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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

April 13, 2026

POWERED BY

The WNBA draft is Monday night, and this year’s rookie class is set to make more money than ever. Thanks to the league’s new CBA, all drafted players who end up making a team will earn more than any WNBA player did last year.

—Margaret Fleming

First Up

  • Augusta National opens briefly after the Masters, but members get only a short window to play before the course shuts down for months. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: The Chernin Group led a funding round in the social box score app Real, adding to a growing list of investors backing the start-up. Read the story.
  • Luxury tax payouts for NBA teams dropped to roughly $4.9 million this season, the lowest since the COVID-19 pandemic. Read the story.
  • Carlos Alcaraz moved into fourth on the all-time career earnings list (despite a runner-up finish) for the ATP Tour, and now trails only the Big Three. Read the story.

WNBA’s 2026 Draft Class Will Be Richest Rookies Yet

The Indianapolis Star

When the 2026 WNBA draft kicks off Monday night in Manhattan, the players who cross the stage will enter a vastly different league than their predecessors.

The WNBA is fresh off ratifying a new collective bargaining agreement with its players’ association last month. The deal raised the salary cap from $1.5 million in 2025 to $7 million in 2026, ushering in the first million-dollar player contracts and also benefiting the new rookies.

The No. 1 pick on Monday will earn $500,000 in her first season, significantly higher than the $78,831 earned by Paige Bueckers, last year’s top pick. For the second year in a row, that pick belongs to the Dallas Wings.

The No. 2 pick, heading to the Minnesota Lynx, will earn $466,913, and the No. 3 pick, going to the Seattle Storm, will get $436,016.

All drafted players who end up making a team will earn more than any WNBA player did last year. The league’s minimum $270,000 salary, which second- and third-round picks would earn if they make a roster after training camp, is higher than last year’s maximum salary of $249,244.

The names of four players have circulated near the top of the mock drafts in recent weeks: UConn’s Azzi Fudd, Spain’s Awa Fam, UCLA’s Lauren Betts, and TCU’s Olivia Miles. Even on the morning of the draft, mainstream mock drafts were pointing in different directions.

Several of Betts’s national champion Bruins teammates are also expecting to hear their names called Monday, including Kiki Rice, Gabriela Jaquez, Gianna Kneepkens, Charlisse Leger-Walker, and Angela Dugalić.

The WNBA’s Chaotic Preseason

The draft nearly got pushed back as CBA negotiations dragged into March. After several blown deadlines and more than a year of talks, the league and the players’ association reached a tentative verbal agreement in the early morning of March 18, a week after the self-imposed cutoff the league had set to keep the season on schedule.

Still, the preseason schedule marched onward. The Portland Fire and Toronto Tempo, the two new teams joining the WNBA this season, held their expansion drafts on April 3. The Fire selected the Lynx’ Bridget Carleton with the No. 1 pick, while the Tempo anchored its team with veteran Marina Mabrey at No. 6.

Then came the eventful free-agency window. The majority of veteran players were free agents, so they could benefit from the new CBA. Many stayed put, while others took off: Satou Sabally to the New York Liberty, Nneka Ogwumike to the Los Angeles Sparks, Skylar Diggins to the Chicago Sky, Brittney Griner to the Connecticut Sun, Alanna Smith to the Wings, and Gabby Williams to the Golden State Valkyries. Some major trades have also gone down, including Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream for future draft picks, and the Sky trading Ariel Atkins to the Sparks for Rickea Jackson.

Next up after Monday’s draft is training camp, an annual gauntlet for the rookies. In recent years, only about 13 to 17 draft picks ended up on opening day rosters, however that number improved to 20 last year as Golden State opened up more spots. The Valkyries, Tempo, and Fire add 36 roster spots to the league that weren’t there just two seasons ago.

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The Family Assist, presented by State Farm®, explores how trust, accountability, and constant support shape performance beyond the stat sheet. Because success at the next level isn’t just about talent, it’s about who’s in your corner when it counts. Watch now.

EXCLUSIVE

Jay Bilas to Have Expanded NBA Role

The Knoxville News-Sentinel

Jay Bilas is set to take on a larger role in ESPN’s NBA playoff coverage, Front Office Sports has learned, stepping in for Michael Malone after his departure to coach at North Carolina. Bilas is expected to call multiple playoff games beginning this weekend.

The move also highlights Bilas’s growing presence on NBA broadcasts after years as one of ESPN’s top college basketball voices, as the network reshuffles its postseason lineup following Malone’s short stint. Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

No Local Voices

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

“I personally think it’s a poor decision.”

—Mike Breen, who is the lead NBA play-by-play announcer for ESPN and ABC, said fans lose a key connection without their team announcers, adding that those voices often “become part of the family,” as the league shifts to an all-national, streaming-heavy playoff broadcast setup. And Breen would know: He’s the lead Knicks play-by-play announcer on MSG Networks.

The NBA playoffs will air entirely on national networks and streaming platforms for the first time this week, eliminating local TV coverage as part of the league’s new media deals. That change ends a longtime option for fans to choose their local broadcast during the first round. Read the story.

STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Aaron Doster-Imagn Images

Wisconsin ⬇ The school’s AD, Chris McIntosh, will be leaving to become the Big Ten’s deputy commissioner for strategy after four years with the Badgers. The news comes a day after the Badgers’ men’s hockey team lost in the 2026 NCAA title game, 2–1, to Denver. Wisconsin is experiencing both academic and athletic changes, as university president Jay Rothman was fired last week.

Marie-Louise Eta ⬆ Following the firing of former coach Steffen Baumgart, Bundesliga club Union Berlin appointed Eta as its head coach until the end of the season, making her the first female head coach of a top-five European men’s soccer league. Eta has served as Union Berlin’s men’s assistant coach since 2023 and is set to become the head coach of the club’s women’s team this summer.

Shane Lowry ⬆ The Irishman will receive a special crystal bowl from Augusta National, which gives the keepsake to players who make a hole-in-one during the Masters. Lowry aced the par-3 6th hole during Saturday’s third round, becoming the first player with two hole-in-ones at the Masters. He aced the par-3 16th hole in 2016.

Kalshi ⬆ The Masters surpassed $545 million in trading volume on the prediction-market platform, marking its most-bet sporting event. The “Masters Champion” wager was its second-most bet single market all-time ($460 million), behind “Who will win the Presidential Election?” ($535 million) in 2024.

FOS at the Masters

Masters Sunday Was Rare Golf Stumble for CBS

by Michael McCarthy
Viewers were left hanging on the most important shot of the tournament.

Inside the Masters: PGA Tour Plans, LIV Talks, and Media Moves

by David Rumsey
Augusta National brought plenty of industry chatter.

Masters Gnome Sells for Record $28K As Collectible’s Future in Doubt

by David Rumsey
An original 2016 edition of the Masters gnome was just auctioned off.

Can you rank the top five MLB teams by the highest cost of a beer at their home ballparks?

Play Factle Sports
Events Video Games Shop
Written by Margaret Fleming
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Dennis Young, Catherine Chen

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