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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

October 29, 2025

The relationship between the Mavericks and Stars has deteriorated into a legal fight over control of their shared arena, potentially reshaping long-term venue plans for both of the Dallas sports teams.

—Eric Fisher, David Rumsey, and Ben Horney

Mavericks Accuse Stars of Holding Dallas Arena ‘Hostage’ in Lawsuit

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The long-festering uncertainty around the arena future in Dallas has moved to the legal front as the Mavericks have sued the Stars for breach of contract, alleging the NHL team is thwarting improvements to the American Airlines Center, the current home of both teams.

In a suit filed this week in Texas Business Court, the Mavericks and its owners, Dallas Sports Group, make several additional claims, including that the Stars are “holding the American Airlines Center hostage,” further signaling what has been a steady deteriorating relationship between the teams. The Mavericks are now seeking court affirmation of a prior seizure of the Stars’ half of a joint operating company overseeing management of the AAC.

DSG is led by billionaire Miriam Adelson and son-in-law Patrick Dumont.

“After repeated failed attempts to bring the ownership of the Stars to the table and address improvements and operations of the AAC, DSG must, unfortunately, rely on the courts to confirm ownership of the AAC lease and allow DSG to make the desired improvements to the venue,” the company said in a statement.

The Tom Gaglardi–led Stars have quickly countersued, seeking to “restore normal operations” at the arena.

Future Plans

The legal dispute could have long-term ramifications for plans from both teams to develop new venues.

Front Office Sports reported earlier this month that a 2031 move by the Stars to suburban Plano, Texas, is among the team’s leading options. There, the team could build an expansive mixed-use development surrounding the arena, in keeping with a fast-growing trend across sports, and generate additional year-round revenue. The Stars already have their team headquarters and practice facility in nearby Frisco—something that the Mavericks claim breaches a long-held franchise agreement. 

The Stars’ moves, in part, stem from the Mavericks having started on their own path to build their own arena, without the hockey team. That effort is being led by Mavericks CEO and Basketball Hall of Famer Rick Welts. 

The Mavericks’ actions are “nothing short of a hostile takeover of the management of the American Airlines Center,” the Stars’ legal counsel said in a statement. “Their lawsuit seeks to marginalize the Dallas Stars to the role of a mere tenant, and ultimately, drive the team out of Dallas.”

The 24-year-old AAC is owned by the city of Dallas, but it is operated by the joint company involving the Stars and Mavericks that is at the center of this dispute.

Parallels Back East

The Dallas dispute bears some similarity to the prior arena battle in Philadelphia between the ownership groups of the 76ers and Flyers. Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment, which owns the 76ers, previously sought to build a new downtown facility, something that Flyers owner Comcast Spectacor firmly opposed. 

That matter, however, never reached a lawsuit stage, and the power dynamic has been somewhat different, given that Comcast Spectacor owns Xfinity Mobile Arena. Comcast Spectacor and HBSE have since come together on a deal to jointly develop and own a new arena in the south Philadelphia sports complex. HBSE executives have said the expansive vision for the forthcoming venue, targeted for a 2031 opening, is to build no less than “the greatest arena in the world.”

Even as the Stars and Mavericks previously played in the now-demolished Reunion Arena in Dallas, there is likely no reunion happening between those teams.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Inside Next-Gen Sports Venues

Today’s sports venues have evolved far beyond the concrete coliseums of the past. They’ve become immersive, high-tech entertainment hubs—not just for fans but for entire cities. 

From AI-powered innovations and frictionless in-venue purchasing to luxury seating, five-star dining, and world-class entertainment, the modern stadium is a marvel of sophistication and strategy.

Tune in Nov. 12 at 1 p.m. ET for Future of Sports: Stadium Sophistication. Front Office Sports Today host and producer Baker Machado will sit down with industry leaders to explore the billion-dollar business behind these next-gen venues—the technology, key players, and innovations driving unforgettable fan experiences.

Register now.

NFL Ratings Continue to Surge: CBS and NBC on a Record Pace

Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

The NFL’s three primary broadcast partners for Sunday games all capped the first two months of the 2025 regular season with various high TV ratings marks.

Through September and October games, CBS and NBC are drawing their best audiences on record for their respective NFL packages.

NBC is averaging 24.7 million viewers per game for Sunday Night Football. That’s the largest average TV audience through Week 8 since the network took SNF over in 2006. 

Sunday afternoon telecasts on CBS are averaging 18.61 million viewers, which is the network’s best performance through eight weeks since the NFL returned to CBS in 1998. CBS also had its most-watched October since 2015, averaging 19.07 million viewers per game this month (up 7% from last October).

Fox is averaging 19.59 million viewers for its own Sunday afternoon games, which is the network’s best start to an NFL season through Week 8 since 2015 (when Fox averaged 19.74 million viewers per game).

The Top 5

Through the first two months of the NFL season (excluding Thursday’s Ravens-Dolphins matchup), here are the five most-watched games:

  • Eagles-Chiefs (Week 2): 33.8 million on Fox
  • Cowboys-Eagles (Week 1): 28.3 million on NBC
  • Lions-Chiefs (Week 6): 27.3 million on NBC
  • 49ers-Buccaneers (Week 6): 26.9 million on CBS
  • Packers-Cowboys (Week 4): 26.9 million on NBC

Best of the Rest

Amazon Prime Video is averaging 15.29 million viewers per game for its Thursday Night Football package, which is up 16% over last year, and the streamer’s best mark in four seasons with exclusive NFL rights. 

Leaguewide viewership through Week 8 (which includes ESPN’s Monday Night Football package) is not yet available. But through Week 7, NFL games were averaging 17.6 million viewers across all networks, the best mark since 2015.

Overall, the NFL continues its strong TV performance in the first season of Nielsen’s new Big Data + Panel methodology.

EXCLUSIVE

Wizards Hire Ex-ESPN Editor Daglas for Front Office Role

Cristina Daglas has joined Monumental Basketball—which operates the Wizards, Mystics, and Capital City Go-Go—in a new research and identity role after departing ESPN earlier this year, Front Office Sports has confirmed. As FOS previously reported, Daglas had been placed on administrative leave in January following HR complaints before ultimately leaving ESPN in June. For more on the Wizards’ front office move, read Ryan Glasspiegel’s exclusive story here.

Disney’s Fubo Deal Closes After DOJ Ends Antitrust Review

FuboTV

Disney’s acquisition of a majority stake in Fubo has closed, after the U.S. Department of Justice completed its probe and cleared the controversial transaction, Front Office Sports has learned.

The completion of the deal—which will see the ESPN parent buy a roughly 70% stake in Fubo and merge it with the Hulu + Live TV streaming service—was announced Wednesday morning. Existing Fubo shareholders will own the remaining 30%. Fubo stock was up more than 19% in premarket trading Wednesday.

The DOJ had launched an investigation into the transaction for potential antitrust issues in April, but that probe has concluded and the agency okayed the deal within the last week, a source familiar with the matter tells FOS. 

On Tuesday, Puck had reported that the ongoing federal government shutdown—which just entered its fourth week—could result in the imminent completion of the deal, because deadlines were set to lapse while Antitrust Division staffers remain furloughed.

The companies say the deal creates the sixth-largest pay-TV provider in the U.S. with almost six million subscribers. It will offer more than 55,000 live sporting events. 

The deal, announced in January, includes a $220 million payment by Disney to Fubo and a $145 million loan scheduled for next year. 

The transaction helped resolve legal claims stemming from the introduction of the now-shuttered Venu Sports, a joint streaming service that had been planned by ESPN, Fox, and Warner Bros. Discovery. Fubo had sued over the formation of Venu last summer, arguing the initiative violated U.S. antitrust law. Fubo succeeded in blocking the intended debut of Venu last fall, and the case was still ongoing when the saga came to a sudden end in early January when Disney agreed to buy the majority stake in Fubo.

Not everyone was pleased with the outcome. Satellite TV carriers DirecTV and EchoStar filed letters with the U.S. District Court, arguing that the Disney-Fubo deal and the resulting dismissal of legal claims did not “address the underlying competition issues,” and that Disney simply paid Fubo “to ensure cooperation from an aggrieved competitor.” 

Lawmakers, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), in particular, also viewed the proposed transaction suspiciously. Warren said it would “allow Disney to simultaneously circumvent the lawsuit while gobbling up a competitor” and urged the DOJ to probe the deal.

“The favors keep rolling in for companies that suck up to Donald Trump—and who pays the price? The American people,” Warren said in a statement to FOS on Wednesday. “The Trump administration’s approval of this merger means sports fans should get ready for higher costs and fewer choices to watch the games they care about.”

Although Venu never got off the ground, something like it may still wind up existing now that Disney has completed its deal for Fubo. Disney CEO Bob Iger said in August that there have been discussions to add other companies’ sports offerings to the new ESPN streaming platform.

A representative for the DOJ declined to comment.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS TODAY

Rozier’s Lawyer Blasts ‘Fake Injury’ Claim

FOS illustration

Terry Rozier’s lawyer says the Heat guard would not have compromised earnings from his shoe deal by missing NBA games intentionally, and says claims that Rozier faked his injury are “absurd.” This comes as a new ESPN report says the NBA is looking to withhold pay for Rozier and Chauncey Billups during their leaves of absence. FOS reporter Colin Salao joins to discuss.

Meanwhile, FOS reporter Amanda Christovich explains why the NCAA is delaying plans to let its athletes gamble on professional sports, and why the SEC is fighting against this new allowance. Plus, Cllct Media founder Darren Rovell joins Baker Machado to discuss a changing tide in the collectibles industry, and why big buyers and billionaires are artificially inflating the market for the worse.

Also, the WNBA proposes a collective bargaining extension, Michael Jordan rips load management, and Americans want a new national holiday.

Watch the full episode here.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Jets fans ⬇ The NFL team is raising ticket prices in 2026 by an average of 3.5% per seat across MetLife Stadium. Not every ticket will be more expensive, though, as 56% of seats will cost between $5 and $10 more per game, a Jets spokesperson told the New York Post. Jets season-ticket holders will also have one more home game to pay for in 2026 (10 total including regular and preseason) because this season, one of those games was played in London—a two-point loss to the Broncos on Oct. 12. New York won its first game of the season Sunday in Cincinnati to improve to 1–7.

Aidan Hutchinson ⬆ The star Lions defensive end signed a four-year contract extension worth $180 million, and $141 million of it is guaranteed. The total guarantee is the highest for a non-quarterback in NFL history. Hutchinson’s deal extends a run of lucrative pacts for star defensive players, following ones for players such as Micah Parsons, T.J. Watt, and Myles Garrett, among others.

College Sports Commission ⬆⬇ The burgeoning enforcement agency created by the Power 4 conferences has hired veteran federal prosecutor Katie Medearis to be its new head of investigations and deputy general counsel. The CSC heads up the NIL Go clearinghouse (among other entities), which has taken some flak for its slow approval process around name, image, and likeness deals.

FanDuel Sports Network ⬆ The regional sports network operator said its total audience for NHL coverage is up 29% compared to the same period last season, and for the first nights of NBA coverage involving 12 of its 13 teams, total audience there has grown 12%. The viewership gains follow similar growth during the 2025 Major League Baseball regular season, and continue a revival for the company following last year’s bankruptcy reorganization. 

Conversation Starters

  • Michael Jordan says load management should not be needed in the NBA. Check it out.
  • Loyola Chicago unveiled a Sister Jean jersey patch, which the Ramblers will wear this season in honor of the 106-year-old nun who was also a devoted backer of the basketball team before she passed earlier this month. Take a look.
  • Drew Mestemaker never started a varsity game at QB in high school, was a zero-star recruit, and decided to walk on at North Texas. The freshman led the country in passing in Week 9, just threw for a school-record 608 yards, and has the Mean Green 7–1.

Editors’ Picks

The Trumps Are All In on Prediction Markets

by Ben Horney
Truth Social is launching a platform that will offer sports event contracts.

Cooley Signing Adds to Utah’s Pursuit of Early NHL Success

by Meredith Turits
In its second season, Utah is committed to winning as fast as possible.

Rozier’s Lawyer Says Missed 2023 Games Cost Him Shoe Money

by Colin Salao
Rozier had a Puma deal through the end of the 2022–23 season.
DAILY TRIVIA

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