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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

March 12, 2026

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As the Players Championship tees off, new PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp, in his pre-tournament remarks, put the brakes on the growing push to elevate the event to major championship status.

Meanwhile in Manhattan, the WNBA and WNBPA met for a second straight late night of CBA negotiations after blowing through a March 10 deadline; players departed at midnight without a deal yet.

—David Rumsey and Annie Costabile

First Up

  • WNBA and WNBPA reps met at a Midtown Manhattan hotel Wednesday for the second straight night to hammer out a deal; players left at midnight with no new deal in place yet. Read the story.
  • Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., will get its World Cup games after Robert Kraft agreed to foot the $7.8 million security bill the town said it would not cover. Read the story.
  • As the new NFL year officially began, teams signed deals that were developing earlier this week, but the Raiders are regrouping after the Crosby trade mess. Read the story.
  • Steve Tisch is giving up his shares in the Giants after his close ties to Jeffrey Epstein were revealed, but he will remain chairman of the board. Read the story. 

PGA Tour Pumps Brakes on Players Championship ‘Major’ Talk

Jeff Swinger-Imagn Images

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp has put the brakes on the growing push to elevate the Players Championship to major championship status, as he prioritizes finalizing the schedule and structural changes to the tour.

“We take a lot of pride in The Players, and with all the major talk, some may say even too much pride,” Rolapp said Wednesday in the opening remarks of his pre-tournament press conference. “Ultimately, that is not for us to decide.”

Debate over whether The Players should become a major championship—alongside The Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, and Open Championship—has swirled since the PGA Tour early last month released a promotional video with the tagline “March Is Going to Be Major.” Players Championship executive director Lee Smith said the tour “wanted to start a conversation” about the tournament’s status.

“I’m not entirely sure how majors become majors,” Rolapp said. “The history is really interesting to study. There used to be more majors. There’s fewer majors. I think what’s important, that’s not for us to decide. What is important is that this is a pretty special event and I think among the best events in golf.”

Beyond tradition, the Official World Golf Ranking awards 100 points for winning the four majors, and 80 for The Players—the most of any non-major event. 

LIV Golf members are still eligible for the majors, which are not operated by the PGA Tour. They are not eligible for The Players, and that doesn’t appear to be changing anytime soon.

“That’s not a priority I’ve put on my list,” Rolapp said about allowing LIV members at The Players when asked by Front Office Sports. “That’s not something I’ve considered to date. There’s other priorities.”

Feb 17, 2026; Pacific Palisades, CA, USA; Genesis Invitational tournament host Tiger Woods speaks to the media during a press conference at Riviera Country Club.
Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Six-Step Plan

Rolapp revealed six themes that have emerged from the Tiger Woods–led Future Competition Committee he created in August and tasked with exploring potential changes to the PGA Tour’s annual schedule and overall competitive makeup.

  • Season structure: Targeting a 21 to 26 tournament slate (including the majors) that “first track elevated events” played between late January and early September. The PGA Tour schedule in recent years has started in early January, this year holding events in 33 consecutive weeks (some with multiple overlapping tournaments).
  • Consistent fields: Tournaments would have roughly 120 players and include a 36-hole cut. The eight $20 million signature events this year have fewer than 100 players and either no cut or a limited one.
  • Open big: The PGA Tour wants to start the season at an iconic West Coast venue and play during primetime TV hours on the East Coast.
  • Major markets: Evaluation of playing in cities like New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C., is ongoing.
  • Promotion and relegation: Offering a clear pathway for players to ascend from a second track of PGA Tour events to the top level.
  • Enhancing the postseason: The potential integration of match play is being considered for playoff events, either at the season-ending Tour Championship or even all postseason tournaments.

Rolapp said any “significant change” is likely to be implemented for the 2028 season. “Nothing has been finalized,” Rolapp said. “We are still doing our work and gathering input from our players, our partners, and other key stakeholders.”

Rolapp said he plans to hold another press conference at the Travelers Championship in late June to update the status of any schedule changes after a player policy board meeting earlier that month.

SPONSORED BY TOYOTA

Greatness Moves Us

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By supporting athletes like Erin Jackson, Jessie Diggins, and Andrew Kurka, Toyota highlights the commitment, momentum, and resilience required to compete at the highest levels—on and off the field of play.

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ONE BIG FIG

Limited Room to Spend

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa (1) and wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) take the field before the opening game of the season against the New England Patriots at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Sept. 11, 2022.

Palm Beach Post

$151 million

The amount of dead money against the salary cap the Dolphins have in 2026. Miami is spending more than half of the $301.2 million cap on players who will not play for the team next season. Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s release will create an NFL-record $99.2 million in dead money, with $67.4 million owed next season after he is designated as a post–June 1 release. Other players who contribute to the tally include Tyreek Hill and Bradley Chubb, who were both released by the Dolphins this offseason.

SPONSORED BY TOYOTA

Greatness Moves Us

Advertisement

Toyota backs the journeys that shape athletes every day. From early-morning practices to road games and the long rides home, Toyota’s partnership with Team Toyota celebrates the dedication and belief that drive progress over time.

By supporting athletes like Erin Jackson, Jessie Diggins, and Andrew Kurka, Toyota highlights the commitment, momentum, and resilience required to compete at the highest levels—on and off the field of play.

Because every destination has a beginning.

FOS EXPLAINS

Inside the Tulsa Transfer Portal House

FOS graphic

College football recruiting has changed forever. In the NIL era and transfer portal chaos, teams are looking for every possible edge. So one program tried something completely new.

Tulsa rented an entire Airbnb and turned it into a transfer-portal recruiting headquarters.

Front Office Sports went inside the first “Portal House” to see how modern college football rosters are actually built. What we found looked more like an NFL front office than a college recruiting visit.

Watch the full video to see what it was like inside the portal house.

Editors’ Picks

Significant Fine Looms After Jaylen Brown Ejection

by Alex Schiffer
Brown was ejected after picking up a pair of technicals on Tuesday.

College Basketball Regular Season Finishes With Record Viewership

by Griffin Senyek
CBS had the highest viewership of any network.

Ex-NBA All-Star Antonio Davis: NBA Betting Epidemic ‘Blows My Mind’

by Ben Horney
The 13-year pro “can’t fathom” players who aren’t trying to win.

Question of the Day

Do you think the Players Championship should be elevated to a major?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 41% of respondents are less interested in watching March Madness when favorites dominate the tournament.

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Written by David Rumsey, Annie Costabile
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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