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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

June 16, 2026

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Iran’s national team had to fly out of the U.S. immediately after its Monday night match against New Zealand in Los Angeles. The players boarded a flight back to their base camp in Tijuana, Mexico, just hours after the match ended, rather than spending the night in California to recover. Team captain Mehdi Taremi said “everything is like a disaster” for the team.

—Margaret Fleming

First Up

  • Major League Baseball has cautioned players against writing on their caps after several Giants pitchers wrote Bible verses on their Pride Night hats. Read the story.
  • An amended version of the Protect College Sports Act likely won’t garner support from the Big Ten or SEC. Read the story.
  • Serena and Venus Williams will play doubles at Wimbledon after receiving a wild-card entry. The sisters have won six Wimbledon doubles titles together. Read the story.
  • Brendan Sorsby’s decision to enter the NFL supplemental draft brings unprecedented intrigue. Read the story.

‘Most Oppressed’: Iran Blasts FIFA After World Cup Opener

REUTERS/Matthew Childs

After months of anticipation, Iran’s national team played in the World Cup on Monday night in Los Angeles.

Iran tied with New Zealand 2–2, the fourth draw of the day, a rarity that has happened only once before in the World Cup in 1958.

Just hours after the final whistle, the players boarded a flight back to their base camp in Tijuana, Mexico.

“They didn’t even give us time to recover,” coach Amir Ghalenoei said through an interpreter following the match. “After the game today, they said to us, ‘You have to leave immediately.’ It’s very important for us to have time for recovery, [but] we are asked to get on a plane and return to our camp in Tijuana, and we are really troubled by that.”

Ghalenoei said “our team is perhaps the most oppressed” in the tournament.

After Monday’s match, Iran captain Mehdi Taremi said he thinks “FIFA have to help us more than this” because “everything is like a disaster” for the team.

“It’s so bad and it’s affecting our team, and we just want peace, which is the standards of FIFA,” Taremi said. “We don’t follow the excuse, we’re just looking forward. We’re having hope for the next two games, and we will do our best for our people and we bring the joy for our supporters.”

Ghalenoei confirmed many of Iran’s substitutions in the match weren’t made for “technical reasons,” but because players developed cramps that he blamed on the travel schedule. Iran was only allowed to enter the U.S. on Sunday, and had to leave immediately following the match despite wanting to stay another night. Taremi said the team’s journey from Tijuana to Los Angeles took five hours.

“We were clear this was the process,” Trump Administration World Cup czar Andrew Giuliani told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

REUTERS/Matthew Childs

More than a dozen team staffers and federation leaders from Iran’s traveling party, including federation president Mehdi Taj, were denied entry into the U.S. Those officials watched the match from Mexico. One player, Mehdi Torabi, was only given a single-entry visa, and the federation is trying to get him a new one so he can join the team for upcoming matches.

Iran initially chose to train in Tucson, Arizona, during the World Cup, but just weeks after that announcement went public, the U.S. and Israel launched joint attacks on Iran on Feb. 28 that threw the team’s participation into question.

The back-and-forth carried on for months. FIFA repeatedly stated it wanted all qualified teams to participate. Iranian officials delivered seemingly contradictory statements. The most fluid stance came from U.S. President Donald Trump, who said he didn’t care if Iran participated, but after a meeting with FIFA supposedly said they would be welcome, then said he couldn’t guarantee the players’ “life and safety.”

FIFA denied Iran’s request to move its matches to Mexico, but it allowed the federation to have its base camp in Tijuana. The federation said it requested the move, but Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said the U.S. didn’t want the Iranian team staying overnight in the country.

Iran next faces Belgium in Los Angeles on June 21, then squares off against Egypt in FIFA’s Pride Match in Seattle on June 26.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino visited the team in the locker room after the match. “I know what you go through, I understand, but you are stronger than everything,” he told the players through a translator.

“I’m very happy we managed to get Iran to come and play in the World Cup and I’m proud of the work of my team and grateful to the administrations of the three host countries for having cooperated with us to make this happen,” Infantino told reporters in his opening press conference last week.

Flag Controversy

Ahead of the tournament, FIFA banned pre-revolutionary Iranian flags, viewing them as a political statement. FIFA’s official stance was that it wanted only flags of its member associations, and the current Iranian flag is used by the soccer federation. Earlier Monday, a judge ruled that FIFA’s ban could stand.

The old flag, which features a lion and a sun, is a symbol of protest for some in the Iranian diaspora—particularly supporters of the previous monarchy—which is heavily concentrated in Southern California.

Despite FIFA’s ban, the lion and sun flags were everywhere at Monday’s match. Some posts on social media claimed security removed flags from the stands, but the flags were still seen all over the stadium. FIFA did not respond to questions about the flags and its strategy going forward.

Before the game, hundreds of people protested against the current leadership in Tehran as well as the team, waving the lion and sun flag outside of the stadium.

SPONSORED BY STATE STREET INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SPY

Building Endurance Beyond the Court

As the best of women’s basketball convene in Chicago for the 2026 WNBA All-Star weekend, Front Office Sports will gather executives, athletes, and changemakers for an afternoon of conversation and connection exploring the future of the game and the business behind it.

Join us July 24 for Future of Sports: Investing in Athletes, presented by State Street Investment Management SPY. 

This intimate event will feature thought-leadership discussions with league leaders, athletes, and financial decision-makers exploring the strategic moves fueling the growth of both major leagues and individual athletes—and how athletes are building long-term wealth, influence, and opportunity beyond the court through the support of financial advisers, investment partners, and others. 

Space is limited. Request to attend for a chance to be in the room.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Scotland’s World Cup Dad

Scottish world cup fans

Courtesy of Mike Morrison

“I looked at them from my car and kind of just pointed, and they pointed right back at me. They motioned me over and it was just hugs and slaps on the back and ‘come in for a beer’ right away.” 

—Mike Morrison, the “suburban dad” who went viral after befriending a group of six Scottish soccer supporters who were staying at the Airbnb across the street from his Boston-area home. 

Morrison told Front Office Sports he couldn’t join the group for a drink, as he was headed to work, but he invited the whole crew over for a hangover-curing sausage breakfast the next morning—to which the World Cup tourists arrived bearing gifts for Morrison’s wife and children, including hats, candy, and a Scottish flag that now hangs outside the family’s home. Read the story. 

FOS NEWS

Building a WNBA Expansion Team From Scratch

FOS graphic

In the team’s inaugural season, Portland Fire GM Vanja Černivec is already thinking about the playoffs.

Černivec joined Front Office Sports to discuss how the team got off to such a strong start. She also shared what it was like to build the Fire roster under extreme CBA timeline pressure, why she doesn’t believe in copying and pasting from the Valkyries model, Portland as an emerging epicenter of women’s sports, and more. 

Watch the full interview. 

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Last Week in L.A.

Last Thursday, Front Office Sports joined forces with EY Consulting to bring together 100 leaders across sports and technology for a conversation on modern fandom.

The discussion explored how purpose-driven fandom, AI-powered personalization, and real-time infrastructure are reshaping the fan experience. Speakers shared insights on creating emotional connections at scale, designing seamless experiences across every touchpoint, and turning fleeting moments into lasting relationships.

Learn more about the event or sign up for future event updates.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Jun 3, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; New York Knicks forward Og Anunoby (8) shoots the ball against the San Antonio Spurs during game one of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center.

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

OG Anunoby ⬆ The Knicks forward is having an exceptionally good week. After helping his team win its first NBA title since 1973 on Saturday, Skechers announced Anunoby will receive his own signature shoe. He’s the first NBA player to win a championship while sporting the brand. (Joel Embiid is the only other active NBA player with a Skechers signature shoe deal. His shoe, the SKX JE1, was released in December 2025.)

New Zealand soccer ⬆ The New Zealand national team finished with a 2–2 draw in its opening match against Iran yesterday, but All Whites defender Tyler Bindon made history when he stepped on the pitch. His mother, Jenny Bindon, represented New Zealand at the 2007 and 2011 Women’s World Cups. The pair are now the first mother-and-son duo to play in World Cup tournaments. 

Visit PA ⬆⬇ The Pennsylvania tourism board sent a reminder to incoming World Cup fans late Monday about a “well-documented phenomenon in Philly: The Rocky Statue Curse.” Historically, visiting (American) football teams that have dressed the famed Rocky Statue in their colors have gone on to lose. Ecuador’s soccer team was no exception this weekend; it lost 1–0 to the Ivory Coast in heartbreaking, last-minute fashion at Lincoln Financial Field (temporarily renamed Philadelphia Stadium) after dressing Rocky in an Ecuador jersey earlier in the day.

Kalshi ⬇ The prediction-market platform reportedly cannot use “World Cup” in listings on its platform because it doesn’t have an agreement with FIFA to use the phrase. A page titled “World Cup Games Odds & Predictions 2026” presents users with an error message. Instead, users must place bets on the “World Soccer Cup.” FOS previously reported that FIFA’s official prediction-market partner is an obscure Abu Dhabi blockchain project. 

Editors’ Picks

U.S. World Cup Team Was Assembled Stateside, Honed in Europe

by Mike Jakeman
Most of the U.S. roster leveled up in clubs abroad.

Rory McIlroy Questions PGA Tour’s Planned Schedule Overhaul

by David Rumsey
The tour is targeting 2028 to fully revamp its schedule.

Jalen Brunson’s $113M Sacrifice Built a Champion—and Created the Knicks’ Next Dilemma

by Alex Schiffer
Karl-Anthony Towns is up next for an extension.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Margaret Fleming
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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