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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

July 1, 2026

July 1 brings with it the annual payment of deferred salary owed to current MLB players and many long-retired ones, among them Bobby Bonilla’s annual payment from the Mets. But the unofficial baseball holiday could become a thing of the past if MLB team owners get their way.

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • The WTA Finals are moving to Indian Wells from Riyadh as the WTA and Saudi Arabia have ended their hosting agreement early. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: NFL reporter Jonathan Jones is in advanced talks to leave CBS Sports for The Athletic. Read the story. 
  • The World Cup continues to break ratings records, with the group stage averaging 5.05 million viewers across Fox, FS1, and Tubi. Read the story.
  • Allie Clifton, now a household name in basketball media, tells FOS she credits the Road Trippin’ podcast with changing her career trajectory. Read the story.

Bobby Bonilla Day Would End With MLB Owners’ Proposal

RVR Photos-Imagn Images

Bobby Bonilla Day has rolled around once again, but the annual celebration of the former MLB star’s deferred income could become a thing of the past if MLB team owners get their way.

The arrival of July 1 brings with it the annual payment of deferred salary owed to many long-retired MLB players and some still playing. Among the notable contracts with deferral payments happening today:

  • Bonilla’s annual payment of $1.19 million from the Mets that runs through 2035 and previously gave rise to the unofficial baseball holiday. That structure, first created in 2000, has turned an initial $5.9 million contract obligation into nearly $30 million in deferrals and compounded interest. Today marks the 16th deferral payment the Mets are making to Bonilla. 
  • A separate deferred payment of $500,000 to the 63-year-old Bonilla from the Orioles, the result of a somewhat similarly structured contract. That annual payment will run through 2028. 
  • Pitcher Max Scherzer, now with the Blue Jays, is getting $15 million from the Nationals, a team he last played for in 2021. Washington will make two more such annual deferral payments to the veteran hurler.  
  • Former Orioles slugger Chris Davis is receiving $3.5 million as part of a deferral structure running through 2037. 
  • Former Red Sox star Manny Ramírez is getting the last $2 million in contract deferrals from that team. 

“It doesn’t suck. It doesn’t suck. … I just wanted to be able to spend as if I was an active player in retirement,” Bonilla said last year in The Big Deal, a short film produced by Front Office Sports Studios.

Changing Times? 

Though MLB salary deferrals continue to capture the imagination of many fans—particularly on the July 1 date that is the typically designated timing—these structures could ultimately cease to exist in baseball. 

As part of a series of dramatic labor proposals made to the MLB Players Association that include a hard salary cap and floor, a heavily reworked system for player development, and a redesigned reserve system, team owners are also looking to ban all salary deferrals. 

All current contract obligations, including existing deferrals, would still be honored in the proposals. But if owners get this into the next labor deal, all new pacts beginning in 2027 would not allow deferred money. Management sees this bid, fundamentally tied to its push for a salary cap, as another tool to help level the sport’s economic playing field. 

While large-revenue teams such as the Dodgers remain fully compliant under the current labor deal, they’ve also successfully used hefty salary deferrals, including a record $680 million in delayed money for superstar Shohei Ohtani, as a core roster-development strategy.

The union is resisting the league’s proposal, and it sees deferred money as another option that enhances player flexibility and choice.

“Players view it as a fundamental right, to be able to negotiate contracts at any amount and at any length,” MLBPA interim executive director Bruce Meyer said late last week in response to a Front Office Sports question.

“We would prefer, given the choice of a dollar now versus a dollar later, the dollar now. But that’s not always the choice. It’s sometimes 60 cents now or a dollar later. And at that point, it’s again an issue of player flexibility. We believe that if the player and the agent believe [deferrals] are something that’s helpful in getting the deal done, they should have the option to do it,” Meyer continued.

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ONE BIG FIG

Trump Tickets

Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

$122,050

The value of tickets to 10 sporting events that U.S. President Donald Trump received last year, according to his newly released financial disclosure. 

Trump attended the US Open, Ryder Cup, Daytona 500, and more. The largest package came from Saints owner Gayle Benson, who gave him 10 tickets to Super Bowl LIX valued at $50,000. Read the story. 

LOUD AND CLEAR

Short Return

Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - June 30, 2026 Serena Williams of the U.S. waves to the crowd after losing her first round match against Australia's Maya Joint

REUTERS/Andrew Couldridge

“It was really great to be back at Wimbledon. I never expected to be here.”

—Serena Williams said in a statement Tuesday after her three-set loss to Maya Joint in the first round at Wimbledon. Williams, 44, did not attend the mandatory press conference after the match.

On Wednesday morning, Williams’s agent, Jill Smoller, released a statement saying Williams “tweaked her right knee at the end of the first set.” Smoller said the injury is what caused Williams to miss her media obligation, and she was excused by Wimbledon organizers.

Williams is still scheduled to compete in doubles Thursday alongside her sister, Venus. But her status is unclear. Smoller said Williams “is doing everything she can to be ready for her doubles match later this week.”

STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Jun 30, 2026; Brooklyn, New York, USA; New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart (30) waves to the crowd after being named the game MVP after winning the Commissioners Cup Championship against the Las Vegas Aces at Barclays Center.

John Jones-Imagn Images

New York Liberty ⬆ The team won the WNBA Commissioner’s Cup championship Tuesday, becoming the first team to win two of the in-season tournament titles since it was introduced in 2021. Every player on the Liberty will take home around $30,000—except their two developmental players, Anneli Maley and Marine Fauthoux. New York stars Breanna Stewart and Sabrina Ionescu plan to share their winnings with the developmental players.

Michigan stadium ⬇ The Big House may soon lose its title as the largest stadium in the U.S., as Penn State’s ongoing $700 million renovation of Beaver Stadium could push its capacity to around 108,000 or more, surpassing Michigan’s official capacity of 107,601. Penn State AD Pat Kraft said the new upper seating bowl should be in place by the time the Nittany Lions host USC on Oct. 10.

DJ Moore ⬆ The Bills wide receiver purchased 27 shirt jerseys for $1,200 with his name and number on them at a Buffalo mall, asking the store to give them away for free to fans looking to purchase a shirt of his. Moore was acquired from the Bears for a second-round pick in March and has $62.5 million in guaranteed money left on his deal.  

NBA Cup ⬆ Butler’s Hinkle Fieldhouse will host the in-season tournament championship game on Dec. 11. The 2026 NBA Cup final will be the first held outside Las Vegas, with the semifinals also being played in the home markets of the higher seeds for the first time. NBA commissioner Adam Silver previously mentioned the league and Amazon were looking into hosting the final at a “storied college arena.”

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Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Catherine Chen

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