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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

July 10, 2026

 

Nearly a month after the Hurricanes won their first NHL title in 20 years, the team this week unveiled the engraving of names on the Stanley Cup. Carolina owner Tom Dundon is listed first, as is custom, but his name is followed by those of his wife, Veruschka, and each of their five children, the youngest of whom is 7. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • The personalized message Bryce Harper recorded in 2024 for a man deep in gambling debt was purchased through Cameo. Read the story.
  • Conor McGregor returns Saturday night at UFC 329 in his first fight in five years, as the fighting promotion looks to set new gate and viewership records. Read the story.
  • The U.S.-Belgium World Cup match on July 6 notched a combined 50.1 million viewers from Fox and Telemundo. Read the story.
  • Erling Haaland, the breakout superstar of the World Cup, is from a 13,000-person farming community in rural Norway. Read the story.

Carolina Owner Faces Backlash for Engraving Kids’ Names on Stanley Cup

James Guillory-Imagn Images

Stanley Cup glory has quickly faded into unanswered questions following the Hurricanes’ engraving of one of the most hallowed trophies in sports.

Nearly a month after Carolina won its first NHL title in 20 years, the team this week unveiled the engraving of names on the Stanley Cup, and with a particularly notable difference. Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon is listed first, as is custom, but his name is followed by those of his wife, Veruschka, and each of their five children. 

It’s also not uncommon for some family members of team owners to be listed on the Stanley Cup—but typically when they also have a role in the organization, such as serving as alternate governor or working in the team’s hockey or business operations. 

That was the case with the Panthers following their back-to-back championships in 2024 and 2025, listing on the Stanley Cup owner Vinnie Viola along with his wife, Teresa, and three children who are all alternate team governors. 

Forever etched in history pic.twitter.com/KpJaNsb5Fz

— Carolina Hurricanes (@Canes) July 9, 2026

But that’s not the situation in Carolina. Veruschka Dundon and the Dundon children do not have formal roles with the Hurricanes, and the children are mostly school-aged and as young as 7. The Dundon names take up the entire first two lines of the team’s Stanley Cup entry, with 90 total characters.

Because of the maximum number of 55 names that can be engraved on the Stanley Cup, the inclusion of all the Dundon children helped result in some others in the Hurricanes organization being omitted as it settled on a final list of 53 engraved names. 

One who was left out was longtime equipment manager Bobby Gorman, with the franchise since its prior era as the Hartford Whalers and on the Stanley Cup honoring the team’s 2006 win. Another omitted name is defenseman Joel Nystrom, who played 38 regular-season games for Carolina. Also left out were the team’s three minority team owners.

The Hurricanes and NHL declined to comment on the Stanley Cup engraving.

“The Stanley Cup goes to the players first,” tweeted TSN legal analyst and Canadian radio host Eric Macramalla. “By allowing the names of the owner’s kids to be engraved on the Cup—and ahead of the players to boot—is a troubling step toward an owner-first culture. That’s not hockey.”

Rules of the Cup

There are various rules and oversight surrounding the Stanley Cup engraving. In addition to the 55-name maximum, a list of names must be submitted to the NHL for review. The league seeks to ensure players, coaches, and hockey operations staff meet various criteria, such as an appearance minimum of 41 games for players to guarantee a spot.

Engraved names of non-playing personnel, however, are much more at the discretion of club ownership—something of which Tom Dundon has taken particular advantage.

There have been prior, unrelated engraving issues regarding the Stanley Cup. The name of Basil Pocklington, father of former Oilers owner Peter Pocklington, is chiseled with X’s following his erroneous inclusion of names to Edmonton’s 1984 title. Brad Aldrich, a video coach for the 2010 Blackhawks, also has his name crossed over following allegations of his sexual assault of Chicago prospect Kyle Beach.

Not the Only Scrutiny

The engraved family names aren’t the only recent controversy to surround Tom Dundon. Also the new owner of the NBA’s Trail Blazers, Dundon is angering fans and political leaders in Portland with a series of cutbacks within that organization, and most recently, with division over funding renovations to that team’s Moda Center.

Dundon has been insistent that he should not be obligated to help fund improvements to the 31-year-old, publicly owned arena.

“It feels like we’re making a pretty big investment by staying here and paying these tax rates,” Dundon said at a recent Portland Metro Chamber event.

Amid those rising issues in Portland, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman has stood firmly behind Dundon.

“Tom may not always be—because we’re hearing this out of a different market—the most conventional owner, but nobody can argue with his commitment to [hockey]. … He’s been great for us all the way,” Bettman said. 

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ONE BIG FIG

Anyone Got Extra Tickets?

July 5, 2026; East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S.; Norway's Erling Haaland and Brazil's Gabriel Magalhaes react.

Caean Couto-Imagn Images

$7,380

That’s the price of nearly 1,200 newly released tickets by FIFA for the World Cup final. Seats across five sections of the top deck of MetLife Stadium were put on sale Friday morning by the governing body, with some sections entirely available. The price charged by FIFA is similar to the cheapest options on secondary markets, with tickets available for $7,377 on SeatGeek on Friday morning. FIFA also put 68 tickets in the lower deck on sale, with prices ranging from $19,995 to $32,970.   

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

FILE PHOTO: Fireworks explode during UFC Freedom 250, on the South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 15, 2026

Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS via PX IMAGES OF THE DAY/File Photo

UFC Freedom 250 ⬆⬇ Eight men have been indicted on murder and terrorism conspiracy charges for their alleged roles in a planned drone and sniper attack at the White House event in June. Prosecutors allege the group planned to target President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, among others, at the event.

AJ Dybantsa ⬆ The No. 1 overall pick scored 27 points in his Summer League debut Thursday, leading the Wizards to a 92–88 win in a matchup against No. 2 pick Darryn Peterson, who finished with 24 points for the Jazz. Dybantsa, 19, and the Wizards face the Kings on Sunday.

Vozinha ⬆ A newly discovered species of sea slug has been named after the 40-year-old Cape Verde goalkeeper after his standout performance at the World Cup. Jesús Ortea, a researcher at the University of Oviedo in Spain, named the Caribbean mollusk Aldisa vozinhai to coincide with the tournament. Cape Verde lost in the round of 32 to Argentina, which will face Switzerland in the quarterfinals Saturday.

Scottie Scheffler ⬇ The world No. 1 is set to miss the cut at a PGA Tour event for the first time in four years. Scheffler will fail to advance to the weekend at the Scottish Open after shooting even par over the first two days of the tournament. The four-time major champion’s streak of consecutive made cuts ends at 78, finishing as the fifth-longest streak in PGA Tour history. 

ONE FUN THING

Soccer Sojourn?

July 3, 2026; Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S.; Cape Verde players pose for a team group photo before the match.

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Despite being eliminated by Argentina in the first knockout round of the World Cup, Cape Verde’s underdog story is still resonating—potentially making it a winner in other ways.

The little-known archipelagic country off the western coast of Africa saw more than a 5,000% spike in Google searches over the past month compared with the previous month. On TikTok, “Cape Verde” was the most-searched World Cup country in the U.S. between June 11 and July 7, with searches increasing nearly 500 times since the tournament started versus last year, according to TikTok. The platform also said “Cape Verde vacation” was a popular search term in the U.S. this past week, with content creators trying to take advantage of user interest with travel advice for visiting the country. 

Officially known as the Democratic Republic of Cabo Verde, it was the country’s first appearance in the World Cup.

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