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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

June 25, 2026

POWERED BY

The NBA draft offered another sign of how much college basketball has changed. More top prospects are staying on campus, and they dominated the first round of the draft.

—Griffin Senyek

First Up

  • First at FOS: ESPN analyst Jay Williams called an NBA draft–night interaction on TV with colleagues “awkward.” Read the story.
  • The Cardinals are laying the groundwork for life after longtime MLB owner Bill DeWitt Jr. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: Former LSU and Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly is joining CBS’s college football coverage. Read the story.
  • The IOC is creating a $140 million fund that will pay every Olympian $10,000. Read the story.

NBA Draft Highlights College Basketball’s NIL Boom

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

College basketball was the overarching theme of the first round of the 2026 NBA draft.

The first 20 players selected Tuesday all played in college, which was the most to begin a draft since 1994. The only players picked who didn’t play college basketball were international prospects Karim López and Sergio de Larrea. 

That marks a drastic shift from only a few years ago. The 2024 draft saw eight players selected in the first round who didn’t play in college, with four of the first six picks playing internationally or for the G League Ignite. 

Players being able to benefit from their name, image, and likeness (NIL) and be paid directly by their schools as a result of the House v. NCAA settlement is the primary reason for the sudden change. AJ Dybantsa, who the Wizards selected with the No. 1 overall pick, reportedly made between $4 million and $7 million in NIL deals between BYU and sponsors. Former Michigan head coach Dusty May told Front Office Sports in April that he expected the Wolverines’ 2026–27 roster to cost more than $10 million. 

Players having the ability to get paid at the college level has altered the NBA’s predraft process. The G League Ignite program—which launched in 2020 as a paid alternative to going to college for NBA prospects—shut down in 2024, with the emergence of NIL in college sports cited as the primary reason. Additionally, more players are staying in college through their senior year, resulting in the draft being less watered down with fringe prospects. 

“I think it was about 71 early entry candidates this year, which was down by like two-thirds from what it was in prior years,” ESPN analyst Jay Bilas told FOS earlier this week. “For people like me who love college basketball, that’s a good thing.”

NIL has not just helped sway American-born athletes to college but has also convinced several international players to come to the U.S. to play college basketball. Aday Mara (Spain) and Hannes Steinbach (Germany) were foreign-born lottery picks drafted out of Michigan and Washington, respectively, on Tuesday night. Other players with similar backgrounds, such as Henri Veesaar, Baba Miller, and Felix Okpara, are expected to hear their names called during the second round Wednesday night. 

The draft being dominated by college players is something fans should get used to. In Bleacher Report’s 2027 mock draft, 27 of the 30 projected first-round picks will play in college this upcoming season. 

At the college level, the regular season finished as one of the most watched in recent history, with several networks reporting record viewership numbers. While NIL has been cited as a detriment to college sports and is something politicians are seeking to regulate, the numbers indicate it’s resulting in more NBA prospects playing college basketball while helping the sport reach new heights. 

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ONE BIG FIG

Lyon’s Share

Jan 22, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Washington Spirit team owner Michele Kang talks to media during a press conference at BMO Stadium.

Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

87.8%

That’s the stake in French soccer club Olympique Lyonnais that Washington Spirit owner Michele Kang has agreed to buy, a move that would end John Textor’s ownership of the team. Kang would pay $30 million for the controlling stake and commit more than $80 million in new funding over the next two seasons. Kang also owns a majority stake in the Lyon women’s team. 

The deal still depends on several conditions, including Lyon keeping its place in France’s top soccer league, Ligue 1. If it goes through, it would mark the latest twist in a long-running power struggle between Kang and Textor that has spilled into public view. Read the story.

DAILY SPORTS TRIVIA

Can you rank the top five WNBA players by the most career minutes played in the playoffs?

Play Factle Sports
LOUD AND CLEAR

Portland Pressure

Soobum Im-Imagn Images

“Criticism is easy. Long-term vision is hard.”

—Portland Mayor Keith Wilson, in an open letter to city council members, urged them to approve the city’s share of a funding package to renovate the Trail Blazers’ Moda Center. He warned that the nearly $600 million project could stall if the city fails to do its part.

The arena debate has turned more public, with elected officials sparring over the use of taxpayer money and the pace of negotiations. The standoff is also renewing concerns about the Blazers’ long-term future in Portland under new owner Tom Dundon. Read the story.

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Editors’ Picks

NHL’s Sun Belt Powerhouse Center Is Set to Expand

by Eric Fisher
The league draws closer to placing a second team in Texas.

USMNT World Cup Run Could Push Fox Ad Rates Past $2 Million

by Michael McCarthy
Fox was charging nearly $1 million for USMNT group-stage games.

Basketball Players Sue NCAA Over New Five-Year Eligibility Model

by Amanda Christovich
The players are suing after being excluded from the new policy.

Question of the Day

Do you think the NBA is a better product when prospects stay in college longer?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 25% of respondents think AJ Dybantsa will lead the Wizards to the playoffs as a rookie.

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Written by Griffin Senyek
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Ben Axelrod, Catherine Chen

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