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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

June 22, 2026

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The Senators and Panthers have completed a blockbuster trade in which Ottawa has dealt team captain Brady Tkachuk to Florida—where he’ll play with brother Matthew—for a package of four draft picks. Tkachuk had been the face of the franchise, but he is now yet another player from a Canadian-based team who shifted to a contending one in the U.S.—Tkachuk will be playing in a state with no personal income tax. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • Michigan coach Dusty May has agreed to become head coach of the Mavericks, two months after the Wolverines won their first national title since 1989. Read the story.
  • The new labor proposal from MLB team owners would drastically change how and when amateur talent reaches the pros. Read the story.
  • Criticism of Alexi Lalas, Fox’s lead studio analyst for the 2026 FIFA men’s World Cup, seems to be reaching unprecedented levels. Read the story.
  • Basketball analyst Jay Bilas tells FOS that this year’s NBA draft is “the best and deepest draft of big-time talent that I can recall.” Read the story.

Tkachuk Is Latest Star Player on Canadian Team to Move South

James Guillory-Imagn Images

The NHL’s Panthers, winners of the 2024 and 2025 Stanley Cups, are eagerly reloading after an unexpected retreat this past season, while the Senators are showing the heightened difficulty many of the league’s seven Canadian teams are having trying to compete.

Ottawa and Florida have completed a massive trade in which the Senators have dealt team captain Brady Tkachuk to the Panthers for a package of four draft picks. Two of those selections will be first-rounders in this weekend’s NHL draft in Buffalo, including the Nos. 9 and 25 picks. Ottawa will also receive a 2029 first-round pick that is top-10 protected, as well as a second-rounder next year.

Far from a standard offseason NHL trade, this particular deal is rife with far-reaching subplots. The Panthers are bringing together Tkachuk with his older brother, Matthew, who is already on the Florida roster. The franchise is also looking to get back to its winning ways after a budding NHL dynasty saw a series of injuries this past season result in Florida’s first non-playoff year since 2019.

“Brady is a dynamic competitor and one of the most physical and relentless forwards in the league,” said Panthers GM and hockey operations president Bill Zito. “A proven leader and exactly the type of player we want in our locker room, he strives to make everyone around him better.”

The two Tkachuk brothers also played together on the U.S. men’s national team that won gold at the Milan-Cortina Olympics earlier this year, as well as on the American team in 2025’s 4 Nations Face-Off. 

Reboot in Ottawa

The Senators, meanwhile, are retooling, at least to some degree, after posting the franchise’s first back-to-back playoff campaigns since 2012–13. Brady Tkachuk had been the face of the franchise, but he is yet another player from a Canadian-based franchise that shifted to a contending one in the U.S. operating in a state with either a relatively low personal income tax or none at all. In this case, Tkachuk will be working in a state with no such tax. 

Similar moves have been made in recent years by stars such as the Golden Knights’ Mitch Marner, Hurricanes’ Nikolaj Ehlers, and Wild’s Quinn Hughes. Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck, a three-time Vezina Trophy winner, former league MVP, and a leader of that gold medal U.S. team in Italy, is similarly now the subject of trade rumors. 

Brady Tkachuk had signaled he was not inclined to sign an extension with the Senators when his seven-year, $57.6 million deal made in 2021 expires in two years. That helped prompt Ottawa to pull the trigger now on a trade. 

“This was not a decision we took lightly, but ultimately, we did what we felt was best for the long-term future of our hockey club,” said Senators GM Steve Staios. “We now possess cap space and draft capital and will be actively working to improve our roster.”

To that end, Staios said the Senators will be “active in the market” and that he has “no intention of taking a step back.”

The Senators, meanwhile, have been in the midst of a long-running effort to develop a new arena in downtown Ottawa, and will now do so without their biggest star. 

Although the Panthers have much of their championship core locked up for multiple years, the team was able to absorb the financial implications of the Tkachuk trade thanks to a sharply rising NHL salary cap that will reach a record $104 million in the 2026–27 season. 

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ONE BIG FIG

Bagpipe Parade

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Scotland's Tartan Army march to Boston's Fenway Park baseball stadium - Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. - June 14, 2026 Scotland fans wearing kilts and playing the bagpipes during the march to Fenway Park

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Bob Dechiara

10,000

The potential number of bagpipe-playing, kilt-wearing Scottish World Cup fans—known as the Tartan Army—are coming to South Florida ahead of Wednesday’s match against Brazil in Miami. The Miami Police Department said on X/Twitter that crowd estimates for the Tartan Army’s visit range from 2,000 to 10,000. At about 4 p.m. ET, it will walk toward loanDepot park to attend the Rangers-Marlins game, which will begin at 6:40 p.m. ET. Many in the Tartan Army were based in the Boston area for the tournament’s first-round matches, where Scotland beat Haiti but then lost to Morocco on Friday. The Scottish fans made friends with locals, reportedly drank Boston bars dry, and generally infused the city with their raucous and merry energy. The Boston Globe even took out a full-page ad Monday to thank the Tartan Army for the “joy you brought to our city.”

LOUD AND CLEAR

A Market for Basketball

Big3

Chapman Baehler

“Most leagues are owned by a bunch of billionaires. Fans, all they get to do is watch, buy some merch, get a ticket, and bet on the games. But they can’t invest. We want to change that. In my vision, we’re here 100 years, not just 9.”

—Ice Cube, cofounder and CEO of 3-on-3 basketball league Big3, in an interview with Front Office Sports. The company that owns Big3 said on June 12 it is planning to go public at a $290 million valuation through a special purpose acquisition company merger with Graf Global Corp. The league’s ninth season opened over the weekend with some drama as a fight led to one-game suspensions for former NBA players Lance Stephenson and Michael Beasley. Read the story.

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STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Jun 19, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Chicago White Sox right fielder Junior Perez (37) celebrates at home plate with White Sox left fielder Sam Antonacci (17) after hitting a solo home run against the Detroit Tigers in the sixth inning at Comerica Park.

Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

White Sox ⬆ After three straight seasons with 100-plus losses, the Chicago team holds a winning record through mid-June and is leaning in to fan experience to rebuild its base, offering tickets as low as $12. Up next, the White Sox will face the Guardians in a three-game series beginning Monday night. 

PWHL ⬆ The league raised outside capital for the first time, securing investments from Ilitch Companies and Kilmer Sports Ventures after being financed solely by Mark and Kimbra Walter through its first three seasons. Both firms took stakes in the league as a whole, not in any individual team. The investment comes as the PWHL expands from eight to twelve teams in the 2026–27 season.

Manchester United ⬆ The team has acquired a 25-acre plot of land from Blackstone-owned Indurent, securing the majority of land needed to build a new 100,000-seat stadium near Old Trafford. The project is expected to cost more than $2 billion and would make it the largest sporting arena in the U.K. 

Markéta Vondroušová ⬇ The 2023 Wimbledon women’s singles champion has been suspended for four years after refusing an anti-doping test in December, the ITIA announced Monday. Vondroušová, 26, reached a career-high ranking of No. 6 after winning the Grand Slam in 2023. She will be eligible to return to professional tennis on June 21, 2030.

Editors’ Picks

Rece Davis to Host ESPN’s Wimbledon Coverage

by Michael McCarthy
Davis replaces former host Chris McKendry, who is moving to play-by-play.

Curaçao’s World Cup Goalie Eloy Room Puts Spotlight on the USL

by Margaret Fleming
Eloy Room plays for Miami FC in the USL Championship.

Women’s Football Is Ready for Its Tom Brady Moment

by Ellyn Briggs
The league hit an inflection point in its just-completed seventh season.
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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