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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 28, 2026

Former NBA player and assistant coach Damon Jones is the first defendant to plead guilty in the two federal gambling cases that rocked the league last year. He admitted Tuesday that he tipped off gamblers using “inside information I obtained as a result of my relationships from my playing career in the NBA,” including giving gamblers information about an injured player who appeared to be LeBron James.

—Alex Schiffer

First Up

  • As the PGA Tour returns to Trump National Doral after a decade, five of the top-15-ranked players—including Masters champ Rory McIlroy—won’t play. Read the story.
  • The NWSL board of governors is no longer expected to hold a controversial vote about flipping the calendar due to player opposition. Read the story.
  • A sports-data company is pushing back on reports that raised concerns about the firm’s ties to unregulated gambling operators overseas. Read the story.
  • The Braves say their new TV network is on pace to potentially surpass prior broadcasting revenue from the embattled Main Street Sports Group. Read the story.

Damon Jones Admits He Sold LeBron Injury Information to Gamblers

Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

BROOKLYN — Former NBA player and assistant coach Damon Jones pleaded guilty in federal court Tuesday to two counts of wire fraud, one in each of the federal cases that rocked the league in October. 

One case alleges an illegal NBA gambling scheme; the other describes a complex plot to rig poker games.

Jones is the first defendant to plead guilty among the 34 defendants listed between the two cases. He admitted Tuesday that he tipped off gamblers using “inside information I obtained as a result of my relationships from my playing career in the NBA.”

Though LeBron James was not named in the government’s indictment, prosecutors accused Jones of giving gamblers information about an injury to a player who was clearly James.

Jones previously pleaded not guilty to both wire fraud and money laundering, but pleaded guilty only to the wire fraud charges Tuesday. 

He is scheduled to be sentenced in both cases on Jan. 6, 2027. Jones will also have to pay forfeiture and restitution, the latter of which will be determined at sentencing. 

In the poker case, Jones admitted he was “a face card in pre-rigged games” and used his status as a former NBA player to “attract high-end bettors to games.” Jones said he was compensated for participating in the games. 

Jones apologized to “all of those who were involved” in the poker case and said “I’d like to sincerely apologize to the court, my family, my peers and also the National Basketball Association” for his conduct in the gambling case.

The 49-year-old was arrested in October and charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. While each charge carries up to 20 years in prison, government prosecutors recommended Jones serve between 21 months and 27 months for the gambling case and between 63 months and 78 months for the poker case, with some time reduced because Jones pleaded guilty before April 30. 

Prosecutors accused Jones of providing nonpublic information about NBA players’ health status multiple times, with at least two of them involving James when Jones was an “unofficial assistant coach” with the Lakers. James and Jones were teammates for three years in Cleveland from 2005 to 2008. 

James has not been accused of anything, and there is no evidence to suggest his involvement in either case. 

Jones and his attorney declined to speak with reporters after they exited court Tuesday. 

“As shown by his guilty pleas today, Damon Jones converted his fame and ties to professional basketball into a multi-faceted criminal betting operation,” U.S. attorney Joseph Nocella said in a statement. “He used private locker room and medical information from multiple NBA teams to cheat legitimate sportsbooks. He also, separately, lured unsuspecting victims to high-stakes rigged poker games.”

Next Up

Marves Fairley, a Mississippi bettor who is a defendant in both the NBA gambling case and a similar one in college basketball, will also plead guilty, according to a court document filed Monday. 

Prosecutors say Fairley illegally used information given to him by De’Niro Laster, a friend of NBA guard Terry Rozier. Laster allegedly told Fairley that Rozier planned to exit a game prematurely while with the Hornets in March 2023. 

Jones’s guilty plea comes a day after prosecutors revealed they’re seeking additional charges against Rozier in the gambling case.

Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups is alleged to have played a similar role in the poker games as Jones: using his status to help attract wealthy bettors. At a status hearing in March, prosecutors said they planned to offer plea agreements to a dozen defendants and added they’ve had “productive” talks with at least nine more. 

It’s unknown whether Billups, who has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him, is considering a plea deal. 

Judge Ramon Reyes has told federal prosecutors he wants to start a trial for the other poker defendants on Nov. 2. A status hearing for that case is currently scheduled for June 10. 

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EXCLUSIVE

WWE Moving 20 NXT Premium Live Events to The CW

WWE NXT

WWE NXT

WWE’s NXT and The CW are expanding their relationship. 

All of NXT’s premium live events will air on the broadcast network in a deal for 20 programs over “the next several years,” the sides confirmed to Front Office Sports. 

NXT is WWE’s developmental promotion. Its PLEs previously streamed on Peacock before moving to YouTube last month. The new deal begins with this summer’s Great American Bash. The PLEs will air live on both coasts. Read the story. 

For all of our sports media news and analysis, you can subscribe to the weekly Tuned In newsletter.

ONE BIG FIG

Louisiana Loses LIV

Jan 10, 2026; Lecanto, Florida, United States; The LIV Golf Promotions trophy is displayed on the first tee during the third round of the LIV Golf Black Diamond Ranch golf tournament at Black Diamond Ranch.

Jeff Swinger-Imagn Images

$5 million

The hosting fee Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry last year agreed to pay LIV Golf to land a league event in New Orleans. 

Now, just weeks after questions emerged about LIV’s future, the league’s debut tournament in New Orleans set for late June has been called off, with a potential fall rescheduling on the table. 

“We appreciate LIV’s good-faith efforts and look forward to maintaining our partnership as we continue conversations around an event later this year,” a joint statement from Landry and Louisiana Economic Development secretary Susan Bourgeois said.  

The state is now expecting a partial refund from LIV. Read the story. 

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Last year’s event featured big league commissioners like Adam Silver and Rob Manfred, network heads like Jimmy Pitaro and Eric Shanks, and on-air talent like Maria Taylor, Stephen A. Smith, and Greg Olsen for candid, newsmaking conversations in New York City.

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STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Jan 6, 2024; St. Paul, Minnesota, USA; Montreal forward Marie-Philip Poulin (29) shoots as Minnesota forward Kendall Coyne (26) defends during the second period in a PWHL ice hockey game at XCel Energy Center.

Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

PWHL ⬆ The league is seeing increases across attendance, live YouTube viewership, and merchandise sales following the conclusion of its third regular season on April 25. Notably, merchandise sales went up by 190% after the 2026 Winter Olympics, compared to the same period last season. The PWHL playoffs begin Thursday.

Caitlin Clark ⬆ The Indiana Fever star is publishing a children’s book based on her life, titled EXTRAordinary! A Little EXTRA to Reach BIG Dreams. The book is being published by Random House Books for Young Readers on Nov. 3, and it includes illustrations from Romanian children’s book illustrator Adriana Predoi.

Phillies ⬇ The MLB club, one of several high-revenue teams to struggle this season, fired manager Rob Thomson on Tuesday. Don Mattingly, previously the Phillies’ bench coach, will be interim manager for the duration of the 2026 season. That move forms MLB’s first father-son duo between manager and GM, as Preston Mattingly holds the latter role with Philadelphia. The firing is the second in the last three days across MLB following the Red Sox’ dismissal of Alex Cora. 

NCAA ⬆⬇ The proposed rule that would give collegiate athletes five seasons to max out their eligibility would not apply to current student-athletes, NCAA president Charlie Baker confirmed. “If you’ve used up your eligibility, you’ve used it up,” Baker said. The Division I cabinet will next meet to discuss, and potentially vote on, the issue on May 22.

Editors’ Picks

Tyler Adams: USMNT ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Jersey ‘Exactly What We Want’

by Margaret Fleming
The players contributed to Nike’s World Cup designs.

Zac Brown Is Everywhere in Sports—and Says It Happened ‘Organically’

by Eric Fisher
An upcoming UFC concert is part of a run of sports-related appearances.

Prosecutors to Bring Bribery Charges Against Terry Rozier

by Alex Schiffer
Rozier allegedly “solicited and accepted a bribe.”
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Alex Schiffer
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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