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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

February 6, 2026

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Bill Belichick and Robert Kraft were officially left off the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s first ballot, a stunning decision that’s dominated Super Bowl week and sparked backlash across the NFL.

Plus, Shannon Sharpe tells Front Office Sports he’s open to a reunion with Stephen A. Smith and a return to ESPN.

—Eric Fisher and Michael McCarthy

FOS at the Super Bowl

  • The Hall of Fame’s decision to leave out Bill Belichick and Robert Kraft has sparked a once-absurd debate: Is Tom Brady really a first-ballot lock? Read the story.
  • Why the NFL’s first game in Australia landed on 49ers–Rams comes down to rivalry, travel, and global ambition. Read the story.
  • Bad Bunny says his Super Bowl halftime show will be a “huge party,” and the NFL is bracing for a massive—and potentially record-breaking—audience. Read the story.
  • The NFL isn’t ready to embrace prediction markets yet, but executives say they’re watching closely as regulation evolves. Read the story.
  • The NFL’s QB salary boom isn’t slowing down, and Patrick Mahomes’s agent says a $70 million deal is inevitable. Read the story.

Belichick and Kraft Officially Miss First-Ballot Hall of Fame Cut

Eric Canha-Imagn Images

SAN FRANCISCO — It’s official: the winningest Super Bowl head coach ever and one of the NFL’s most influential and impactful team owners in league history are not first-ballot Pro Football Hall of Famers.

Patriots owner Robert Kraft and former head coach Bill Belichick were both denied as the 2026 induction class for the football shrine was revealed at the NFL Honors ceremony late Thursday at the Palace of Fine Arts. Instead, the latest inductees will include Drew Brees, Roger Craig, Larry Fitzgerald Jr., Luke Kuechly, and Adam Vinatieri. 

While each has made laudatory contributions to football and, in many instances, ranks among the most prolific performers in NFL history, none of them have captured the attention that the candidacies of Kraft and Belichick have. And in a certain irony, it was Vinatieri, a standout kicker who was part of three Super Bowl winners in New England, who gained entry to the Hall of Fame before his coach and owner there. 

The situation around Belichick and Kraft has dominated conversation in and around the festivities leading up to Super Bowl LX on Sunday. Belichick was famously cantankerous with the media and was involved in several scandals, and Kraft led the team while issues such as Spygate and Deflategate unfolded. The failure to recognize the accomplishments of both, however, has sparked widespread outcry. 

Belichick’s six Super Bowl wins as a head coach are unmatched, and his 302 victories in the regular season rank third in NFL history behind Don Shula and George Halas. Kraft, meanwhile, has been a central figure in the NFL’s ascent into a global business colossus that has included still-rising revenue and franchise values, and quite possibly, another U.S. television viewership record on Sunday.  

Patriots Cry Foul

Leading up to Thursday night’s reveal of the induction class, significant sentiment existed among former Patriots colleagues, and elsewhere in football, that both Belichick and Kraft were unjustly treated.

“Coach Belichick needs to be in the Hall of Fame, and it needed to be a first ballot,” former Patriots tight end and Fox Sports personality Rob Gronkowski told Front Office Sports on Radio Row at Super Bowl LX. “Now there’s no such thing as a first ballot Hall of Fame coach. No other coach ever in history should go first ballot.”

Patriots coach Mike Vrabel, preparing for the title game Sunday against the Seahawks, concurred.

“In my experiences with Robert, he’s more than deserving of being in the Hall of Fame,” Vrabel said. “I’m not in charge of deciding when that happens.”

Changes Likely Coming

After the induction class was announced, Pro Football Hall of Fame president and CEO Jim Porter acknowledged the furor surrounding Belichick and Kraft and said several changes are potentially on the table to improve voting procedures. Among them are a public release of vote totals, changes to how candidates are classified, and a return to full in-person voting and debate—something shelved during the pandemic.

“We’re going to take a look at everything,” Porter said. “I’ve had selectors say it’s not apples-to-apples [between a contributor, player, or a coach]. … A quarterback and a guard probably aren’t apples-to-apples either. What we ask the selectors to do is pick the people most deserving that are in front of them. It’s hard.”

Porter said on-field matters are what selectors are tasked to consider, and as a result, issues such as the Patriots’ Spygate scandal could be part of that evaluation.

Other Winners

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, meanwhile, won the NFL Most Valuable Player award, beating out the Patriots’ Drake Maye in a high-profile battle. The 37-year-old Stafford, winning by just five points over Maye in the weighted voting, used the occasion to announce that he will be returning for the 2026 season.

Vrabel won Coach of the Year, leading New England to a massive turnaround in his first year that includes a trip to Sunday’s Super Bowl LX. Browns defensive end Myles Garrett unanimously won Defensive Player of the Year after setting a new single-season sack record. The 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey won Comeback Player of the Year, and is the first running back to gain that honor in 24 years.. 

The league continues to expand its annual Honors ceremony, with the primetime ceremony shown on NBC and Peacock and hosted by Jon Hamm. The actor was not afraid to skewer key league figures in his opening monologue.

“Incredible performance by Jerry Jones on Landman, way more convincing than when he said it was a good idea to trade Micah Parsons,” he joked about the Cowboys owner. 

Hamm also addressed the league’s ever-expanding global profile.

“There’s nowhere this game can’t thrive—except the NFC South.” he said.

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EXCLUSIVE

Shannon Sharpe Open to Reunion With Stephen A. Smith, ESPN

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

SAN FRANCISCO – Could Shannon Sharpe make a comeback at ESPN?

Sharpe reunited with his old First Take sparring partner, Stephen A. Smith, here on Radio Row on Thursday for a live version of his Nightcap podcast with Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson.

In an exclusive interview with Front Office Sports, Sharpe said he’s open to a possible reunion with Smith and ESPN.

“That’s not my call. I would love to go back if they were to call. Burke [Magnus], Jimmy [Pitaro], Dave Roberts. That is their call. But obviously, I’m more than willing, I’m more than capable. They see what we do here on Nightcap. They see the numbers that we generate, “ Sharpe said.

“Club Shay Shay was in the Top 10 this weekend on YouTube. Both of our shows are normally in the Top 20. Very few people can say they have a Top 20 show. We normally, customarily have two shows in the Top 20 on YouTube. So clearly, I still have a fan base. I still have a big following. If a reunion is in order, I’m amenable to it.”

ESPN had no comment on Sharpe.

The last three years have been a rollercoaster ride for the Pro Football Hall of Famer. In June 2023, Sharpe split with debate partner Skip Bayless after six successful years on FS1’s Undisputed. Their relationship became so toxic that they had a public fallout on the air. A disgusted Sharpe took a buyout from FS1–and left Bayless on his own.

The next year, Smith personally recruited Sharpe as a contributor to his morning juggernaut First Take, which routinely trounced Undisputed in the ratings. Sharpe joined ESPN part-time–and became an even bigger TV star than before.

The three-time Super Bowl champion added humor to the debate show. He broke Smith up by roasting fellow First Take panelist Dan Orlovsky for looking like a “fast food manager” with his checked, short-sleeve shirt. In June 2024, Sharpe signed a multi-year contract extension with ESPN that essentially made him the successor to Smith if the First Take superstar ever left the worldwide leader for a second career in politics or entertainment.

At the same time, Sharpe was turning his owned and operated Club Shay Shay podcast into one of the biggest shows in sports media. His landmark interview with comedian Katt Williams in 2024 broke the Internet with 91.5 million views and counting. He added the hit Nightcap podcast with Johnson. By April 2025, Sharpe was getting multiple offers for his five-year-old Shay Shay Media. With his deal with Colin Cowherd’s The Volume set to expire. Sharpe was in line for a Bill Simmons-like deal worth $100 million or more for his media empire.

But it all fell apart quickly thanks to an embarrassing $50 million lawsuit filed by an ex-girlfriend in April, 2025. The legal back and forth featured a series of lurid, sexually detailed texts by both parties. Sharpe temporarily stepped away from First Take and eventually settled the suit. But the damage was done. Disney-owned ESPN parted ways with Sharpe last July. Even so, Smith and Sharpe kept in touch. So it was no surprise when his friend made a surprise appearance with Sharpe and Johnson on Radio Row.

“Stephen A. never left my side. We still talk. We probably talk more now than we did when I was actually on the show. He’s been great. He’s always been in my corner,” Sharpe said.

“I didn’t know Stephen A. that well. We knew each other casually in passing,” he said. “Until I really started working on the show. Then this past year, obviously, with what happened, he’s been there every step of the way. ‘You need anything? He always texts me. Hey, I’m free, I’m about to call you.’ He’ll call, he’ll touch base to make sure everything was OK, and tell me to keep my head up. He’s just been great. I think he gets a bad rap. People see him on First Take, and they have his takes. He’s really, truly a great man.”

The best news for Sharpe? Despite the headlines, his audience never left him. Sharpe’s viewership numbers for Club Shay Shay and Nightcap have actually gone up, not down, following the lawsuit.

During the 2025 football season, his overall YouTube views rose 22% from the previous season. And his live episode views increased 32%. On Thursday night, he and Johnson were set to host a live taping of Nightcap at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco.

Said Sharpe about his loyal fans: “They never left. They believed in me. They supported me. They propped me up when I had fallen down. They wouldn’t let me stay down. It’s been unbelievable. If somebody would have told me this was going to be the outcome. You know, I thought I could bounce back. But I thought it would take longer than it actually did.”

ANOTHER FOS EXCLUSIVE

Woodson Passed on Browns Stake to Keep Liquor Brand

Pro Football Hall of Famer Charles Woodson told Front Office Sports he chose to keep his name attached to his wine and whiskey business rather than take a minority ownership stake in the Cleveland Browns, citing NFL rules around alcohol branding. Read more in Ryan Glasspiegel’s story here.

FOS at Radio Row

  • Stephen A. Smith says “somebody’s gonna burn the building down” if Tom Brady is ever denied a first-ballot Hall of Fame spot. Watch here.
  • SportsCenter’s Christine Williamson and Kevin Negandhi broke down how the iconic ESPN show is evolving as media habits shift. Watch here.
  • Cardinals tight end Trey McBride made it clear he expects Kyler Murray back, calling him “our franchise quarterback.” Watch here.
  • “It’s more football, so I love it,” Falcons running back Bijan Robinson says as talk of an 18-game NFL season grows. Watch here.

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On Feb. 26, Front Office Sports and Athletes Unlimited are joining forces to host Future of Women’s Sports with speakers Sydney Colson, Athletes Unlimited athlete; Uzma Rawn Dowler of Major League Baseball; sports broadcaster Ros Gold-Onwude; Michelle Kennedy of the Nashville Predators; Lara Krug of the Kansas City Chiefs; Carolyn Braff of PepsiCo; Nancy Dubuc of TOGETHXR; Jon Patricof and Allie Kleva of Athletes Unlimited; and others.

This half-day summit—hosted in one of the country’s most dynamic sports cities—will forecast where women’s sports is headed and highlight the vast opportunities that still lie ahead. 

Set in advance of the AU Pro Basketball Championship game, this experience will bring together collaborators in culture, business, and competition to explore what’s next.

This is your front-row seat to the future of women’s sports. Don’t miss your opportunity to join us—request to attend.

What Else We’re Watching

  • College basketball is having a ratings moment, with star power and competitive games driving growth far beyond the usual sports bump. Read the story.
  • Tigers ace Tarik Skubal won big in arbitration, but the ripple effects could reach far beyond Detroit and into MLB’s next labor fight. Read the story.
  • The NBA trade deadline brought plenty of action, even without a Giannis deal, as teams rebuilt or scrambled to avoid the luxury tax. Read the story.

Editors’ Picks

Olympics Norovirus Outbreak Postpones Finnish Women’s Hockey Game

by Margaret Fleming
More than half the women’s team is sick or quarantining.

Why State Courts May Be the Key to Winning More NCAA Eligibility

by Amanda Christovich
Athletes have had a string of successes at the state court level.

Olympic Torch’s Long Road to the Opening Ceremony

by Sam Becker
How the Olympic Torch made its way to Milan for the Winter Games.
Events Video Games Show Shop
Written by Eric Fisher, Michael McCarthy
Edited by Matthew Tabeek

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