April 9, 2026

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Front Office Sports - Asset Class

 

Behind every major sports deal are lawyers guiding teams and investors through league rules, ownership hurdles, and the complexities of billion-dollar transactions. Lately, firms have been poaching top talent from rivals—and the most sought-after attorneys are landing pay packages north of $10 million.

—Ben Horney

First Up

  • The U.S. Department of Justice has opened an investigation into whether the NFL uses anticompetitive tactics that harm consumers. Read the story.
  • Kalshi can offer sports-event contracts in New Jersey as an appeals court ruled the state can’t stop the platform amid its case against state gambling regulators. Read the story.
  • The John Henry–led Fenway Sports Group has a long record of success, but issues are flaring up for the Red Sox and Liverpool FC. Read the story.

Top Sports Lawyers Command $10 Million Salaries Amid Poaching Frenzy

Peter Casey-Imagn Images

The transfer portal has transformed college sports—just ask the Michigan men’s basketball team, which just won a national championship with five starters who started their college careers elsewhere. 

A similar dynamic is playing out in the legal world, where law firms are raiding rivals for sports attorneys who can instantly import a big book of business. Lawyers live behind the biggest deals in sports, quietly guiding teams and investors as they navigate league politics, ownership rules, and the complexities of billion-dollar transactions.

Firms do not disclose how much they are paying the lawyers they’re poaching. But revenue-producing partners from major law firms are commanding high seven-figure annual compensation packages—and in some cases that’s stretching into eight figures, exceeding more than $10 million per year—according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.

“The transfer portal is open for sports lawyers,” one leading sports attorney who has been approached, but not yet poached, tells Front Office Sports.

Latham & Watkins, which earlier this year added Matthew Eisler and Russell Hedman from Hogan Lovells, represented the estate of Paul Allen in connection with the recently completed sale of the Portland Trail Blazers to Tom Dundon. Kirkland & Ellis, which last year nabbed Frank Saviano from Latham and Jason Krochak from Proskauer Rose, advised Dundon’s group on that deal.

In November, Davis Polk landed Jon Oram from Proskauer—he’s a longtime legal sports powerhouse who advised New York Jets owner Woody Johnson in the acquisition of John Textor’s 43% stake in Premier League club Crystal Palace and the family of the late former Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen in the then-record $4.65 billion sale of the NFL team to a group led by Walmart heir Rob Walton.

Most recently, Simpson Thacher on Tuesday added three heavy hitters, bringing in Michael Kuh from Hogan Lovells, Eric Geffner from Sidley Austin, and Matthew Carpenter-Dennis, who comes from the NBA. Kuh advised on the NWSL’s launch and the 2026 FIFA World Cup bid for the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, while Geffner has represented Monarch Collective and NWSL club Angel City, including on its 2024 sale at a record valuation of $250 million.

Kuh tells FOS he and Geffner—who years ago worked together at Latham—saw the move as “an opportunity to ensure that when people think of sports deals going forward, they think about Simpson Thacher.”

The same day, Cleary Gottlieb hired Matthew Schwartz from Gibson Dunn; his work includes advising the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia on LIV Golf and David Tepper on the $2.275 billion Carolina Panthers purchase in 2018.

“It’s definitely a trend,” says Brian Anderson, who co-leads the sports industry team at law firm Sheppard. “There’s a lot of firms out there looking to bolster their bench.”

That sentiment is shared by Irwin Kishner, co-chair of the sports law group at Herrick Feinstein, who has been with Herrick since 1992 and says he’s been approached “more than once” amid the recent wave of movement. He doesn’t dispute the level of offers being levied.

“It’s the law of economics, supply and demand,” Kishner tells FOS. “To get that kind of talent, you generally need to pay some sort of premium.”

The Catalyst Behind the Chaos

Historically, many law firms didn’t view sports as its own practice area, because sports-related work typically touches on other areas that firms do dedicate resources toward—such as deals, employment, and litigation.

But in recent years, sports as an asset class has exploded, with pro team valuations soaring and a larger ecosystem of leagues, media rights, sports betting, and private capital. All of this has created enough complexity and deal flow to justify sports-specific practices. A similar trend is happening in private equity, where firms have followed one another in standing up dedicated sports divisions to capitalize on the opportunities that exist in sports.

It’s not a coincidence that both are happening simultaneously. 

Although sports franchise valuations have been rising for more than a decade—Kuh notes that while the S&P grew 700% between 2014 and 2024, NBA team valuations “grew by over 2,000%”—private-equity firms really entered the fold in a major way only around 2021. That’s when Arctos Partners made its first NBA deal by taking a minority stake in the Golden State Warriors, which Kuh calls “a demarcation point.” 

After that, Kuh says, “Private equity went into sports in earnest. Today, PE is in every major sports league.”

Some firms identified the trend early. Sidley Austin, for instance, hired Chuck Baker and Irwin Raij away from O’Melveny & Myers LLP in 2022. They had a role in the $1.5 billion sale of the Minnesota Timberwolves to the group led by Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore, and represented Mitchell Rales, Magic Johnson, and others in the $6.05 billion Josh Harris–led purchase of the Washington Commanders. 

More recently, Sidley advised The Ones Basketball League—Tracy McGrady’s upcoming one-on-one basketball league—in connection with its relaunch, and represented Ariel Investments on Project Level, a women’s sports-focused fund that in February announced it had secured $250 million and is still raising money.

Geffner, who until earlier this week worked with Baker and Raij at Sidley, points to women’s sports as a space that is still relatively “untapped,” with hockey and volleyball standing out as two sports that are on the rise, in addition to basketball with the WNBA and soccer with the NWSL.

“It’s not just the Caitlin Clark Effect,” he tells FOS. “A lot of people at first looked at women’s sports as a mission-based investment. They were trying to drive equity and get compensation for female athletes up. It’s shifted, and now it’s really a value proposition that’s growing rapidly.”

The trend has only accelerated since Sidley’s move in 2022. Attorneys say that it’s more than just the rise of private equity; there’s been a wider increase in sophisticated investors getting involved in sports. 

“Years ago, buying a sports team was a vanity investment,” Kuh says. “Now, it’s a sector.”

That shift is also reshaping the pipeline. Interest from younger attorneys has surged alongside the deal flow, but breaking in still requires mastering a core practice area first.

“I tell associates and law school and college students that, for the first seven years of my career, I was just a traditional M&A and PE lawyer,” Geffner tells FOS. “I got trained and learned how to do deals before jumping into sports.”

DEAL FLOW

Masters Golfer Tees Off AI Investment

Apr 6, 2026; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Bryson DeChambeau hits out of the bunker and onto the 16th green during a practice round for the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club

Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

  • LIV golfer Bryson DeChambeau is leading a group of investors that agreed to buy Sportsbox AI, which offers an app providing AI and 3D motion capture technology to coach and train golfers. The deal comes the same week DeChambeau is competing at the Masters.
  • Always Alpha, a management firm dedicated to female athletes, has agreed to buy Courtside Talent, a tennis-focused management firm that counts Sloane Stephens as one of its clients. This represents the first acquisition for Always Alpha, which was formed in 2024 by a group featuring Olympic sprinter Allyson Felix.
  • 154 Partners, a sports-focused private-equity firm from ex-Blackstone investors, clinched its debut fund with $400 million in tow. The firm is backed by David Blitzer’s Bolt Ventures. Blitzer—who is still a Blackstone senior executive and co-owns the NHL’s Devils and NBA’s 76ers through Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment—will join 154’s investment committee.
  • Competitive sailing league SailGP has yet another team owner, with Quantum Pacific Group—a conglomerate helmed by Israeli billionaire Idan Ofer—which is buying Spain’s Los Gallos team. SailGP has a growing list of significant owners, including celebrities Anne Hathaway and Hugh Jackman, as well as private-equity firm Ares Management.
  • Silver Lake–backed Diamond Baseball Holdings has picked up another minor league baseball team with the acquisition of the Trenton Thunder. The Thunder were previously a minor league affiliate of the Tigers, Red Sox, and Yankees, but it is currently part of the unaffiliated MLB Draft League. DBH owns close to 50 minor league teams.
LEGAL CORNER

Suits Allege Live Sports-Data Monopoly

Feb 5, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view a Wilson NBA basketball and logo during the game between the Mavericks and the Spurs at the American Airlines Center

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

  • Integrity monitor Sportradar has been sued by online sports-betting software provider Altenar over allegations it has a monopoly over live data and betting odds, thanks to exclusive deals with the NBA, ATP, NHL, and MLB. Two suits were filed, one in New Jersey federal court, and another in the London High Court.
  • The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a motion in Arizona federal court seeking to stop the state’s attempted criminal charges against Kalshi. Arizona, which is one of three states the CFTC sued last week over attempts to rein in prediction markets, brought criminal charges against Arizona last month.
  • An affiliate of finance firm Cantor Fitzgerald sued DraftKings and FanDuel claiming they infringed upon mobile gaming patents created by a now-defunct business unit called Cantor Gaming. The suit against DraftKings was filed in Massachusetts, while the suit against FanDuel was filed in New Jersey.

Editors’ Picks

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The product is scheduled to launch on Thursday.

LIV Signs Prediction-Market Deal As PGA Tour Has Held Off

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LIV signed a short-term deal for Masters week.

Caleb Williams Didn’t Mean to Start an ‘Iceman’ Fight

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Ben Horney
Edited by Daniel Roberts, Meredith Turits, Catherine Chen

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