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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

June 5, 2026

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Get-in pricing for Games 3, 4, and 6, if necessary, of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden took another massive jump on resale marketplaces in the wake of the Knicks’ 105–95 road win over the Spurs in Game 1. As of Thursday afternoon, low-end tickets for Monday’s Game 3 started at about $8,200, more than three times higher than prices three weeks ago. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • One week out, a large number of World Cup tickets remain. There appear to be two ways FIFA can offload them before hopeful fans may see prices drop. Read the story.
  • ESPN is bracing for its second round of layoffs this year, expected to affect both talents and non-camera-facing employees, sources tell FOS. Read the story.
  • French Open finalist Maja Chwalińska said she struggled to pay for her hotel because she didn’t expect to be in Paris so long. Read the story.
  • Two of MLB’s longest-running stadium albatrosses—the Rays and A’s—are both showing meaningful progress, commissioner Rob Manfred said. Read the story.

Knicks Get-In Prices for Game 3 at MSG Hit $8,000—and Climbing

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Just when there is seemingly a ceiling on how high tickets can go for NBA Finals tickets at Madison Square Garden, the escalating madness around Knicks fandom still finds an entirely new level. 

Get-in pricing for Games 3, 4, and 6, if necessary, at MSG took another massive jump on multiple ticket resale marketplaces in the wake of the Knicks’ 105–95 road win over the Spurs in Game 1. As of Thursday afternoon, low-end tickets for Monday’s Game 3 started at about $8,200, nearly doubling the comparable figure of $4,200 from just three days ago, and more than tripling the market level from less than three weeks ago. 

Game 4 on June 10—which is now a potential clinching scenario should the Knicks complete another postseason sweep—has taken an even bigger leap. Pricing that began at $3,900 on Monday for that contest has now soared to around $8,500 per ticket across multiple markets.

Game 6 on June 16, still a tentative contest based on the outcome of the series, has pricing beginning at about $9,000 per ticket, up from $5,300 at the start of this week. 

Rarefied Air

These figures are far beyond the comparable data from Super Bowl LX in February, and show just how manic the demand for Knicks tickets has become. In addition to the 27-year gap since the Knicks last appeared in the NBA Finals, the team has not won a league title since 1973, which means fans are that much hungrier to see a championship happen. 

“There have been some high tickets for the NBA Finals before, and the event has been steadily going up [over recent years], but this is totally unprecedented territory and is a whole other thing,” TicketIQ founder and CEO Jesse Lawrence tells Front Office Sports. “It’s also not surprising, though, given the intensity of the Knicks fan base and the disposable income that’s in New York.”

These get-in figures are all for the upper sections of MSG, and lower-level seats continue to command resale pricing well into five figures. Notably, the get-in price for Game 3 of the NBA Finals also exceeds the comparable $7,900 figure for the FIFA men’s World Cup final on July 19. 

As has been the case since the Knicks-Spurs matchup was set last weekend, pricing is far cheaper in San Antonio. Friday’s Game 2 has a get-in resale price of less than $800, with that figure falling by several hundred dollars after the Spurs’ loss to open the series. A potential Game 5 on June 13 at Frost Bank Center starts around $1,800, while a possible Game 7 there on June 19 begins at $3,200.

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Watching Prices Rise

Even Knicks watch parties outside of MSG, or elsewhere in New York, are not immune to the ticket resale price escalation that is accelerating all around the NBA Finals.

A sold-out Game 2 watch party inside MSG that carries a $10 ticket cost, with proceeds going to the Garden of Dreams Foundation, now has resale costs beginning at around $100. Outside the arena, additional watch parties can proceed after New York officials reversed a prior ban. 

The outcome of Friday’s Game 2 of the NBA Finals will have significant sway on resale market activity over the weekend heading into the two games at MSG next week.

“If the Knicks win and go up 2–0 [in the series], you’ll see the market go crazy, especially for Game 4,” Alex Warner, CEO and cofounder of season-ticket management company Winventory, tells FOS. “In that case, you’ll see a lot of folks looking to get in for that one. It would either be a clinch possibility, or at worst, the Knicks go into that one up [two games to one] with an opportunity to really put the Spurs on the ropes, and that will certainly drive the market.”

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FOS NEWS

Sen. Schmitt on Fixing College Sports in Congress

FOS graphic

The Protect College Sports Act is a 111-page bipartisan bill that touches nearly every broken thing in college athletics right now, from the transfer portal to NIL pay-for-play to a provision that would allow schools to pool their media rights and sell them together. 

Sen. Eric Schmitt (R., Mo.) is a cosponsor and one of the architects of the bill, and he joins Front Office Sports to explain why he believes these issues are all connected and why Congress is the only entity that can actually fix them.

Watch the full interview.

Daily sports trivia: Can you rank the top five MLB players by the most career doubles?

Play Factle Sports
LOUD AND CLEAR

NFL Defends TV Deals

Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; NFL commissioner Roger Goodell arrives during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting at the Arizona Biltmore.

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

“As technologies have presented new ways to distribute video content, viewing habits have changed, and we have adjusted our approach, but to be clear, this has not come at the expense of our dedication to broadcast television.”

—NFL EVP and general counsel Ted Ullyot in a letter sent to the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, led by Rep. Jim Jordan. In the letter, the NFL declined to have league commissioner Roger Goodell testify before Congress in a hearing examining the NFL’s television deals and compliance with the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961. Read the story.

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.

Editors’ Picks

How Much Money Will the Knicks Make From Their Finals Run?

by Ben Horney
Finals games alone could be worth $20 million each.

Trump Administration: World Cup Is ‘Behind’ on Drone Security

by Ava Hult
DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin said counter-drone measures are “a little behind.”

Duke-Michigan Hoops Moving to MLB Ballpark to Skirt Rights Issue

by David Rumsey and Ryan Glasspiegel
The crux of the move is due to media-rights complications.

Question of the Day

Did you watch Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Wednesday night?

 YES   NO 

Thursday’s result: 52% of respondents said they are rooting for the Knicks in the NBA Finals. 48% said the Spurs.

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Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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