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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

July 8, 2026

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While the U.S. men’s national team didn’t meet the moment in Seattle, it was easy to see why the World Cup host is widely regarded as a premier soccer city. The atmosphere held its own against that of countries where soccer is closer to a religion than a sport.

 —Margaret Fleming

First Up

  • The NHL’s salary scale is quickly recalibrating, in part due to a historic tender offer from the Flyers for Ducks center Leo Carlsson. Read the story.
  • Two different entities are claiming control over the Professional Tennis Players Association, as dueling lawsuits plunge the group further into chaos. Read the story.
  • U.S. women’s soccer legend Carli Lloyd excelled on TV after Team USA’s devastating 4–1 loss to Belgium on Monday night. Read the story.
  • The Nuggets are “unconcerned” after Nikola Jokić said he won’t sign a contract extension for the second straight summer. Read the story.

The USMNT Failed to Meet the Moment. Seattle Did Not

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Blake Dahlin

SEATTLE — The U.S. men’s national team fell flat Monday night, suffering a deflating 4–1 loss to Belgium and once again getting knocked out in the round of 16.

While the U.S. squad wasn’t able to put on a show, host city Seattle did.

Seattle is widely regarded as a premier soccer city, home to MLS’s Seattle Sounders and the NWSL’s Reign, both of which play at the Seahawks’ Lumen Field. Earlier in the World Cup, fans packed the streets and the stadium for the U.S. group-stage match against Australia earlier in the tournament. Monday was the last of the city’s six World Cup matches.

Seattle shines as a soccer city for a number of reasons. One is that the stadium is centrally located and easily accessible by both foot and public transit. While getting to a World Cup match in most other U.S. host cities means a long trek via car down highways, many fans walked to the stadium Monday.

Coworkers Greg and Patrick walked to the match from their office downtown. “We came down, we’re hanging out, we stopped at bars on the way. … It’s been a great experience,” Patrick told Front Office Sports.

Another reason is the crowd. Lumen Field—dubbed Seattle Stadium for the duration of the tournament—is widely regarded as one of the toughest atmospheres in the NFL for visiting opponents. Seahawks fans are called the 12s, alluding to the deafening crowd as an extra, 12th player for the football team.

“This is going to be insane,” Greg told FOS before the match. “This is going to be so loud; it is going to be louder than a Seahawks [game].”

Along the city’s waterfront, Seattle underwent a major aesthetic transformation just in time for the World Cup. It took decades to rebuild the area from a viaduct that separated downtown from Elliott Bay into the sprawling public park and commercial district that opened in September.

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Kevin Ng

Seattle put its new gem center stage for the tournament, installing a big screen to show matches on the pier.

On Sunday night, Mexico fans packed the giant steps leading down to the pier for a viewing party of the Mexico-England match. Fans looked out toward sailboats on the water and the Olympic Mountains in the distance, shielding their eyes from the early evening sun. In the opposite direction, they saw the rest of the waterfront walkway and its Ferris wheel, the sweeping arches of the football and baseball stadiums, and the snowy peak of Mount Rainier.

The next day, downtown Seattle turned into a total party.

On a sunny, breezy afternoon, supporters in red, white, and blue strolled down the streets toward the stadium, passing fans sitting outside at bars and restaurants and gathering under trees for a watch party in Pioneer Square. Others gathered in a large crowd, singing and waving flags, before marching toward the stadium. Beer gardens, food trucks, and tents selling Seattle dogs greeted fans outside the match.

Why the Turnout Matters

One of the biggest questions leading into this tournament was whether it could grow soccer fandom in the U.S. The line of thinking is that bigger fandom can foster a more elite soccer ecosystem, which would then produce a future USMNT that can compete with the best soccer powerhouses in the world.

But in between the 2022 and 2026 World Cups, it wasn’t clear whether the USMNT had that kind of draw. The U.S. played twice in front of a concerningly empty SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles during the Concacaf Nations League, and completely lost home field advantage during the Concacaf Gold Cup.

The U.S. also wasn’t helped by FIFA setting high ticket prices for its matches. In Seattle, some fans told FOS they paid $700 each for their tickets, while others paid $3,000 apiece.

But from the team’s opener in L.A., it was clear U.S. fans were bought in for the World Cup. Fox and Telemundo averaged NFL playoff–level viewership for all U.S. matches, and the team had distinct home field advantage in L.A., Seattle, and San Francisco.

That’s part of why the loss in Seattle stings so badly. The atmosphere held its own against that of countries where soccer is closer to a religion than a sport, like the Argentine celebrations in Kansas City and the Dutch takeover of Houston.

“I’m grateful for the support that they gave us this summer,” U.S. star Christian Pulisic said after the match. “It felt that they took a step up, and just the support behind us, I don’t know, it felt incredible.”

Perhaps the most vivid images of the fandom were displayed in the headgear. Fans wore red, white, and blue cowboy hats, giant foam cowboy hats, tall Uncle Sam hats, bucket hats, jester hats, wigs, and a giant tricolor Afro wig. Two fans walking together wore a U.S. Soccer sombrero and a mitre, or Pope hat. One person dyed stars and stripes into a buzz cut. 

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Kevin Ng

While the scene looked like the Fourth of July, the patriotism still had a distinctly liberal, Seattle undertone. One fan’s baseball cap said “Fuck Trump,” while another’s said “Protect Birthright Citizenship.”

For all of those fans, the hours before the match felt dreamy. Looking out from the open-air upper concourse, the sun glistened on the water. Only small sections of the stadium were filled with Belgium supporters; the vast, vast majority of the sold-out 66,925-person crowd were there for the U.S. The crowd roared when stadium hosts called upon U.S. fans to make some noise, and they belted “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Things quickly went downhill as the USMNT put on a dismal performance against Belgium. The crowd still broke out into chants, and particularly found some life after Sebastian Berhalter provided a spark of energy in the second half, but the festive, hopeful prematch bubble had popped.

Leaving the stadium later Monday evening, the sun was setting over the bay in a bright orange ball, and soon afterward, pink clouds dotted the sky. The USMNT’s breakdown stole the spotlight, but Seattle still got its curtain call.

SPONSORED BY BETMGM

The $593B Global Soccer Betting Boom

The world’s biggest international soccer tournament is already one of the biggest events in sports. This year, it could also become the biggest betting event in history.

In the latest episode of FOS Explains, Derryl Barnes breaks down the business behind the tournament—from media rights and sponsorships to ticket sales, tourism, and the sports betting boom projected to drive nearly $600 billion in global wagers.

Presented by BetMGM, this episode explores how the expanded tournament, America’s growing legal betting market, and record global audiences are reshaping the economics of international soccer.

Watch now.

ONE BIG FIG

Knockout Ratings

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 16 - United States v Belgium - Seattle Stadium, Seattle, Washington, U.S. - July 6, 2026 U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino speaks to the team after the match as the U.S. are eliminated from the World Cup

REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian via TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

30 million

How many people tuned in for Monday’s FIFA men’s World Cup matchup between the U.S. and Belgium, according to Fox, citing Nielsen’s preliminary fast national metric. Viewership for the U.S.’s 4–1 knockout loss peaked at almost 37 million between 9:15 and 9:30 p.m. ET. The match was the most-watched soccer broadcast in U.S. history, a milestone that had been reached several times already in the tournament as audiences have neared those normally seen during NFL playoffs. 

Even though the U.S. and Mexico are now out of the tournament, Fox and Telemundo have already banked much of the upside from a 2026 World Cup that has seen unprecedented viewership in the group stage, and then a record-setting match in the round of 32. Read the story. 

DAILY SPORTS TRIVIA

Can you rank the top five NBA teams with the most MVP awards all-time?

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FOS NEWS

Daniel Negreanu on Poker’s New Era

FOS graphic

The World Series of Poker is returning to ESPN for the first time since 2020. Eight-time WSOP winner Daniel Negreanu joined Front Office Sports to discuss how Peyton Manning’s media company, Omaha Productions, is reinventing poker as event television for the 2026 iteration. He also spoke about poker’s creator economy and how vlogging has grown the sport, and what surprises fans can expect from the 2026 WSOP broadcast.

Watch the full interview.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Intersecting Capital and Competition

Sports has become one of the most compelling investment opportunities in the global market. Private equity is gaining ground across leagues and teams, prediction markets are challenging the status quo, women’s sports continues its rapid ascent, and the economics of college athletics are being rewritten in real time.

On Sept. 15, we’ll unpack it all as Asset Class returns to Manhattan—bringing together the investors, operators, founders, and executives shaping the future of the business of sports.

Led by FOS deals reporter Ben Horney, the event will feature candid discussions about the trends, transactions, and capital strategies driving the industry forward—and what they mean for the next era of growth.

Request to attend now. Space is limited.

Editors’ Picks

FIFA Quietly Suspended Two U.S. Soccer Officials Before Belgium Match

by Dennis Young and Margaret Fleming
U.S. Soccer confirmed the suspensions but did not comment.

IOC Reinstates Russian Olympic Committee Ahead of LA28

by Ava Hult
The IOC said Russia’s participation is at the discretion of international federations.

Ken Griffey Jr. Wants to Bring Black Athletes ‘Back to Baseball’

by Ryan Glasspiegel
Griffey’s fourth annual Swingman Classic will take place on Friday.

Question of the Day

Will you continue watching the World Cup since the U.S. was knocked out?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 78% of respondents said they watched the U.S.-Belgium match on Monday.

Events Video Games Shop
Written by Margaret Fleming
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Catherine Chen

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