Read in Browser

Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

April 23, 2026

POWERED BY

A growing number of federal officials and politicians are raising issues with the NFL’s media strategy, with most criticism focused on an increasingly fragmented and expensive experience for consumers. Now, the league is beginning to mount its defense. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • The Royals have finalized plans for their $3B downtown stadium, but there are multiple large-scale twists in the MLB club’s updated ballpark plan. Read the story.
  • The Fever’s GM discussed the impact of the new WNBA CBA on the team’s roster construction, as 40% of their cap could be tied to two stars in 2027. Read the story.
  • Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear blasted recent decisions by University of Kentucky leadership, including a $1M salary for outgoing AD Mitch Barnhart. Read the story.
  • Steve Kerr’s contract with the Warriors is expiring, and sources told FOS he has been meeting with media agents. Read the story.

NFL Pushes Back As FCC Scrutiny of Media Strategy Grows

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

The NFL is beginning to mount its defense against increasing scrutiny from Washington officials about its media strategy.

Hans Schroeder, league EVP of media distribution, met with Federal Communications Commission officials in the nation’s capital last Friday, as he sought to allay concerns that the league’s growing embrace of streamers is creating an overly fragmented and expensive experience for consumers. 

There, Schroeder made a series of points as he defended the NFL’s antitrust exemption, according to league officials, including that it shows 87% of all its games on free, broadcast television. That figure rises to 100% for the competing teams’ home markets in each contest. 

The league also argued that having each team negotiate its own media rights, as opposed to the current pooled approach, would lead to far greater fragmentation and higher costs for consumers.

The NFL’s growing migration to streaming, meanwhile, is mirrored through sports media and is happening as those services continue to grow in size and traditional cable and satellite subscribers are in marked decline. Under the current model, the NFL last season had its best regular-season viewership since 1989.  

The NFL requested the meeting with the FCC, and there is no follow-up session currently scheduled, industry sources said. The session, however, signals that the league is not merely dismissing the federal inquiries. 

“I’m not sure there’s a single content owner, league, or otherwise that’s done more to support broadcast television than what we do,” Schroeder said at the NFL’s recent annual meeting in Arizona. “We’re very committed to broadcast. We always have been, and continue to be. It’s a tremendous way to reach fans, and our focus is on reach.”

Jamie Sabau-USA TODAY Sports

Questions Around Town

The FCC’s ongoing pressure on the NFL, and what chairman Brendan Carr sees as potential antitrust violations, is one of at least four major legislative and regulatory efforts percolating in Washington on this subject. Most recently, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D., Wisc.) introduced For The Fans Act, a bill that, if successful, would end regional blackouts on sports streaming subscriptions and require that all pro leagues provide free, live access to local games. 

The NFL already does the latter measure in the home markets of the competing teams in each game, but Baldwin’s bill aims to expand the concept to every other major league and on a state-level basis.

The U.S. Department of Justice, meanwhile, has also initiated a formal investigation into the NFL and whether the league uses anticompetitive tactics that harm consumers. 

The ongoing dialogue in Washington about the NFL is happening as the league is nearing a final decision on a five-game package of game rights. Interested parties in that inventory include prominent streamers Netflix and YouTube—something all but certain to continue the political dialogue. 

The Wall Street Journal initially reported the NFL’s meeting with the FCC.

SPONSORED BY TRAVEL TEXAS

Texas Beyond the Match

In Texas, the best moments often come after the final whistle. Match-day energy keeps flowing with bold flavors, lively patios, live music, and shops brimming with local charm, turning every game day into a celebration that lingers long after the final play. Gather with friends, relive the highlights, and soak in the electric atmosphere as the night carries on with laughter, great food, and unforgettable memories.

Explore your taste of Texas fun.

FOS NEWS

Big Cat on Wisconsin NIL, Barstool, and Bears

FOS Graphic

Barstool Sports has gone from getting laughed out of pitch meetings to landing deals with Netflix and Fox Sports in the span of a decade. Dan “Big Cat” Katz has been there for all of it, and he sat down with Front Office Sports to get into exactly how Barstool evolved from a scrappy independent operation to a content engine that the biggest names in streaming want to work with.

FOS’s Baker Machado asks how Barstool keeps producing breakout talent, what the future looks like for Big Cat, and where Diana Russini fits into the independent media landscape after leaving The Athletic. Plus his honest take on the Bears potentially moving to Indiana.

Watch the full interview.

Can you list the teams who have the top five picks in the 2026 NFL Draft in order?

Play Factle Sports

LOUD AND CLEAR

Cost of a Championship

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

“Our final number was closer to $15 million than $40 million.”

—Curt Cignetti on how much Indiana football spent on its title-winning roster. The coach was pushing back on recent comments from Alabama GM Courtney Morgan who, in an interview with FOS, speculated that other top programs are spending “probably more than $40 million.” 

Read the story.

Editors’ Picks

All 44 of Caitlin Clark’s Fever Games Will Be on National TV

by Ryan Glasspiegel
This season marks the first of the WNBA’s new rights deal.

NFL Draft’s Recent No. 1 QB Success Raises Stakes for Raiders

by Eric Fisher
A quarterback is expected to lead the draft for the fourth straight year.

Chelsea Fires Coach Less Than Four Months into Six-Year Contract

by Margaret Fleming
Liam Rosenior had a contract through 2032.

Question of the Day

Do you think the NFL's current media strategy hurts fans?

 YES   NO 
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Matthew Tabeek

If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here.

Update your preferences / Unsubscribe

Copyright © 2026 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016

Subscribe To Our Daily Newsletters

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.