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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

May 21, 2026


The commissioners of the Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12 have all recently expressed support for the 24-team College Football Playoff model. Now, the decision rests with the SEC, which has its annual spring meetings next week, where the topic is expected to be a major focal point.

—Amanda Christovich

First Up

  • The Indiana Fever’s abrupt announcement that Caitlin Clark would miss Wednesday’s game against the Portland Fire with a back injury sparked confusion. Read the story.
  • Six senators raised concerns about the proposed merger of the parent companies of CBS Sports and TNT Sports. Read the story.
  • New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani announced Thursday that he negotiated 1,000 tickets from FIFA that will cost residents only $50 each. Read the story.
  • Lawmakers from both parties grilled witnesses from the sports betting and prediction-market industries about consumer safety and advertising to minors. Read the story.

SEC Holds the Cards to 24-Team College Football Playoff

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

When it comes to whether the College Football Playoff will expand to 24 teams, the SEC holds all the cards.

The commissioners of the Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12 have all recently expressed support for the 24-team model. Now, the decision rests with the SEC, which will convene for its annual spring meetings in Destin, Fla., next week, where the topic is expected to be a major agenda item.

All FBS leagues are theoretically entitled to provide input. But thanks to a memorandum of understanding signed in 2024, the SEC and Big Ten must agree on a format for expansion to take place.

So far, that hasn’t happened. Over the past year, Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti has been pushing for the 24-team model, while SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has held firm on 16 teams. Petitti’s idea has gained steam in recent weeks, as the ACC and Big 12 have come out in favor of it. 

The two biggest selling points for the 24-team model: access and revenue. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark, for example, said on the Big 12 Today podcast this week that he favored the concept for the extra opportunities for teams to participate in the postseason, and that he specifically believed the setup would benefit the Big 12. The model would also theoretically increase the media-rights revenue exponentially for all—including the Group of 6 conferences, who will receive significantly fewer annual distributions than those in the Power 4.

However, Sankey has continued to reiterate concerns about how an expanded Playoff might affect the regular season. One major question, for example, is whether conference title games—which bring in millions of dollars in revenue for multiple leagues—would be eliminated.

“At any level of expansion, there will be games that didn’t matter in a smaller number that now matter in a bigger number,” Sankey said earlier this month. “But there’s another side to that coin where the next-to-last weekend [of the regular season]—that, right now, is critically important—might not matter in the same way [in a 24-team Playoff].”

There are other scheduling considerations, too, including what an expanded Playoff model would mean for the future of the Army-Navy football game. President Donald Trump even signed an executive order in March to prevent early-round CFP games from coinciding with the matchup.

As of now, SEC coaches and ADs are split on the issue, according to a CBS Sports survey. But even if the group can reach a consensus next week in Destin, expansion wouldn’t take place immediately. ESPN, the main rights holder for the entire CFP, gave the league a Dec. 1 deadline to decide on expansion, which wouldn’t take place until 2027–28 at the earliest. 

The Big Ten, meanwhile, remains staunchly in favor of 24 teams—and is not in a rush to implement a plan before that Dec. 1 deadline. 

“If we have to wait, it’s O.K. We’ll wait,” Petitti said at Big Ten meetings this week.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

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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.

ONE BIG FIG

Controlled Substances

Aug 4, 2024; Paris, FRANCE; Noah Lyles (USA) defeats Kishane Thompson (JAM) and Fred Kerley (USA) to win the men's 100m final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Stade de France.

James Lang-Imagn Images

91%

The percentage of athletes participating in the Enhanced Games on May 24 who use testosterone or testosterone esters. Enhanced, the company administering the competition in Las Vegas, announced details about approved substance usage by athletes during a 12-week clinical trial period. The trial included 36 of the 42 athletes competing; of those 36 athletes, two are competing naturally. The competition, which has track and field, swimming, and weightlifting events, permits athletes to use legal performance‑enhancing drugs under medical supervision and offers prize money up to $1 million. The company also said 79% of athletes used human growth hormone and 62% of athletes used stimulants, such as Adderall, during the trial. 

LOUD AND CLEAR

Show Me the Money

French Open

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

“No, we are not going to change anything. We are going to initiate discussions and that is what everyone wants.”

—French Open tournament director Amélie Mauresmo told the media Thursday at Roland-Garros when asked whether prize money would change this year. Top tennis players have criticized the Open organizers for the players’ share of tournament revenue. 

The French Open’s prize pool for 2026 increased by $6.5 million to $72.3 million compared with 2025, which represents nearly 15% of the revenue the tournament is projected to earn. This is down from the 15.5% players said they earned in 2024. Players, including Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff, have threatened a potential boycott of Grand Slams if they continue to feel they aren’t being paid what they deserve. Players attending Friday’s opening press conference will walk out after 15 minutes in protest.

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STATUS REPORT

One Up, One Down, Two Push

Shiann Darkangelo (27) of Brighton plays for the Montreal Victoire during a PWHL game against the New York Siren on March 28, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena.

Daily Press and Argus

Montreal Victoire ⬆ The PWHL team won its first Walter Cup final Tuesday, defeating the Ottawa Charge 4–0 in Game 4. It’s the first Canadian team to win a title in the league’s third season, with head coach Kori Cheverie becoming the first female coach in league history to lift the Walter Cup. Captain Marie-Philip Poulin, a longtime staple of the Canadian national team, was named playoff MVP.

BYU ⬆⬇ The Big 12 university supports the NCAA’s proposed legislation to give athletes five years to complete their eligibility without redshirts, though there’s one caveat. AD Brian Santiago said a religious exemption to the redshirt rule was “super important” to the school, as several athletes playing for schools across Utah (including 56 players on BYU’s 2025 football team) went on missionary trips during college. The NCAA plans on making exceptions to the no-redshirt rule for religious missions, pregnancy, and military service. 

Apple TV ⬆⬇ The streaming service will broadcast its first game shot with an iPhone, as it will capture the entirety of Saturday’s LA Galaxy–Houston Dynamo MLS match on an iPhone 17 Pro. Apple TV is the official streaming service of MLS. iPhone camerawork was also incorporated in a September 2025 MLB game between the Red Sox and Tigers on Apple TV, but that included only select moments throughout the game.

Nolan Smith Jr. ⬇ The Eagles linebacker was arrested May 15 for driving 135 mph in a 70-mph zone in Georgia, with the arrest first reported by The Georgia Gazette. Smith, Philadelphia’s 2023 first-round draft pick and a part of its most recent Super Bowl roster, is set for a July 14 court date—though he doesn’t have to appear if he pays the proper fine. 

Editors’ Picks

How Jake Paul’s MVP Plans to Build on Successful Netflix MMA Debut

by Ryan Glasspiegel
Saturday’s debut averaged 12.4 million viewers on Netflix.

Ed Orgeron Returns to LSU After Years of Scandals

by Amanda Christovich
LSU fired Orgeron in 2021, two years after he won a national championship.

NHL Playoffs Deliver Record Second-Round Ratings for ESPN, TNT

by Eric Fisher
The Canadiens-Sabres series brought additional audience milestones.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Amanda Christovich
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Ben Axelrod, Catherine Chen

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