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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

May 15, 2026

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There are roughly one quadrillion ways to arrange the NFL’s 272-game schedule, and the league released its full schedule Thursday night, unveiling a slate that, like last year, puts more games than ever in exclusive broadcast windows. And after a banner 2025 season for viewership, the NFL is leaning even more heavily into a packed winter holiday schedule, including three games on Christmas. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • Less than three weeks after Arkansas cut its men’s and women’s tennis programs, the university’s athletic department said it will reinstate them. Read the story.
  • World Cup fans in host cities Boston and Philadelphia will need a match ticket to participate in tailgate events outside stadiums. Read the story.
  • After a strong run of major golf events in Pennsylvania—including this week’s PGA Championship—officials are targeting a PGA Tour stop. Read the story.
  • The Professional Tennis Players Association’s lawsuit against tennis governing bodies is now spilling into Grand Slam credential fights. Read the story.

NFL 2026-27 Schedule Brings More Netflix Games, More Drama

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

After weeks of amplifying buildup, the 2026 NFL regular-season schedule is now out, and so begins the jockeying for supremacy—both on and off the field. 

As planned, the league released its full schedule Thursday night, unveiling a slate that, like last year, places more games than ever in exclusive broadcast windows. Among the highlights of the 272-game regular-season schedule:

  • All about the holidays: After a banner 2025 season for viewership that featured historic viewership around fall and winter holidays, the NFL is leaning into that even more this year. The league created a new Thanksgiving Eve game on Netflix with the Packers and Rams. The traditional Thanksgiving Day slate on CBS and Fox, marked by fierce divisional rivalries, will lead to an NBC nightcap with the Chiefs and Bills. Amazon’s fourth edition of the Black Friday game will feature the Broncos and Steelers. Netflix’s Christmas doubleheader, meanwhile, will include the Packers vs. the Bears and the Bills vs. the Broncos, followed by a primetime Fox holiday contest with the Rams and Seahawks that reprises last season’s NFC Championship game. 
  • High-drama kickoff: NBC will begin the season on Wed., Sept. 9 with a Super Bowl LX rematch between the Patriots and Seahawks. The somewhat unexpected move brings into further focus the ongoing personal scandal involving New England head coach Mike Vrabel. 
  • International intrigue: The unprecedented nine-game set of global matchups incorporates CBS, Fox, and NBC in that part of the schedule, and will likely generate historic increases in viewership for those broadcasts. 
  • Road to the Super Bowl: As ESPN and parent company Disney are placing all of their weight behind coverage of Super Bowl LXI and are chasing a viewership record, the network’s Monday Night Football schedule features every 2025 playoff team, and multiple appearances by the Bills, Rams, Chiefs, Eagles, and Seahawks. 
  • Mendoza watch. After selecting Indiana star and Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza with the first selection in the NFL Draft, the Raiders have no primetime appearances on their schedule. There could be later changes, however, with flex scheduling rules that will go into effect after the season starts. 

Nearly every nuance in the schedule carries massive implications as the NFL remains, by far, the most-watched programming in all of U.S. television.

Broadcast Changes

This year’s schedule follows a series of dramatic offseason moves in which the league closed a complex equity deal with ESPN and Disney, and regained four games in that transaction along with a separate broadcast previously held by YouTube. The NFL subsequently resold three of those games to Netflix, and one each to Fox and NBC. (Netflix now has five games, up from two last season.)

The end result is a heightened presence for the league in both streaming and over-the-air TV as the NFL continues its pursuit of maximum reach in a fast-changing media environment.

Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Each of the league’s rights holders, meanwhile, touted the appeal of their respective schedules. 

Amazon has every 2025 playoff team on its Thursday Night Football schedule and its lineup includes a Christmas Eve broadcast with the Texans and Eagles. CBS Sports will air the Chiefs, Bills, Patriots, and Steelers up to nine times each—triple the number on any other network. NBC Sports touted its turn with the “Rivalry of the Decade” between Chiefs and Bills. ESPN will oversee a hefty 26-game regular-season slate between MNF, a Week 18 Saturday doubleheader, and seven games on the NFL Network. Fox has the most windows of any rights holder, thanks in part to a tripleheader in Week 10. 

Within that, the race for bragging rights as the most-watched NFL window of the season will commence. 

“Our schedule is very well balanced, and we’re really excited about the amount of top quarterback matchups that we have,” Amazon Prime Video head of sports programming Jeff Kaiser tells Front Office Sports. “It’s things like Joe Burrow vs. Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes vs. Matthew Stafford, Drake Maye vs. Caleb Williams, or Sam Darnold vs. Bo Nix, and it’s a consistent theme throughout the schedule.”

Earlier in the week, NBC, Fox, Amazon, ESPN, and CBS all had releases of key games on their respective schedules. 

High-Wire Politics 

Despite the expanded role for each of the legacy networks in this year’s schedule, the increased fragmentation of the slate will likely only amplify the political and regulatory pressure on the NFL.

There are at least four different points of legislative and regulatory pressure on the NFL, including an investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice. While that probe is not expected to produce any charges against the NFL, many leaders including U.S. President Donald Trump have been openly critical of the league’s approach, and criticisms of the league will likely continue.

Meanwhile, the NFL has consistently argued that its commitment to broadcast television is unwavering, as shown in part by 87% of its games being broadcast on free television—a figure that rises to 100% in the competing teams’ home markets in each contest.

“To be fair, watching the NFL is more complicated than it used to be, as no single service has everything,” wrote LightShed Partners in a research note to clients. “But consumers now have real choice, and for those willing to navigate multiple apps, the savings are meaningful. It’s also worth remembering that before 2023, the only way to watch every NFL game was DirecTV with a satellite dish bolted to your house, unless you could prove one would not work at your location. Streaming has been unambiguously pro-consumer.”

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Postseason Representation

Feb 8, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; General view down the line of scrimmage as Seattle Seahawks center Jalen Sundell (61) prepares to snap the ball against the New England Patriots during Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium.

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

14

The number of 2025 playoff teams appearing in each of the NFL’s three primetime broadcast windows in the upcoming season—complete representation from that postseason pool. NBC’s Sunday Night Football, ESPN’s Monday Night Football, and Amazon’s Thursday Night Football each will feature revivals of playoff clashes from last season, highlighted by the Sept. 9 kickoff game between the Patriots and Seahawks on NBC that is a rematch of Super Bowl LX. 

Daily sports trivia: Can you rank the top five NCAA men’s basketball teams in the final AP poll of the 2025–26 season?

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LOUD AND CLEAR

Rough Showing

May 14, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Rory McIlroy watches his shot from the 15th tee during the first round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Aronimink Golf Club.

James Lang-Imagn Images

“Shit.”

—Rory McIlroy responded to a question Thursday during his post-round interview at the PGA Championship of how he’d describe his first-round score, a 74 (+4).

The 2025 and 2026 Masters winner went on to say: “I’m just not driving the ball well enough. It’s been a problem all year for the most part. Yeah, I’ve sort of got, like I miss it right, and then I want to try to correct it. And then I’ll overdo it, and I’ll miss it left.”

The PGA Championship teed off Thursday morning at Aronimink Golf Club just outside Philadelphia and will conclude Sunday.

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Editors’ Picks

Houston WNBA Team Expects to Keep Comets Name Amid Trademark Dispute

by Colin Salao
The Connecticut Sun will move to Houston in 2027.

Adam Silver Says He Could Further Punish Tanking Teams in New Lottery

by Alex Schiffer
“We can actually take away draft lottery balls.”

BTS, Madonna, Shakira Headline First-Ever World Cup Halftime Show

by Margaret Fleming
The lineup could extend the final’s halftime.

Question of the Day

Do you think your favorite NFL team has an easy or hard slate next season?

 EASY   HARD 

Thursday’s result: 85% of respondents think this year’s PGA Championship prize money will exceed last year’s purse of $19 million.

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Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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