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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

May 7, 2026

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After a long labor standoff, the NFL and NFL Referees Association are progressing toward a new labor agreement that would avoid a work stoppage and help avert a disastrous start to the 2026 season.

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • The first round of the NBA playoffs ended in historic fashion as viewership reached a 33-year high, averaging 4 million viewers per game. Read the story.
  • FIFA’s president is justifying World Cup ticket prices by claiming they’re cheaper than what it costs to see a college football game. Read the story.
  • A $100M defamation fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Business Insider is over. The suit centered on a story about the boxer’s real estate deals. Read the story.
  • Napheesa Collier walked back harsh comments she made about WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert, admitting they were intended as CBA leverage. Read the story.

NFL Nears Referee Deal to Avoid Another ‘Fail Mary’ Disaster

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The NFL is closing in on a labor deal with its referees and could avoid a potential disaster to start the 2026 season.

The league is nearing a formal agreement with the NFL Referees Association, according to industry sources and multiple reports, that would avoid a work stoppage. The pact, if completed, would end months of rancor between the two sides. The union has a ratification vote scheduled for Thursday evening, more than three weeks before the May 31 expiration of the current pact. 

While economics have been part of the labor negotiations throughout this nearly two-year-old saga, the league has also been eager to achieve other gains, including elevating standards used to measure referee performance and increasing the length of the probationary period for new officials.

“This is an opportunity for us to improve the state of our officiating,” NFL EVP Jeff Miller said in March. “The owners were consistent in saying, ‘We’re more than happy to pay for performance.’ This was consistent through the course of the discussions over the last couple of days. But what they are insistent upon—insistent upon—is that performance of the officials and the accountability for their performance has to improve. And that’s where we are in these negotiations and that’s exactly where we’re going to stay.”

Both sides declined to comment on the latest status of the talks. ESPN initially reported the advancing negotiations. 

Notably, the public vitriol between the two sides has quieted considerably over the last month. In an on-air interview with ESPN preceding the recent NFL Draft in Pittsburgh, league commissioner Roger Goodell similarly toned down the rhetoric and said, “I think we all want to reach an agreement. It’s important for us to reach an agreement. … The conversations have been productive recently, and we’re pleased with that, and we hope that continues.”

If a new labor deal is ratified, it would negate a provisional rule approved at the NFL’s recent annual meeting in Arizona. There, team owners approved a measure in which the league’s officiating department in New York could consult in real time with replacement officials and use replay to correct clear and obvious calls missed by those alternates.

That additional rule was designed to act as something of a safety net should replacement officials be needed. 

Imagn Images

What Might Have Been 

Even with that rule in place, however, the NFL faced a possible repeat of the start of the 2012 season. That year featured a similar, 110-day lockout of the referees, with replacements pulled primarily from lower-level colleges and minor pro leagues. 

Most notably, that period included the infamous “Fail Mary” game in which a Week 3 contest on Monday Night Football between the Packers and Seahawks ended in a Seattle game-winning touchdown that the league later conceded involved an uncalled offensive pass interference penalty. Had that penalty been called, it would have ended the contest in a Green Bay victory. Instead, the Seahawks’ touchdown also included two referees standing right next to each other, making opposing calls on the play. 

Two days after that game, the NFL and NFLPA reached a deal, and Goodell acknowledged the widespread attention “may have pushed the parties further along” toward the agreement. The Packers’ loss also helped lead the team to being the No. 3 seed in the 2012 playoffs instead of the No. 2 seed with a first-round bye. Green Bay then lost on the road to San Francisco in the divisional playoffs.

Replay technology has improved considerably since then, but there is still a sizable gap in the speed of play in the NFL and the lower levels of football where replacements ordinarily work. That difference would almost inevitably lead to game-altering calls by replacements.

SPONSORED BY SHEPPARD PRATT

The Real Competitive Edge

Ever wondered why some teams hold it together under pressure while others unravel? It isn’t just about talent. It’s about how people manage stress, make decisions, and support one another when the stakes are high. Mental health shapes all of that, which is why more leaders are treating mental well-being less like a perk and more like part of the game plan. Mental Health Awareness Month puts a spotlight on that shift.  

You can see the same thinking in sports. The Baltimore Ravens’ partnership with Sheppard Pratt reflects a belief that mental strength is essential to performance. Whether you’re managing a team or just trying to stay sharp, building strong minds changes the outcome.  

Get a closer look at how you can approach mental wellness.

FOS NEWS

Zac Brown: Superfan With a Backstage Pass

FOS graphic

Zac Brown has been everywhere in sports lately, from March Madness and Sunday Night Baseball to now headlining the fan fest at UFC Freedom 250 at the White House. He is a self-described lifelong UFC obsessive with a real relationship with Dana White, and this event means something personal to him beyond the stage. 

Brown sat down with Front Office Sports to discuss the intersection of music, sports, and live experience, as well as his residency at the Sphere and his recent Survivor cameo. Watch the full interview.

Daily sports trivia: Can you rank the top five NBA players by the most total rebounds in the 2026 regular season?

Play Factle Sports
LOUD AND CLEAR

Dollars and Sense

Front Office Sports

“I hate it. I hate it so much.”

—Gotham FC’s Midge Purce on the NWSL’s controversial “High Impact Player” rule. She told Front Office Sports on an upcoming episode of Portfolio Players that she feels the rule is restrictive.

Purce said her issue with the rule—often called the “Rodman Rule” as the NWSL pushed it through to ensure that Trinity Rodman didn’t have to chase a bigger paycheck in Europe—was that she believes Rodman is “worth more than what that rule allows her to make.” Read the story.

Editors’ Picks

FanDuel CEO Pushed Out After Five Years Amid Stock Slump

by Ben Horney
Shares of Flutter, FanDuel’s parent company, are down more than 50% this year.

Kara Lawson Took Amazon Job to Scout WNBA Players for Team USA

by Colin Salao
Lawson will be a WNBA game analyst for Amazon Prime Video.

Tottenham Hotspur Is Facing a Billion-Dollar Disaster

by Alex Christian
A seemingly improbable drop to England’s second tier is a tangible possibility.

Question of the Day

Do you think the NFL and its referees will reach a labor deal before the 2026 season begins?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 75% of respondents think wealthy boosters are now the biggest difference-makers in college sports.

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

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