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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

May 13, 2026

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The ACC still isn’t sold on private equity, even after the Big 12 struck a landmark private-capital deal with RedBird Capital Partners and Weatherford Capital. Commissioner Jim Phillips said Wednesday that nothing presented to the conference so far has “made sense” for the ACC.

Phillips also defended Duke’s recent deal with Amazon to stream several marquee non-conference basketball games, despite reported concerns from the Big Ten over the arrangement.

—Daniel Roberts

First Up

  • The White House pushed back on reports that Iraqi national team players were denied visas ahead of this summer’s World Cup. Read the story.
  • Netflix expanded its NFL package with new Week 1, Thanksgiving Eve, and late-season games, deepening its ties to the league. Read the story.
  • Warner Bros. Discovery leaned heavily on sports programming at its upfront as the Paramount merger hangs over the company. Read the story.
  • Four New Mexico tribes sued Kalshi, and argued the prediction-market company’s sports betting products violate federal tribal gaming law. Read the story.

ACC Still Holding Off on Private Equity Despite Big 12 Leap

Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. — The ACC is still not ready to embrace PE. 

That was the gist of an answer from ACC commissioner Jim Phillips on Wednesday.

Front Office Sports asked Phillips at the ACC spring meetings about a majority of Big 12 schools saying they aren’t yet taking a $30 million line of credit offered through that conference’s landmark private-capital deal. 

“To date, there’s nothing that has made sense,” Phillips said. “And so we’ll look at it again—in fact we’ll talk about it next week in Charlotte—but there’s nothing that has been put forward that interests us.”

Phillips added, “We’ve looked at the RedBird deal, I’m happy for [Big 12 commissioner] Brett [Yormark] that he got that done, he worked hard on that, that’s what he wanted to do for his league. And we know what that looks like for the ACC. But that just hasn’t been something our group has wanted to do.”

Big 12 school presidents approved the conference’s deal with RedBird Capital Partners and Weatherford Capital (founded by former FSU quarterback Drew Weatherford) that includes a $12.5 million infusion into the conference, opportunity to coinvest in new revenue opportunities for the conference, and a line of credit for up to $30 million for each individual school. 

The schools have a year to choose to take that offer, but at this time, 13 of the 16 member schools say they are not taking it, while the remaining schools are not commenting. No Big 12 school has yet said it is taking the money. (RedBird IMI, in which RedBird Capital Partners is a joint venture partner, is the primary investor in Front Office Sports.) 

Still, the deal provides an example for how other conferences might accept or make available to their schools money from private-equity partners.

Phillips certainly left the door open for the ACC to still entertain a similar deal.

“We have had a lot of education for our presidents on the PE space,” he said. “We’ve brought in an awful lot of those kinds of groups and experts, and my job as commissioner is to educate the board, engage in discussion, and then garner their feedback and go off of that and move forward … and I think we have an awful lot of really bright, sophisticated finance presidents and chancellors in our group.”

Last summer, Phillips told FOS, “Our group is very educated about it, and there just hasn’t been anything that really has made sense for the ACC.” It appears that the conference and its members remain unswayed nearly a year later, despite arguably its most comparable peer making the jump.

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ONE BIG FIG

Global Audience

NFL London

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

9

That’s the number of NFL international games scheduled for 2026, a league record and two more than last season. The expanded slate will send games to Australia, Brazil, England, France, Germany, Spain, and Mexico, including the league’s first regular-season contests in Australia and France.

The league is also changing how these games reach fans back home, with Fox, NBC, CBS, Netflix, and NFL Network all carrying international matchups this season. The expanded TV push gives legacy broadcasters a bigger stage for international games as the league faces mounting streaming criticism. Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Fare Fight

The Record

“Does charging $32,970 for a ticket qualify as a ‘chilling effect’? Asking for a friend.”

—The press office account for New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill responded to a Front Office Sports post by taking a shot at FIFA after the organization criticized the state’s pricey World Cup train fares. The jab came after FIFA listed tickets to the World Cup final for nearly $33,000, while New Jersey and New York worked to lower transportation costs for fans heading to MetLife Stadium.

New Jersey recently cut round-trip NJ Transit fares from $150 to $98 per person with help from corporate sponsors, while New York used $6 million in taxpayer funding to slash shuttle-bus prices. The spat highlights growing concerns about how expensive it will be for fans to attend the World Cup. Read the story.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Hang Out in the Hamptons

Huddle in the Hamptons has earned its place as the season’s most coveted invitation: a sun-soaked gathering where the people shaping sports come to think, compete, and connect.

This July, Front Office Sports returns to the Hamptons for another quintessential summer Friday with official partner UBS.

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.

STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

WNBA ⬆ The league’s opening-weekend headliner, the Dallas Wings’ win over the Indiana Fever on May 9, averaged 2.49 million viewers on ABC. This makes it the second-most-watched WNBA game on ESPN networks. These ratings do come with a caveat, though, as Nielsen’s new ratings formula measuring coviewing can inflate numbers. Meanwhile, in-person attendance is also going strong, with the Portland Fire and Toronto Tempo selling out their first home games.

Cori Close ⬆ The recently crowned national champion coach signed a four-year extension to stay at UCLA, keeping her in Los Angeles through the 2029–30 season. She is reportedly being paid around $2 million a year, a significant raise from the $1.2 million that she earned during the 2025–26 season. This moves her closer to the salary of the other three coaches in this year’s women’s Final Four—Vic Schaefer (Texas), Geno Auriemma (UConn), and Dawn Staley (South Carolina), who all earn more than $2 million annually.

McDonald’s ⬆ The fast food giant will be the namesake of the Chicago Fire’s new $750 million soccer stadium, which will be called McDonald’s Park and include a restaurant. The privately funded MLS venue will seat up to 31,000 people and is set to open in 2028 in Chicago’s South Loop neighborhood. Beyond soccer, it will also host concerts and different community events.

Craig Berube ⬇ Just over a week after earning the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NHL draft, the Maple Leafs have fired their head coach after two seasons. In Berube’s stint with Toronto, the team won the Atlantic Division during the 2024–25 season and made it to the second round of the NHL playoffs, but then finished last in its division this past season. This comes just over a month after team GM Brad Treliving was fired following three seasons with the team.

Editors’ Picks

How Sports Graphic Designers Are Grappling With the Rise of AI Art

by Yanyan Li
The release of ChatGPT 2.0 Images sparked a conversation among sports designers.

NFL Should Release Audio on Crucial Replay Decisions

by Dennis Young
The ACC let viewers in the replay booth last fall.

ESPN Wants Its First Super Bowl to Be the Most-Watched Ever

by Michael McCarthy
Fox’s broadcast of Super Bowl LIX holds the current record.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Daniel Roberts
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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