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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

May 28, 2026

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Gucci has signed on as the title sponsor of Alpine Formula One, pushing the luxury Italian brand further into the sports world. The partnership will start in 2027 and will change the French team’s name to Gucci Racing Alpine F1 Team. Gucci, which is owned by French conglomerate Kering, enters F1 at a time of significant growth for the motorsports championship. 

—Colin Salao

First Up

  • NBA owners on Thursday voted to approve the “3-2-1” draft lottery system that will begin with the 2027 draft. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: Underdog made a board game poking fun at Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and refuses to bend despite a cease and desist request. Read the story.
  • Sacramento leaders formally unveiled an MLB expansion bid Thursday, with local officials hoping to build on the three-year interim stay of the A’s. Read the story.
  • Heavy favorite world No. 1 Jannik Sinner lost in the second round of the French Open, breaking a 30-match win streak that extends back to February. Read the story.

Gucci Is Making a Big Bet on Sports

Reuters Connect

Gucci is accelerating its push into sports.

On Wednesday, the luxury brand was announced as the title sponsor for the Alpine Formula One team starting in 2027. The partnership, which will change the French team’s name to Gucci Racing Alpine F1 Team, is worth an estimated $50 million to $60 million per season for at least three years, according to The Race. 

Alpine will also adapt Gucci’s brand colors (black, gold, red, and green), replacing its current blue and pink color scheme. 

Gucci enters F1 at a time of significant growth for the motorsports championship. F1 expanded to a record 24 races in 2023 (though two races were canceled earlier this year due to the war in the Middle East). The grid expanded to 11 teams this year for the first time since 2016 following the addition of Audi.

Viewership numbers in the U.S. last year more than doubled the number in 2018 on ESPN networks. F1 parlayed that success into a five-year, $700 million media deal with Apple.

The announcement came just days after women’s world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka carried a Gucci bag onto the court at the Italian Open, a move that the WTA is reportedly reviewing as a possible violation of player gear rules.

And Sabalenka, who signed with Gucci in January, wasn’t the first tennis star to trot out in Gucci. Men’s No. 1 player Jannik Sinner walked out onto the court with a Gucci duffel bag at Wimbledon in 2023.

James Denman, a brand marketing consultant for fashion and luxury brands, tells Front Office Sports that Gucci’s foray into sports signals the brand’s broader direction: “It’s starting to think of itself much more dramatically as a full luxury brand rather than simply being purely from a ready-to-wear perspective.”

He sees the brand showing more personality through sports, particularly because tennis and F1 are personality-driven. Tennis is fundamentally individualistic, while a large focus on F1 is on the drivers.

By entering F1 specifically, Gucci can be more “playful” by showcasing designs through the car’s liveries or even the way the team dresses their engineers and pit crew. 

Denman also pointed out that Kering, Gucci’s parent company, becomes visible in a space dominated by rival luxury conglomerate LVMH. F1 and LVMH started a 10-year comprehensive partnership last year worth a reported $1.5 billion that includes Louis Vuitton, Moët & Chandon, and TAG Heuer. 

“I think from the point of view of Gucci, it makes a lot of sense to be able to go: ‘We are a luxury brand on equal footing as a Louis Vuitton that we have that sort of ability to make something sort of fun and distinctive,’” Denman said. (Kering CEO Luca de Meo is the former head of Renault, the parent company of Alpine.)  

Alpine, currently fifth in the constructors’ championship, reportedly has success thresholds in the contract. But it’s hard to see the team competing with top teams for the F1 title, especially a year after it finished last.

Denman said the value of entering F1 outweighs Alpine’s on-track results.

“You don’t want to be associated with an outright loser,” Denman said. “But the larger commercial comparative here is about the association. And the association [with F1] is rock solid in terms of viewership increasing, major brands piling in, and the expansion of the calendar.” 

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LOUD AND CLEAR

Grand Entrance

May 26, 2026; Paris, France; Naomi Osaka of Japan as she removes the skirt over her tennis dress designed by Kevin Germanier for her match against Laura Siegemund of Germany on day three at Stade Roland Garros.

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

“I come here to play tennis, not to put on a fashion show. And if others want to put on a fashion show, then they should go ahead and do it. That’s totally fine with me.”

—World No. 47 Laura Siegemund told TNT Sports about opponent Naomi Osaka’s custom fashion looks she’s become known for. The four-time Grand Slam winner walked onto the court at Roland-Garros for her first-round match against Siegemund—which Osaka won—in a long black skirt and sleeveless beaded bodice, which she took off to reveal a sequined gold playing dress. Siegemund wasn’t a fan, adding that she thought “bigger names are treated differently.”

“In our sport, at every tournament they count every second, right up until you’ve unpacked your water bottle,” the German player said. “But she can have a minute and a half to change. I have a problem with that, because these rules simply exist and they are what they are—every second is now being watched so closely for us.” 

For her second-round match against Donna Vekić on Thursday, Osaka wore a metallic gold bomber jacket over a sequined gold dress with an ivory train.

ONE BIG FIG

An 18th Regular-Season Game

Dec 22, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle (85) looks on during warmups before the game against the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

2

The number of changes 49ers tight end George Kittle says the NFL should make if it adds an 18th game to the regular season. Kittle suggested players get an extra bye to ensure adequate rest and financial compensation. “You can’t keep doing this ’cause the game is hard enough as it is,” he said in an interview with Front Office Sports. Read the story.

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Building Endurance Beyond the Court

As the best of women’s basketball convene in Chicago for the 2026 WNBA All-Star weekend, Front Office Sports will gather executives, athletes, and changemakers for an afternoon of conversation and connection exploring the future of the game and the business behind it.

Join us July 24 for Future of Sports: Investing in Athletes, presented by State Street Investment Management SPY. 

This intimate event will feature thought-leadership discussions with league leaders, athletes, and financial decision-makers exploring the strategic moves fueling the growth of both major leagues and individual athletes—and how athletes are building long-term wealth, influence, and opportunity beyond the court through the support of financial advisers, investment partners, and others. 

Space is limited. Request to attend for a chance to be in the room.

STATUS REPORT

One Up, Two Down, One Push

Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 27, 2026 Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina in action during her second round match against Ukraine's Yuliia Starodubtseva

REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq

Elena Rybakina ⬇ The world No. 2 and the reigning Australian Open champion was defeated by Ukrainian world No. 55 Yulia Starodubtseva in the second round of the French Open. Among the most significant upsets of the tournament so far, this eliminates the chance for a male or female tennis player to complete a calendar Grand Slam (winning all four Grand Slams in one year) after men’s Australian Open champion Carlos Alcaraz withdrew from Roland-Garros with an injury.

NASCAR ⬆ In the weekend following the unexpected death of driver Kyle Busch, NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 averaged 3.06 million viewers Sunday night, making it the most-watched NASCAR on Prime Video race to date. This number is up from last year’s 2.72 million viewers who watched the same race on Amazon Prime Video. Sunday was a massive day for racing, with the Indy 500 taking place that same afternoon.

Jaxson Dart ⬆⬇ The Giants quarterback addressed his teammates in a Tuesday meeting about introducing U.S. President Donald Trump at a New York rally last week, according to NFL Network insiders Mike Garafolo and Ian Rapoport. Garafolo said the players “worked through it” and are “moving forward” from what happened. Dart’s introduction created widespread discussion, including criticism from his teammate Abdul Carter in a now-deleted tweet.

Lakers ⬇ The NBA team laid off several employees as part of team-wide reorganization following Mark Walter’s purchase of the team in October 2025, according to The Athletic. This includes people working in content, marketing, sponsorships, corporate partnerships, and media relations, with a team source calling the moves “very brutal.” The Trail Blazers also had layoffs after Tom Dundon bought the team, though the Lakers’ layoffs were reportedly not as widespread as what happened in Portland.

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Dave Checketts Says Founding MLS Team Was His ‘Worst Investment’ 

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NBA, NHL, WNBA Leaders: AI Will Change Officiating, Impact Games

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Colin Salao
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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