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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 29, 2026

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The NBA is floating a new draft lottery system that wouldn’t give the league’s worst teams the best odds at getting the top pick. Not everyone is happy with the latest proposal to crack down on tanking, with multiple league executives telling Front Office Sports the concept left them confused.

—Alex Schiffer

First Up

  • Adidas’s Q1 earnings handily beat analyst expectations, reporting 14% sales growth. Notably, it was the company’s first quarter free of Yeezy inventory. Read the story.
  • The Titans’ president of football operations stepped down, continuing a cycle of moves at the franchise that began with Mike Vrabel in 2024. Read the story.
  • After the NWSL tabled a vote on a calendar flip following opposition from players, the league said it will keep its spring-to-fall calendar through 2030. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: The Athletic’s top editor told staff communications about the Dianna Russini–Mike Vrabel saga could have been more clear. Read the story.

NBA Execs Question Latest Anti-Tanking Proposal: ‘Doesn’t Make Sense’

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

When in doubt, flatten the lottery odds further. 

That appears to be NBA commissioner Adam Silver’s approach as he prepares to present new anti-tanking proposals to the league’s owners next month, ahead of a vote to further curb the practice on May 28. 

“We are going to fix it,” Silver said of tanking in March. “Full stop.”

On Tuesday, ESPN reported that the NBA sent its 30 GMs a proposal for a “3-2-1 lottery.” The concept would expand the draft lottery from 14 teams to 16, flatten the lottery odds, and add a “relegation zone” that would give the three bottom teams worse lottery odds than the teams directly above them in the standings. The proposed system could be put in place as soon as next season.

To install a new system, Silver would need 23 owners to support the vote. ESPN reported that the “key points of the framework have a majority of the support from teams.” 

The “3-2-1 lottery” name stems from the number of lottery balls each group of teams would receive in the new system. Silver’s proposal also gives two more teams the chance to land the No. 1 pick. 

Teams that miss the playoffs and play-in tournament (but don’t finish with a bottom-three record) would each receive three lottery balls. The bottom three teams—the “relegation zone”—would get just two lottery balls but would also not pick lower than 12th. 

Play-in tournament teams that are the Nos. 9 and 10 seeds would receive two lottery balls apiece; teams in the game pitting the Nos. 7 and 8 seeds would each get one. The new system would also prevent a team from getting the No. 1 pick in consecutive years or top-five picks in three straight drafts. Teams also wouldn’t be able to protect their first-round picks in the Nos. 12 to 15 slots.

The new system would make it harder for the league’s worst teams—which arguably need a talent injection the most—to land a high pick. Multiple league executives told Front Office Sports that they have an issue with a system that gives the bottom three teams the same lottery odds as the Nos. 9 and 10 seeds. “That aspect doesn’t make sense to me,” one executive said. 

The “3-2-1 lottery” would be the league’s latest flattening of the draft odds, which has been its go-to remedy for tanking issues over the years. In the 1960s and ’70s, the top pick was determined by a coin toss between the worst teams in each conference. The league introduced the lottery in 1985 and has modified it four times since, most recently in 2019, when the NBA gave its lowest three teams each a 14% chance at securing the top pick. 

“I don’t necessarily think the changes we made over the last 40 years or so were necessarily wrong,” Silver said in March. “I think in some cases they worked for a period of time. Math is math. When we make those changes and change odds, you know exactly statistically where you’re going to come out. What’s changed is behavior around those odds.”

Silver’s proposal includes a sunset provision that would allow the “3-2-1 lottery” to expire after the 2029 draft, with the league’s owners either electing to continue the system or deciding on a new one. The league’s current CBA expires after the 2029–30 season. 

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EXCLUSIVE

Ian Rapoport, ESPN Finalizing Multiyear Deal

Feb 4, 2026; San Francisco, CA, USA; Ian Rapoport on the NFL Network set at the Super Bowl LX media center at the Moscone Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

ESPN is finalizing a deal to retain longtime NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport, sources told Front Office Sports.

ESPN completed its acquisition of NFL Network in an equity deal with the NFL earlier this year. Following the transaction, ESPN absorbed all of NFL Network’s contracted talent, with Rapoport being the first to agree on a new deal. Read the story. 

LOUD AND CLEAR

From BYU to the NBA

Mar 19, 2026; Portland, OR, USA; BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) dribbles against Texas Longhorns forward Dailyn Swain (3) in the second half during a first round game of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Moda Center.

Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

“The main thing is being able to play the game that I love, hopefully injury free.”

—AJ Dybantsa, the projected No. 1 NBA draft pick, on what he’s focusing on as he joins the pros. 

Dybantsa, who on Wednesday signed a multiyear deal with Nike, tells Front Office Sports he is setting his sights high, on big goals like winning Rookie of the Year, making multiple All-Star teams, being a multi-time All-NBA player, and winning championships. Read the story.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Hang Out in the Hamptons

Huddle in the Hamptons has earned its place as the season’s most coveted invitation: a sun-soaked gathering where the people shaping sports come to think, compete, and connect.

This July, Front Office Sports returns to the Hamptons for another quintessential summer Friday.

Set against one of the East Coast’s most storied summer backdrops, the day blends wellness, candid thought leadership, and the kind of unhurried relationship-building no formal meeting can replicate.

Because some of the most important deals in sports don’t start in the boardroom—they start here.

Want to join us out East? Request to attend.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Stephen Curry ⬆ The NBA star’s 75-shoe auction at Sotheby’s concluded Tuesday night, with his signed, game-worn pair of 2010 Nike Hyperdunk Christmas-themed PEs going for an auction-high $121,600. Auction proceeds—which totaled $1.7 million—will go to Eat. Learn. Play., the foundation created by Curry and his wife, Ayesha, to fight childhood hunger.

The CW ⬆⬇ The network’s sports events will exclusively stream on the ESPN app for ESPN Unlimited subscribers, including ACC, Pac-12, and Mountain West basketball, as well as the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. The ESPN Unlimited subscription, which launched in August 2025 and is separate from the cheaper $12.99-per-month ESPN+ subscription, costs $29.99 per month. 

Brewers ⬆ The MLB team donated an asphalt hotbox that’s being used to fill at least 5,016 potholes in Milwaukee. The city’s Department of Public Works says this hotbox allows them to fill potholes faster and make “stronger, longer-lasting repairs.” The number of Milwaukee pothole patch requests in the first three months of 2026 increased by 65% compared to the same time frame last year.

Lululemon ⬇ The athletic wear company’s founder, Chip Wilson, slammed the company’s new CEO selection, former Nike executive Heidi O’Neill, as out of touch and not reflective of what the brand needs. The fallout at Lululemon, whose stock is down 34% since January, comes at a time when competitors like Adidas are experiencing growth fueled in part by the performance category.

Editors’ Picks

NFL Draft Viewership Falls 12%, Averages 6.6M Over Three Days

by David Rumsey
Coverage across all networks averaged 6.6. million viewers.

Dusty May Says Unsigned Michigan Deal Is Just a ‘Formality’

by Alex Schiffer
May told FOS he won’t sign his new contract until July. 

From Sideline to Spotlight: Mike Vrabel Faces Celebrity Frenzy

by Michael McCarthy
Vrabel has been a tabloid fixture in recent weeks.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Alex Schiffer
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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