Read in Browser

Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

June 24, 2026

POWERED BY

The NCAA’s new age-based eligibility rule allows players five years to complete as many seasons as possible, starting when they enroll in college or turn 19. The policy won’t apply to players who have already exhausted their four seasons of eligibility. Less than a day after the NCAA voted to pass the new model, 15 players have filed a lawsuit to challenge how it will be implemented.

—Amanda Christovich

First Up

  • A second NHL team in Texas would further expand the league’s already-powerful presence across the U.S. Sun Belt. Read the story.
  • If the USMNT makes a deep run through the World Cup, Fox could fetch more than $2 million per 30-second ad spot, sources tell FOS. Read the story.
  • Michele Kang agreed to buy Olympique Lyonnais in a deal that would sever the club’s ties to John Textor’s Eagle Football Holdings. Read the story.
  • The first 20 players selected in the NBA draft on Tuesday all played in college, which was the most to begin a draft since 1994. Read the story.

Basketball Players Sue NCAA Over New Five-Year Eligibility Model

Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Less than 24 hours after the NCAA voted to pass a new “age-based” eligibility model, players have filed a lawsuit to challenge its implementation.

The NCAA’s new policy allows players five years to complete as many seasons as possible, starting when they enroll in college or turn 19, and eliminates redshirts and waivers (except for a few extenuating circumstances like military service, pregnancy, and religious missions). As a result, players across sports will have the opportunity to play five seasons, although the policy won’t apply to players who have already exhausted their four seasons of eligibility.

On Wednesday, 15 men’s and women’s basketball players in this situation—who will not be able to have the fifth season in 2026–27—filed a lawsuit in Hamilton County, Ohio, against the NCAA. All of these players graduated from high school in 2022 and have played four seasons in the NCAA between 2022 and this past year. Under the new rules, they would theoretically have another year of eligibility. But the NCAA opted to exclude them from the new policy, saying it applies only to athletes who haven’t completed four years between 2022 and now. 

The lawsuit is requesting a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction requiring the NCAA to allow these players eligibility this fall.

The lawsuit is the first of several expected to be filed by attorneys Darren Heitner and Ryan Downton, both of whom have represented players across the country against the NCAA (Downton was the attorney representing former Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia, who blew the eligibility cases open in 2024). The attorneys have amassed more than 50 basketball players to sue the NCAA, they told Front Office Sports on Wednesday, and will file additional cases in multiple states this week.

In the complaint, players clarified they aren’t challenging the concept of the NCAA’s eligibility rules (as has been the case with other eligibility lawsuits, which said the rules violated antitrust laws). Instead, they’re challenging the NCAA’s application of the rule, which they say constitutes a violation of the contract between the NCAA and its member schools—of which players are “third-party” beneficiaries. 

“The NCAA’s application of this bylaw to Plaintiffs unfairly limits the number of games they can participate in during their ‘five-year eligibility window’ and unjustifiably restrains their ability to earn money through use of their name, image, and likeness (“NIL”) connected to their work as Division I athletes,” the complaint reads.

To bolster its case, the complaint notes the NCAA offered an extra year of eligibility to players whose 2020 seasons were disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, and that it has allowed players to join professional basketball teams (such as the G League) and then return to college. 

The NCAA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

SPONSORED BY PRUDENTIAL

Inside Cobi Jones’s Second Act

Advertisement

For many athletes, the biggest challenge begins after the final game. In “94 to Now: A Second Acts Story,” soccer icon Cobi Jones reflects on his transition from World Cup star and MLS pioneer to life beyond the field. Through personal stories and hard-earned lessons, Jones shares how he navigated change, redefined success, and discovered new purpose after soccer. Presented by Prudential, the story offers an honest look at the realities of retirement, exploring the mindset required to embrace what’s next—and why building a meaningful second act is a journey that extends far beyond sports. His experience serves as a reminder that retirement isn’t an endpoint but an opportunity to redefine purpose, pursue new passions, and continue growing in unexpected ways.

Watch now.

EXCLUSIVE

Brian Kelly to Call CBS College Football Games

Oct 11, 2025; Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA; LSU Tigers head coach Brian Kelly looks on against the South Carolina Gamecocks during the first half at Tiger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

Brian Kelly will call college football games for CBS this season, Front Office Sports has learned. Kelly is expected to be part of a three-man booth on Mountain West games for the broadcast network, one source said. He spent the last 22 years as a head coach, starting at Central Michigan before moving to Cincinnati, Notre Dame, and then the last four seasons at LSU. Read the story.

ONE BIG FIG

Olympic Grants

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

$10,000

The amount that each Olympic athlete will earn after competing in either the Summer or Winter Games, the International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday. The IOC said it set aside a fund with $140 million per Olympics for this purpose. The first athletes to benefit from the initiative will be those who competed at the 2026 Winter Games. The money is meant to support athletes during their careers or as they transition away from professional competition. About 14,000 athletes are expected to qualify during each cycle. Read the story.

SPONSORED BY ELEVATE

The New Era of Sports Media

Tuned In, presented by Elevate, gathers the biggest names in sports media in one room.

Last year, we welcomed industry heavyweights—from Adam Silver and Rob Manfred to Jimmy Pitaro, Maria Taylor, and Stephen A. Smith—for intimate, candid conversations.

Joining us onstage this year will be NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman, MLS commissioner Don Garber, Steve O’Donnell of NASCAR, Elle Duncan of Netflix, and Pablo Torre of the Pulitzer-winning podcast Pablo Torre Finds Out. Also, college sports broadcasters John Fanta of NBC Sports and Josh Pate of Josh Pate’s College Football Show will sit down together to discuss the growth of college sports and its impact on media.

Additional speakers will be announced soon. Don’t miss your chance to be in the room with the people shaping the future of sports media.

Tickets are limited—register now to join us on Oct. 13 at The Times Center.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Tour Championship Upping Its Game

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

“If we’re at some of these courses that are worthy of hosting this type of event, that’s going to be the first time fans have an opportunity to see the best professional golfers in the world compete on these tremendously prestigious and worthy courses. That’s an experience that I’m not sure is available anywhere else in the golf ecosystem.”

—PGA Tour chief commercial officer Dhruv Prasad, telling Front Office Sports what the vision is for a new-look Tour Championship under a two-series model set to be implemented in 2028. The revamped postseason will incorporate match play, and the PGA Tour is targeting “prestigious venues,” according to CEO Brian Rolapp.

No specific courses have been named, but many fans are imagining highly ranked, ultra-private clubs like Pine Valley in New Jersey or Cypress Point in California. In what could be a made-for-TV showcase, fans lucky—or rich—enough to attend in person could be in for a real treat. “The experience on-site could end up being quite different than a typical PGA Tour regular-season event,” Prasad told FOS. Read the story.

STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Push

Apr 29, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Blake Lizotte (46) controls the puck against the Philadelphia Flyers in the first period in game six of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

Penguins ⬆ The NHL Board of Governors unanimously approved the sale of the team to the Hoffmann Family of Companies, a Chicago-based investment firm. Late last year, Pittsburgh said it entered into an agreement to be sold after about four years of being owned by Fenway Sports Group. The transaction cost will be about $1.75 billion. Geoff Hoffmann, the CEO of the company’s private-equity arm, will serve as governor of the team. The Hoffmann family also owns the Florida Everblades of the ECHL.  

NHL trades ⬆ A pair of top-10 picks were traded Tuesday, ahead of the draft that begins Friday. The Blackhawks acquired defenseman Bowen Byram and forward Jordan Greenway from the Sabres in exchange for a package including the Nos. 4 and 45 picks. After acquiring the No. 9 pick for Brady Tkachuk, the Senators quickly flipped the selection to the Sharks for left winger William Eklund. San Jose will now pick twice in the top 10, at Nos. 2 and 9.  

Kyle Pitts ⬆ The tight end signed a three-year, $54 million extension with the Falcons, with $36 million guaranteed. Pitts received the franchise tag earlier this offseason and was scheduled to make $15.045 million. Instead, he will earn $18 million for the next three years, making him the third-highest-paid tight end in the NFL, trailing George Kittle and Trey McBride, respectively.

Gianni Infantino ⬆⬇ The FIFA president pushed back on criticism of the World Cup’s hydration breaks in a statement Tuesday, saying the stoppages are about player welfare and competitive equity—not revenue. Players and coaches have questioned whether the breaks, which also allow broadcasters to air extra commercials, change the nature of the game.

Editors’ Picks

Portland Arena Standoff Revives Fears Over Trail Blazers Future

by Eric Fisher
Portland’s mayor and city council spar over helping fund arena renovations.

Female Athletes Are Trying to Build the ‘Athleisure of Beauty’

by Ellyn Briggs
“Performance cosmetics” have emerged alongside the women’s sports boom.

ESPN Reporter Tim Bontemps in Advanced Talks to Join Hawks Front Office

by Ryan Glasspiegel and Alex Schiffer
A deal has yet to be finalized.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Amanda Christovich
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Ben Axelrod, Catherine Chen

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.