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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 9, 2026

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Some Masters patrons are being stopped at the gates and questioned about where their tickets came from. The checks are part of Augusta National’s ongoing crackdown on the resale market.

—David Rumsey

First Up

  • The DOJ opened an investigation into the NFL’s media practices, with league sources pointing to looming rights negotiations as the driver. Read the story.
  • A “transfer portal” for sports lawyers is pushing top salaries into eight figures. Read the story.
  • The NFL is preparing replacement officials for OTAs and minicamps as labor talks with referees remain unresolved. Read the story.
  • Holly Rowe said the WNBA draft is “loaded” but complicated by roster uncertainty under the new CBA. Read the story.

Masters Ticket Crackdown Playing Out Behind Closed Doors

Rob Schumacher-Imagn Images

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Just inside the north gate of Augusta National, there is a small, one-story white building with blacked-out windows.

“Authorized Personnel Only,” reads a sign staked out front amid the azaleas.

Shortly after 9:30 a.m. ET on Thursday, a line formed outside that building of nearly two dozen patrons who were waiting patiently to get their days started for Round 1 of the 2026 Masters.

The delay for those patrons was due to Augusta National’s continuing efforts to restrict the Masters ticket resale market. Like what happened at the 2025 tournament, some patrons are once again being stopped upon arrival and questioned about the origin of their Masters passes. 

While some of the questioning could be random, it is believed many of these people are being flagged by Augusta National for having passes that were resold, sources tell Front Office Sports.

Here’s how the process was playing out Thursday morning.

If a patron’s weekly Masters badge scans abnormally, the ticketing attendant then calls over a security officer. The patron is then escorted over to the special white building, where they hand over their badge and proof of identification to a tournament employee, who then takes the credentials inside.

Every few minutes, a tournament employee emerges from the building and calls the name or names of specific patrons. Some are given their badges back and are free to go into the course. Others are brought inside for questioning.

At least four patrons observed by FOS immediately left Augusta National after questioning, although most were allowed to go into the course with their original tickets.

At the south gate, a similar process played out, but there was no noticeable line or backup in the late morning. Some were told there was simply an unknown scanning issue before being let go.

One patron told FOS the process took nearly an hour, with the majority of the time spent waiting outside before a roughly 10-minute questioning session inside, which included probing on where and how they got their badge.

“I guess if you can answer the questions, they let you go,” another patron said.

By Thursday afternoon, the line of patrons under question at the north gate had died down, although there were still a few waiting outside the white building.

Some fans online have also reported not being allowed in with their tickets this week, including at the final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Saturday.

Local Shift

There was a smaller-than-normal resale market for Masters tickets this year on major secondary ticketing platforms. SeatGeek decided not to resell Masters tickets this year. On Thursday morning, StubHub had only two listings available.

Local ticket brokers are still lining the streets of Augusta with signs saying they will buy or sell tickets. Many who decided not to sell their inventory to national brokers like StubHub this year have had fewer issues with badges getting flagged on-site, one source tells FOS.

An Augusta National spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment by FOS.

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EXCLUSIVE

Sky, Sparks Near Atkins-Jackson Deal

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Chicago Sky and Los Angeles Sparks are in advanced talks on a trade that would send Ariel Atkins to L.A. in exchange for Rickea Jackson, with a deal expected when the signing window opens Saturday.

While terms of the deal have not been finalized, the move carries financial implications, as Atkins—cored by Chicago on Monday—would not be eligible for a supermax with the Sparks, instead topping out at $1.19 million (or less). Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Playing With Fire

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

“We were going to bet regardless, no matter what.”

—Charlie, a recent college graduate and former Big East soccer player who asked to remain anonymous, on gambling during his eligibility.

Sports betting has become part of the routine for many college athletes, even though NCAA rules prohibit it. Some researchers estimate 75% of college students gambled in the past year, including 18% who do so weekly. The risks can add up quickly—from massive debt to lost eligibility. Read the story.

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STATUS REPORT

One Up, Two Down, One Push

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Rockies ⬇ The club set a franchise attendance low Wednesday, outside of games impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Coors Field draw of 15,189 for the contest against the Astros followed one on Monday of 16,301, which also set a historic low for the team. This period between Opening Day and the start of May is often the most challenging time of the season across the league for attendance. The Rockies have posted three straight 100-loss seasons and narrowly avoided a league record for losing last year with a 43–119 record. This year’s Colorado team, however, is 6–6 after posting four straight victories, and it didn’t win its sixth game last year until May 1.

MLB alternate uniforms ⬆ The league is continuing its ongoing City Connect program of alternate uniforms with Nike and Fanatics, with eight clubs introducing supplemental looks that will be used during the course of the 2026 season. The latest rollout involves the Braves, Brewers, Orioles, Padres, Pirates, Rangers, Reds, and Royals, with each taking part in the five-year-old City Connect program for a second time. 

Aryna Sabalenka ⬇ The world No. 1 posted on Instagram she will miss the Stuttgart Open due to an unspecified injury from March’s Miami Open, a tournament which she won. Sabalenka previously withdrew from the Dubai Open in February, saying she might not play there again after comments from director Salah Tahlak encouraging “harsher” punishments for players who miss competition.

Gianpiero Lambiase ⬆⬇ Max Verstappen’s longtime race engineer will leave Red Bull when his contract expires at the end of the 2027 season to join McLaren. Lambiase has been with Verstappen since 2016. This move comes after Verstappen, a four-time world champion, insinuated he could retire at the end of the 2026 season and that he wasn’t enjoying the sport.

Editors’ Picks

Men’s March Madness Title Game Draws 18.3M Viewers, Up 23%

by Eric Fisher
Michigan’s title win completes an emphatic run of audience increases.

Masters Gnome Mania Dominating Merch Sales in Augusta

by David Rumsey
The limited supply of the souvenir sells out quickly daily.

North Carolina Makes Michael Malone Among College Basketball’s Richest

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

Can you list the last five NHL teams to relocate cities?

Play Factle Sports
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Written by David Rumsey
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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