Read in Browser

Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

May 26, 2026

POWERED BY

The Knicks are going to their first NBA Finals since 1999. They managed this feat under first-year coach Mike Brown, who was hired after team owner James Dolan fired Tom Thibodeau last season after five years. At the time of his firing, the Knicks owed Thibodeau roughly $30 million, and now Dolan’s decision to fire him looks prescient.

—Alex Schiffer

First Up

  • Secondary market pricing for Game 4 of the NBA Finals at MSG starts at $3,400, and pricing for a potential Game 6 in New York begins at nearly $5,000. Read the story.
  • FIFA confirmed Iran will hold its World Cup base camp in Mexico, not the U.S., as the team had previously planned. Read the story.
  • Bryson DeChambeau, whose LIV contract is set to expire later this year, is staying positive about the league’s uncertain future. Read the story.
  • Women’s lacrosse is trying to prove its value in the revenue-sharing era, as schools concentrate resources into a handful of programs. Read the story.

James Dolan’s Controversial $30M Thibodeau Firing Has Paid Off

Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Knicks owner James Dolan’s controversial decision to change coaches a year ago has paid off. 

On Monday, the Knicks completed their sweep of the Cavaliers to clinch their first NBA Finals berth since 1999. They will play either the Spurs or defending champion Thunder for a chance to win their first NBA title since 1973. 

New York did so behind first-year coach Mike Brown, who was hired after Dolan fired Tom Thibodeau last season after five years. Thibodeau helped pull the Knicks out of mediocrity and led the team to its first back-to-back 50-win seasons in decades and its first conference finals appearance since 2000. 

At the time of his firing, the Knicks owed Thibodeau roughly $30 million from an extension he signed the previous season. New York hired longtime coach Mike Brown to replace Thibodeau. 

“Our organization is singularly focused on winning a championship for our fans,” team president Leon Rose said in a statement announcing Thibodeau’s firing. 

Dolan later clarified that the controversial firing was his call in an interview with WFAN in January. It was Dolan’s first media appearance in two years. 

“We needed to evolve beyond the old traditional coaching formulas,” Dolan said. “And we tried to work that with Tom. And it really wasn’t his thing.”

Dolan has been accused of interfering in the Knicks’ basketball operations over the years and even admitted to overreacting as an owner when he appeared on Jalen Brunson’s and Josh Hart’s podcast.

“There were times when [we’ve] sort of reached for that shiny, sparkly object,” Dolan said in March 2025. “‘Maybe this is what we need.’ Especially when things weren’t going well. Let’s bring in this guy and maybe he’ll turn it all around for us.’ Sometimes it’s players, sometimes it’s a coach.”

But Dolan has been aggressive. The team’s $207 million payroll is the second highest in the NBA, and this current roster was constructed primarily through the signing of Brunson and multiple blockbuster trades for OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, Hart, and Karl-Anthony Towns.

New York finished the regular season as the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference with a 53–29 record, but it has been on a historically dominant hot streak in the playoffs. After falling behind 2–1 to the Hawks, the Knicks have won 11 straight games, many of them blowouts. 

Dolan’s decision to fire Thibodeau has been justified. Now he has the chance to look prophetic. 

While on WFAN in January, Dolan said the expectation is for his team to win the title. 

“We want to get to the Finals and we should win the Finals,” said Dolan. “This is sports, this is business and anything can happen, but getting to the Finals, we absolutely got to do. Winning the Finals, we should win.”

SPONSORED BY MICROSOFT

Inside the Premier League’s Next Growth Strategy

Advertisement

The Premier League already reaches 1.8 billion fans across 189 countries, but its next challenge isn’t getting bigger—it’s getting closer.

Through a new partnership with Microsoft, the league is rebuilding its digital ecosystem with AI-powered experiences designed to make fandom feel more personal, whether a supporter wants tactical insights, historical moments, live match context, or team-specific updates.

The bigger play extends beyond technology. It’s a bet that the future value of sports leagues will come from relevance over reach and turning global audiences into deeper, stickier fan communities.

Read how Microsoft and the Premier League are building the next era of global sports fandom.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Sink or Swim

Aug 2, 2024; Nanterre, France; Cameron McEvoy (Australia) in the men’s 50-meter freestyle final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Paris La Défense Arena.

Rob Schumacher-Imagn Images

“Seriously?! That’s all you got!”

—Australian swimmer Cameron McEvoy posted the Gordon Ramsay meme on his Instagram Story after Greece’s Kristian Gkolomeev swam faster than McEvoy’s world record at the inaugural Enhanced Games on Sunday. Gkolomeev, an “enhanced athlete” who used performance-enhancing drugs before the Games, clocked 20.81 seconds, which was 0.07 seconds faster than McEvoy’s official world record time of 20.88. McEvoy also posted a subsequent image of Michael Jordan surrounded by significantly larger Monstars from the movie Space Jam.

ONE BIG FIG

Reaching New Heights

May 24, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) looks on in the fourth quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder during game four of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Frost Bank Center.

Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images

$5.11 million

The price paid in a private sale for Victor Wembanyama’s 1-of-1 numbered 2023–24 Panini Prizm Black rookie card this month. It’s the most expensive known sale of a non-autographed NBA card and the fourth-highest-known sale of an NBA trading card, according to online card sales database Card Ladder, Fanatics confirmed to Front Office Sports. The sale of the Spurs star’s collectible is far higher than the previous record for a Wembanyama card—$860,100 paid for his 2023–24 Panini Prizm Nebula Choice 1-of-1 card with a PSA 9 grade in February 2025. The Spurs are tied with the Thunder 2–2 in the NBA Western Conference finals; the winner plays the Knicks for the championship.

SPONSORED BY ELEVATE

First Wave of Tuned In Speakers

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, 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.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, Two Down

May 25, 2026; Charlottesville, VA, USA; Princeton Tigers defender Zach Friedman (7) celebrates with the national championship trophy alongside teammates after their game against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the NCAA Mens Lacrosse National Championship game at Scott Stadium.

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Ivy League lacrosse ⬆ For the second consecutive year, an Ivy League team has won the NCAA men’s lacrosse championship, with No. 1 Princeton defeating No. 2 Notre Dame 16–9 on Monday to follow up on Cornell beating Maryland for the 2025 title. Neither the Tigers nor the Big Red fielded any transfers on their championship rosters, while the former university does not have an NIL collective. The Ivy League is also the only conference where all its schools are electing not to opt in to the House v. NCAA settlement that allows them to pay players directly.

Moise Kouame ⬆ The 17-year-old Frenchman, with a career-high ATP ranking of No. 313 before the French Open, defeated former world No. 3 and 2014 US Open champion Marin Čilić in the opening round. Kouame, a wild-card entry into his home country’s Grand Slam, became the youngest male player to win a Grand Slam match since a 16-year-old Bernard Tomic did so at the 2009 Australian Open. Kouame is also the youngest man to reach the second round of Roland-Garros since 1991.

Yomiuri Giants ⬇ Shinnosuke Abe, the Japanese professional baseball team’s GM, resigned from his position for allegedly assaulting his 18-year-old daughter. According to a Yomiuri newspaper, Abe grabbed his daughter by the collar and threw her down to the floor to stop a fight between her and her sister. The paper said Abe admitted to the incident and the two reconciled. The Giants have fielded several MLB prospects in the past, including Blue Jays third baseman Kazuma Okamoto.

Kalshi and Polymarket ⬇ Spain’s Consumer Rights Ministry temporarily banned the two prediction markets ​for operating in the country without a ‌gambling license. The ministry said it launched disciplinary proceedings against the two companies, which allow users to wager on everything from French Open match winners to how much it will rain in Houston this month, for “possible violation of gambling regulations.” The investigation is expected to last between three and four months, the ministry said. In April, Spain’s LaLiga announced a multiyear deal to make Polymarket its exclusive prediction-market platform in the U.S. and Canada.

Editors’ Picks

Everything PGA Tour Players Can—and Can’t—Do on Social Media

by David Rumsey
The new policy was officially rolled out to players last week.

French Open Organizers Meet With Players After Media Protest

by Colin Salao
Players are asking for 22% of revenue by 2030.

Fox’s USMNT World Cup Roster Reveal Spoiled by Leaks

by Margaret Fleming
Tuesday was supposed to be a marquee World Cup kickoff for Fox.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Alex Schiffer
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Dennis Young, 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.