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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

April 9, 2026


WNBA free agency is here, the first under the league’s new CBA. Ten players have received core designations—but there was one notable absence. 

—Annie Costabile

First Up

  • Konnor Griffin signed a nine-year, $140M contract with the Pirates. The record deal could have implications for upcoming MLB labor negotiations. Read the story.
  • The NCAA bans athletes from gambling. But the practice is still rampant, and one former college athlete told FOS, “We were going to bet regardless.” Read the story.
  • The NFL’s trip to Australia to help kick off the 2026 regular season with a 49ers and Rams matchup is facing some logistical hurdles. Read the story. 
  • LIV signed a short-term prediction-market agreement for Masters week. The deal comes as the PGA Tour has kept a distance from prediction markets. Read the story.

What the Core Designation Means Under the New WNBA CBA

Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

WNBA free agency is here, and it began with core designations and qualifying offers. 

In total 10 players were cored. The core tag operates like the NFL’s franchise tag, giving the team exclusive negotiating rights over a player. The 10 players who were cored this week:

Napheesa Collier (Minnesota Lynx)
Kelsey Plum (Los Angeles Sparks) 
Marina Mabrey (Toronto Tempo)
Arike Ogunbowale (Dallas Wings)
Kelsey Mitchell (Indiana Fever)
Ariel Atkins (Chicago Sky)
Allisha Gray (Atlanta Dream)
Ezi Magbegor (Seattle Storm)
Bridget Carleton (Portland Fire)
Sabrina Ionescu (New York Liberty)

Prior to the new collective bargaining agreement, players could be cored twice in their careers regardless of experience. The new CBA says players with six years of service or fewer can be cored up to two times, but once a player reaches their seventh season they are no longer core eligible. (That part of the CBA kicks in next year.)

This designation comes with a supermax qualifying offer from the player’s “home team,” the team they were most recently with. For example, the Sky’s core qualifying offer to Atkins is valued at $1.4 million. However, that doesn’t mean she will sign for that amount. It also doesn’t mean she will stay in Chicago. 

The Sky could negotiate different terms with Atkins and sign her for less than the supermax salary. They also could sign and trade her. In the latter scenario, Atkins would not be eligible to sign a supermax contract, as only the Sky are able to pay her that amount. The same goes for Ogunbowale, Mitchell, and every other unrestricted free agent who was cored by their “home team.” The max a cored player could sign for in a sign-and-trade scenario is $1.19 million. 

The supermax under the previous CBA was $249,244—less than the rookie minimum under the new labor deal.

Noticeably absent from the list of cored players: Phoenix Mercury forward Satou Sabally. 

The three-time All-Star is not expected to re-sign with the Mercury, according to multiple sources. (Sabally thanked Phoenix in a social media post Wednesday.) It’s unclear why GM Nick U’ren wouldn’t extend a core designation to at least preserve a return with her departure. Additionally, the Las Vegas Aces, Golden State Valkyries, Washington Mystics, and Connecticut Sun did not core a player. 

One could argue the Valkyries, Mystics, and Sun didn’t have a player who warrants a supermax qualifying offer.

The Aces, though, certainly do.

The Las Vegas Review Journal reported weeks ago that the Aces planned to re-sign four-time MVP A’ja Wilson to a supermax contract. But there are questions about whether the team can keep its collection of stars together under the new CBA, which severely limits the bottom of teams’ rosters if they sign more than one supermax player because it’s a 20% hit to the cap. 

The Aces will need their stars to make sacrifices to keep their championship roster together, similar to the Liberty. 

Ionescu and Breanna Stewart both said they will be re-signing with the Liberty. But for GM Jonathan Kolb to re-sign Jonquel Jones—he said at the end of last season he had the utmost confidence his Big Three would be back—at least one of the three players will have to take less than the maximum salary, and likely more. 

Balloongate

WNBA champion Nneka Ogwumike had a meeting with the Minnesota Lynx on Wednesday.

Amazing Balloons MN, a local Minnesota balloon company, was first to report the news when the company posted and quickly deleted a video of the company’s employees setting up a balloon arch around a sign that said “Welcome Nneka” at the Lynx practice facility. Ogwumike has planned meetings with multiple teams in the coming days and has not agreed to terms with the Lynx. 

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FOS NEWS

Inside the WNFC’s Breakout Season

FOS graphic

Seven seasons in, the Women’s National Football Conference is breaking attendance and revenue records, adding a brand-new team in Oakland, and reaching fans who never thought they would follow women’s tackle football. What is actually driving the momentum, and why is Year 7 the breakout year?

Watch the full video.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Bringing a Piece of Augusta Home

Apr 4, 2026; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Detail view of the Masters gnomes during the final round of the Augusta National Women's Amateur golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-Imagn Images

Michael Madrid-Imagn Images

“Nothing too crazy today, just like $3,000.”

—A cashier at Augusta National when asked Tuesday what was the largest receipt they had seen at the golf shop. 

Lines at the North Golf Shop quickly grew to 90-minute wait times each morning shortly after gates opened, with most patrons seeking out the highly coveted Masters Gnome. Read the story. 

Editors’ Picks

North Carolina Makes Michael Malone Among College Basketball’s Richest

by Alex Schiffer
It will be his first college job since 2001.

Sue Bird Expected to Join NBC/Peacock WNBA Coverage

by Ryan Glasspiegel
Bird previously hosted Final Four alt-casts for ESPN with Diana Taurasi.

Women’s Title Game Draws 9.9M Viewers, Third-Highest Since 1989

by Colin Salao
Last year’s title game drew 8.5 million viewers.

Question of the Day

Would you travel to Australia to attend an NFL game?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: Only 9% of respondents think World Cup host cities should charge more for public transit to and from matches.

Events Video Games Shop
Written by Annie Costabile
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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