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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

May 13, 2026


The upcoming Super Bowl LXI, set for SoFi Stadium, played a starring role in Disney’s upfront presentation to advertisers Tuesday in New York—as did NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who made an onstage appearance. It will be Disney-owned ESPN’s first Super Bowl, and even for a network not known for doing anything in half-measures, the NFL title game is commanding massive focus across the company. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • About a week after announcing Detroit as another expansion market for the 2026–27 season, the PWHL said it’s also adding a Las Vegas team. Read the story.
  • There was an unavoidable trend during upfront week in New York: legacy TV networks getting additional NFL broadcasts. Read the story.
  • With a month left until the World Cup kicks off in NFL stadiums across the U.S., the NFL Players Association is reigniting its war on turf. Read the story.
  • Under Armour reported a 1% drop in revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter, as the brand still works through a long-running turnaround effort. Read the story.

Super Bowl LXI Gets the Star Treatment at Disney Upfronts

Mike Blake/Reuters via Imagn Images

ESPN’s first Super Bowl, happening in February 2027, is predictably getting super treatment by the network—and then some.

The upcoming Super Bowl LXI, set for SoFi Stadium, was a central element of parent company Disney’s upfront presentation to advertisers late Tuesday in New York. Even for a network rarely known for doing anything in half-measures, the NFL title game is commanding heightened focus across the company. 

Among the Super Bowl–related elements of the upfront event:

  • NFL commissioner Roger Goodell made an onstage appearance for the network—something he hasn’t done for the league’s other rights holders, even as they’ve gained additional game broadcast windows. Goodell and Monday Night Football announcer Joe Buck also heralded the large-scale equity deal that closed earlier this year and saw the NFL become an ESPN investor, while ESPN now oversees the NFL RedZone distribution and merged the NFL’s fantasy football operations with its own. 
  • ESPN is developing an “expansive beachfront broadcast center” at the famed Santa Monica Pier near Los Angeles. The effort, also described as a “state-of-the-art content home” will serve as both a site of several Super Bowl–related shows and a fan destination during the week leading up to the Feb. 14 game. ESPN trumpeted the effort with an onstage appearance by a large collection of Super Bowl Most Valuable Players, including Peyton and Eli Manning, Steve Young, Emmitt Smith, and Jerry Rice, among others. 
  • “With the 61st pick of the Super Bowl, the NFL selects ESPN,” Goodell said, mimicking his typical podium cadence from the NFL Draft. 

These latest efforts supplement the existing corporate focus on the upcoming Super Bowl—something that deeply involves Disney’s entertainment and experiences divisions. 

Far From an Ordinary Event

Beyond this initial opportunity for ESPN to fully integrate itself with the biggest event in sports, the stakes around Super Bowl LXI are massive. Super Bowl LX in February averaged 125.6 million viewers, just missing a U.S. television industry record set in 2025. The opportunity for a new milestone, however, is wide open between the combined distribution of the upcoming game on ESPN, sister broadcast network ABC, and several Disney digital properties, and the likely arrival this fall of an enhanced methodology from Nielsen for measuring co-viewing.

Along similar lines, ESPN reporter and host Laura Rutledge said onstage that she expects Super Bowl LXI to be the most-watched Super Bowl ever. 

Disney’s initial ask for Super Bowl advertising, meanwhile, has reportedly hovered around $10 million per 30 seconds, shattering prior marks for the game. There has been pushback to that, but even with some retreat on pricing, a series of records is likely to be set there, too. The initial work toward that will happen this week as media giants such as Disney make their upfront pitches to advertisers. 

Earlier Tuesday, ESPN also unveiled its first matchup next season on MNF, a Broncos-Chiefs clash that could mark the return of injured Kansas City star quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Meanwhile, ESPN additionally said at the upfront that the NFL Network will carry a Week 9 international game from Madrid involving the Bengals and Falcons. 

The upfront was also the first since Disney CEO Josh D’Amaro began his new role in March, and closely follows last week’s quarterly earnings report that detailed some near-term choppiness for ESPN. 

DON’T MISS A BEAT

FOS NEWS

The Sports Competition Where Doping Is Legal

FOS graphic

With its first event set for May 24, the Enhanced Games are built on one radical idea: Athletes should be allowed to use performance-enhancing substances in a safe and supervised environment.

CEO Max Martin joined Front Office Sports on the day the company went public to explain how they got here and what comes next. The games take place Memorial Day weekend in Las Vegas with 2,500 invite-only spectators and a $25 million prize pool for 50 athletes. Athletes can compete clean or enhanced, and the question of how much each athlete discloses about what they are taking, and how that transparency actually works in practice, is one of the more complicated questions the Enhanced Games has had to answer. Watch the full interview.

Daily sports trivia: Can you rank the top five NHL players by the most shots on goal in the 2025–26 regular season?

Play Factle Sports
ONE BIG FIG

Premium Pricing

On sneakers

On Holdings

$1.06 billion

On’s net sales for the first quarter of 2026. The Swiss sportswear company said Tuesday it increased sales by 14.5%, marking the first time it exceeded 800 million Swiss francs, or about $1 billion in quarterly net sales. (Net sales a year ago were about $929.4 million.) In its earnings report, management raised its full-year 2026 margin outlook, calling for a gross margin of at least 64.5%, “materially ahead of 2025 despite additional headwinds from tariffs,” the company said. On sneakers typically sell for about $160 and up to $280 for running shoes specifically designed to be worn for marathons. Consumers are “willing to trade up,” a company executive said on the earnings call.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Game-Day Spirit

Levy Restaurants

“As these tournaments become higher profile, you want to be seen. So what do you want to be seen holding?” 

—Sandeep Satish, chief commercial officer of food and hospitality company Levy Restaurants, tells Front Office Sports about the rise of the signature cup. Satish’s company handles concessions for the US Open. The cup-as-collectible trend follows the signature cocktail craze, the most famous of which has been the Honey Deuce, first sold at the US Open in 2007. Read the story.

Editors’ Picks

How Tom Brady Won the Upfronts for Fox

by Michael McCarthy
Fox’s lead NFL analyst is also a corporate ambassador for the network.

Another Summer of LeBron Is Here

by Alex Schiffer
James is not under contract for next season.

NFL Honors Expected to Move to Netflix

by Ryan Glasspiegel
The NFL’s annual awards show is moving to streaming.

Question of the Day

Do you think Super Bowl LXI will break viewership records?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 18% of respondents said they’ve tried buying 2026 World Cup tickets.

Events Video Games Shop
Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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