday. Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Crooks on the Move

The Ames Tribune

“I still believe the grass is greener where you water it, and I’ve done that here.”

—Iowa State center Audi Crooks in an Instagram post announcing she is entering the transfer portal. Crooks, the No. 2 leading scorer in Division I during the 2025–26 season, said she wants to “explore what it means to take root again in new ground.” While Crooks would be eligible for the upcoming WNBA draft, her message appeared to indicate her intention to play another college season. 

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Game-Day Eats: A Taste of Texas

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Get your Texas fix.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Jan 4, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins (18) throws a pass against the New Orleans Saints in the first quarter at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Kirk Cousins ⬆ The veteran NFL quarterback will sign a deal with the Raiders that guarantees him $20 million in 2026, per ESPN insider Adam Schefter. Cousins spent his past two seasons with the Falcons before being released in March, halfway through his four-year contract. He served as a backup to Michael Penix Jr. for most of the 2025 season, but started the final six games after Penix went down with an injury. In addition to signing Cousins, Las Vegas is expected to select Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza as the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming 2026 NFL Draft.

Chinese Basketball Association ⬆ American rapper J. Cole will be joining the league’s Nanjing Monkey Kings, ESPN reported Wednesday. This marks the third basketball league Cole has joined, as he previously played for the Canadian Elite Basketball League’s Scarborough Shooting Stars in 2022 and the Basketball Africa League’s Patriots in 2021. 

Alpine fans ⬇ The Formula One team issued an open letter on Instagram to its fans “condemning any hateful behaviour, abuse, threats or bullying online.” The team cited hateful messages aimed at driver Franco Colapinto after his P16 finish in Japan and Haas driver Esteban Ocon, an ex-Alpine driver, following a collision with Colapinto at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Iga Świątek ⬆⬇ The Polish tennis star hired Francisco Roig, former coach of Rafael Nadal, as her new coach Thursday. Świątek parted ways with her coach, Wim Fissette, after the Miami Open following a stretch of early-round tournament losses this season. The six-time Grand Slam champion has undergone two coaching changes since October 2024, amid a turbulent stretch of her career that included a one-month doping suspension, a yearlong title drought, and the 2025 Wimbledon title. 

Editors’ Picks

Amazon Drags the Masters Into the Streaming Era

by David Rumsey
Prime Video’s coverage means more streaming, viewing hours, and on-air talent.

Polymarket’s Sports Push Continues With LaLiga Deal

by Margaret Fleming and Ben Horney
LaLiga is the latest in a series of sports deals for Polymarket.

Magic Johnson Escapes NFT Investment Scheme Lawsuit

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The two sides have reached an “amicable resolution.”
DAILY TRIVIA

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Written by Margaret Fleming
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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