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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 27, 2026

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The day after President Donald Trump criticized the rapidly growing prediction-market industry, saying its growth has turned the world into “a casino,” the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission told Front Office Sports it’s not the government’s role to decide what Americans can trade, only to regulate those markets.

“We can’t have them be the Wild West,” CFTC chairman Michael Selig said.

—Ben Horney

First Up

  • The earliest the Open Championship would return to the Trump Turnberry golf club in Scotland would be 2029, the major’s top executive said Monday. Read the story.
  • After a controversial ruling at the Madrid Open, WTA No. 2 Elena Rybakina said she won’t trust the electronic line-calling system going forward. Read the story.
  • Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua will square off later this year. The fight, bankrolled by Ring owner Turki Alalshikh, will air globally on Netflix. Read the story.
  • Texas Tech QB Brendan Sorsby is seeking treatment for a gambling addiction. The NCAA is reportedly investigating his betting activity. Read the story.

Trump Calls It a ‘Casino.’ CFTC Chief Defends Role As Regulator

REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

President Donald Trump isn’t a fan of the world becoming a “casino.” But the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission tells Front Office Sports it’s not the government’s role to decide what Americans can trade, only to regulate those markets.

“It’s certainly the case that we need to put rules and regulations around these markets,” CFTC chairman Michael Selig told Front Office Sports in an interview at its Washington, D.C., headquarters on Friday. It was the day after a U.S. soldier was indicted for insider trading tied to the military operation to capture Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro—which prompted Trump to criticize the rapidly growing prediction-market industry. 

“We can’t have them be the Wild West,” Selig says. “That’s why we’re taking action. That’s why we’re moving quickly to make sure there’s guardrails.”

Selig, who was confirmed as CFTC chairman in December, believes in the power of prediction markets. He’s also emphatic about a federal law called the Commodity Exchange Act that gives his agency both “broad authority” to regulate the industry and exclusive jurisdiction over it, including with regard to sports event contracts. Whether he’s right about that is the question at the center of more than 20 lawsuits winding through the U.S. court system. Experts say the issue will likely be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

In March, the CFTC issued an advisory reaffirming that it is the regulator in charge of policing prediction markets and soliciting public comments as it prepares to introduce new rules; anyone can submit comments until the end of this month. After that, the regulator will “move pretty aggressively to get proposals out there,” Selig tells FOS, although following those proposals there will be another period during which the public can offer comments.

Selig says the agency “will consider all the comments. We’re statutorily required to do it.” But the CEA provides a “very broad definition of commodity,” which “includes sports events.”

He didn’t rule out changes that could include restrictions or even prohibitions on markets that mirror prop bets or parlays, “but that has to be done through rulemaking.”

“We’re not going to, by staff discretion, decree this product is valid and this one’s not,” Selig tells FOS. “We’re not a merit regulator. Our job is not to tell people in a paternalistic way ‘you can trade this but not that.’”

He acknowledges Congress could amend the CEA if it wants to change the scope of the CFTC’s authority, including to make clear that sports event contracts don’t fall under the regulator’s jurisdiction. But while more than a dozen lawmakers have introduced bills—some aimed at curbing sports and others targeting insider trading—the proposals remain piecemeal and fragmented, with no unified legislative approach taking shape.

As the law currently stands, his agency has authority over sports event contracts, Selig says. That leaves prediction markets free to expand—for now—under the watch of an agency focused on setting guardrails rather than limiting what contracts can exist.

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LOUD AND CLEAR

LPGA Lift

Erik Williams-Imagn Images

“What’s amazing to me is they’re interested in women’s golf. They’re hyping us up, and they’re putting us on their socials, they’re watching, and they’re supporting.”

—Nelly Korda, on superstars like LeBron James who have become more interested in golf and are bringing a bigger spotlight to the sport. James celebrated Korda on social media Sunday as she won the Chevron Championship, which was her third major championship victory.

“It’s so cool to see how many athletes love the game of golf, how many different people it brings together,” Korda said during her winner’s press conference. Read the full story.

SPONSORED BY ADP

How the WTA Sets the Standard

In our latest Future of Sports episode presented by ADP, WTA chief brand officer Sarah Swanson breaks down how leadership is shaping the next era of women’s tennis.

She explains how the WTA has built one of the most valuable platforms in women’s sports, from its global reach to the consistency of its tour, and why that scale continues to separate it from the rest of the market.

Swanson also dives into the evolving business case for women’s sports, sharing why brands are increasingly prioritizing investment in the space as returns become more compelling.

It is a candid conversation on leadership, growth, and the rising value of women’s sports.

Watch the full episode here.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Jul 23, 2022; Eugene, Oregon, USA; Allyson Felix (USA) competes in the 4x400 Meters Relay Women on Day 9 during the World Athletics Championships Oregon 22 at Hayward Field.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Allyson Felix ⬆ The seven-time Olympic champion track athlete will be making a comeback for the 2028 Olympics, she tells Time magazine. Felix, who will be 42 when the next Games roll around, will return to competition in 2027 for a shot at competing in her hometown of Los Angeles. She last raced an official track and field event during the 2022 World Championships. 

Spurs ⬇ Victor Wembanyama criticized the way his team handled his concussion, calling it “extremely disappointing” on Sunday. The San Antonio star missed Game 3 of Round 1 of the playoff series against the Trail Blazers after getting concussed in Game 2, but he was cleared to return for Game 4. Wembanyama did not elaborate on his criticism, telling reporters to ask him again when his season ends. 

Georgetown ⬆ Tom Brady is among the 13 speakers at the university’s 2026 commencement exercises, with Brady addressing the McDonough School of Business on May 16. In addition to the NFL legend, the group of speakers also includes former Secretary of State and 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, who will address Georgetown’s Walsh School of Foreign Service.

Pac-12 ⬆⬇ The conference introduced an all-black logo—a stark change from its previous blue-and-yellow mark—ahead of its rebrand as a nine-team conference starting during the 2026–27 school year. The conference consisted of just Washington State and Oregon State for the past two seasons after the mass exodus of its schools to the Big Ten, ACC, and Big 12.

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Ben Horney
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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