Read in Browser

Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

June 5, 2025

Jerry Reinsdorf has agreed to sell the White Sox to the Ishbia family over the course of nine years. It’s a complicated transaction befitting an 89-year-old owner with a rich and complicated legacy of his own.

—Eric Fisher, Alex Schiffer, Colin Salao, and David Rumsey

White Sox Deal Signals Ninth Inning for Reinsdorf’s MLB Legacy

Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

It’s now the official beginning of the end for one of the most influential team owners in MLB history. 

White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf has struck a multistage equity deal with Justin Ishbia that will see majority control of the franchise transfer no earlier than 2029. After 2034, when Reinsdorf would be 98, an option he holds to sell the controlling interest becomes Ishbia’s—who will also involve his brother, Suns and Mercury owner Mat Ishbia, and his father, Jeff Ishbia, in the deal that was months in development.

While it’s been long expected that Reinsdorf would soon settle the future ownership path of the White Sox, the agreement is nonetheless a massive development involving one of the longest-tenured and most impactful members of MLB ownership. 

Reinsdorf first acquired the White Sox with his business partner, the late Eddie Einhorn, in early 1981 in a deal worth about $20 million. The franchise is now estimated to be worth $2 billion, the 16th highest in the league.

In the four-plus decades since first arriving in baseball, Reinsdorf has played a major role in developing many of MLB’s current financial structures, including revenue-sharing. He also was a seminal figure in the creation of MLB Advanced Media and baseball’s leadership position digitally, and he was central in the combative processes in which Bud Selig and then Rob Manfred ascended to become MLB commissioner. 

More to Do

There’s plenty of unfinished business for Reinsdorf in the years he has left leading the White Sox. The club’s effort to build a new ballpark at The 78, an undeveloped parcel near Chicago’s South Loop, has stalled amid lawmaker resistance, and most recently, the Fire of Major League Soccer have unveiled their own plans to build a privately funded stadium at The 78. The White Sox “remain confident” that a ballpark could fit at the parcel, too, but with the MLB club seeking taxpayer assistance with its project, a much more uphill climb remains. 

Reinsdorf is also looking to further develop the Chicago Sports Network, the regional sports network he created in partnership with Tennessee-based Standard Media and the Wirtz family that owns the NHL’s Blackhawks. After nearly nine months of operation, CHSN is at last nearing a crucial carriage deal with Comcast, the dominant cable operator in the Chicago area. 

With another new MLB commissioner expected in early 2029, when Manfred intends to retire, Reinsdorf again figures to be a key player in the process to select the league’s next leader. MLB is also looking to implement a more centralized media strategy in 2028, when all of its national-level rights agreements expire. 

“As it relates to the next commissioner and the media rights, he’s definitely going to be heavily involved,” Marc Ganis, president of Chicago-based Sportscorp Ltd. and a longtime sports industry consultant, tells Front Office Sports. “On the stadium, I would expect him to defer more to Ishbia.”

Separately, Reinsdorf is also working on the 1901 Project, a $7 billion mixed-use development planned for around the United Center, with the Wirtz family.

Reinsdorf is additionally overseeing an on-field rebuild of the White Sox after the club lost 121 games last year to set a modern-day league record. That mark, however, is already being challenged this year by the similarly woeful Rockies.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS HONORS

Nominate Your Athletic Department

The Most Innovative College Athletic Departments Award will recognize collegiate athletic departments addressing the specific challenges of scholastic sports in the modern age. 

They’re the departments setting the bar for the collegiate sports sector using unique, holistic, and empowering programs to help college athletes navigate an era of accelerating change so these up-and-comers can enjoy lasting success—physically, mentally, and monetarily.

Nominees will be evaluated based on training facilities, fan experiences, data and analytics, athlete resources, and more.

Think your athletic department deserves to be recognized? Nominate it now. 

Nominations are open through June 22.

Aaron Rodgers Finally Agrees to Deal With Steelers

Ed Mulholland-Imagn Images

Aaron Rodgers is returning for another NFL season.

The 41-year-old quarterback informed the Steelers on Thursday that he will fly to Pittsburgh on Friday and sign in time for next week’s minicamp, starting his 21st NFL season.

The news was first reported by NFL Network. 

The decision comes after two disastrous seasons with the New York Jets, one of which lasted just four plays before Rodgers tore his Achilles. The Jets went 5–12 with Rodgers in 2024, leading ownership to clean house.

The Jets have $49 million in dead money for Rodgers on their cap sheet. Rodgers had said all offseason he’d play for $20 million, a relative pittance compared to what he made with Green Bay and New York.

The Steelers-Rodgers union has appeared inevitable for months, with the team keeping its powder dry despite QBs like Kirk Cousins being available and Shedeur Sanders not being picked until the fifth round. Steelers legend and Fox analyst Terry Bradshaw previously called the organization’s drawn-out pursuit of Rodgers “a joke.” They did select Will Howard in the sixth round of the draft, but Howard is unlikely to threaten Rodgers’s hold on the starting job.

Rodgers joins a Steelers team that went 10–7 and lost to the Ravens in the wild-card round last season. They traded for DK Metcalf this offseason and let Russell Wilson walk to the Giants in free agency.

EXCLUSIVE

Layoffs Hit The Ringer, Spotify

Layoffs have hit Spotify’s podcast division.

About 5% of the division, roughly 15 employees, were laid off this week, a source told Front Office Sports. The cuts come as Spotify is focusing on bolstering video production. For more on this breaking story, read Ryan Glasspiegel’s full story here.

For all of our sports media news and analysis, you can subscribe to the twice-weekly “Tuned In” newsletter.

Chiefs, Royals Have Massive Stadium Decision: Kansas or Missouri?

Denny Medley-Imagn Images

The NFL’s Chiefs and MLB’s Royals will very soon have some monumental decisions to make as Missouri’s Senate approved stadium funding for both franchises. 

In the early morning hours of Thursday, during a special session called last week by Gov. Mike Kehoe, the Missouri Senate passed a funding bill by a 19–13 vote that will support up to half the cost of new or renovated facilities for the teams. The measure had previously faced fierce bipartisan opposition, but a coalition of Democrats ultimately got behind the measure, particularly after Kehoe agreed to several other measures, such as additional disaster relief for tornado-stricken areas around St. Louis and more property-tax relief in the state. 

The bill, allowing the teams to bond against their state tax payments, now moves to the Missouri House, where passage is also expected and would, in turn, send it back to Kehoe for his signature. 

“We appreciate legislators working together to use this as an opportunity to show up for our communities by acting swiftly to help those in crisis, while also making smart decisions that secure opportunity for the future,” Kehoe said in a statement. 

The Missouri stadium funding, an elusive element since Jackson County voters strongly rejected a sales tax measure last year, is now poised to stand up against rival bids from neighboring Kansas, which has already approved bonding to help lure the teams across the border. 

That Kansas bonding, however, expires at the end of the month, meaning that decisions on the team’s facility futures could be weeks away. Along similar lines, Chiefs owner Clark Hunt recently said he wants to settle the team’s future stadium plans “by summer at the latest.”

Kansas City mayor Quinton Lucas, who is actively trying to keep the teams from moving out of state, praised the Senate’s move to fund “competitiveness for sports and entertainment retention and attraction in Missouri.”

Neither team has committed to staying in Missouri, and they are looking to take in all the relevant information as they move closer to deciding where to play after their current stadium leases expire in 2031. A Front Office Sports source familiar with the teams’ thinking said the Chiefs and Royals view the Senate vote as “super positive” and “a big win,” but will likely refrain from making any formal comment until after the legislative process is complete.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS TODAY

White Sox Ownership Succession Plan in Place

FOS illustration

After owning the White Sox for almost 50 years, chairman Jerry Reinsdorf says he plans to sell the controlling interest in the baseball team to the Ishbia family after 2029. And MLB commissioner Rob Manfred says robot umps might get called up to the big leagues in 2026. FOS’s Eric Fisher explains how the automated ball-strike system would work next season.

Plus, NBA reporter Jared Greenberg joins Baker Machado and Renee Washington to preview Game 1 of the Finals between the Thunder and Pacers, Tyrese Haliburton drops his new Puma Hali 1 sneakers, and soccer analyst Susannah Collins previews the FIFA Club World Cup. 

Watch the full episode here.

STATUS REPORT

Three Up, One Down

Jennifer Stewart-Imagn Images

Norfolk State ⬆ The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football program, now coached by former NFL star Michael Vick, will play its Oct. 30 game against Delaware State, coached by Vick’s former Eagles teammate DeSean Jackson, at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.

Jordan Ott ⬆ The Cavaliers assistant coach has been hired to be the next head coach of the Suns, according to ESPN. It’s a four-year deal, per John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7. It’s Ott’s first head coaching gig after working as an NBA assistant coach since 2012. A peculiar note on the hiring: Suns owner Mat Ishbia has a longstanding beef with Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, and both have their billion-dollar empires through the mortgage industry.

Canada ⬆ A day after the Oilers took a 1–0 series lead in the Stanley Cup Final, a record-tying four Canadians are set to play in the NBA Finals, including three starters. The Thunder representatives are league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Lu Dort, while the Pacers have Andrew Nembhard and Bennedict Mathurin.

CBS ⬇ Paris Saint-Germain’s dominant 5–0 victory over Inter Milan resulted in the network’s smallest audience for a UEFA Champions League final since it first aired the event in 2021. Saturday’s broadcast averaged 2.04 million viewers.

Conversation Starters

  • The Texas Tech softball team received custom gear for their first Women’s College World Series from Patrick Mahomes, a Red Raiders alum. Watch their reactions.
  • The Oilers resurfaced their ice for the Stanley Cup Final with ice from their players’ hometown rinks across Canada. Take a look.
  • Puma unveiled the Hali 1, the first signature shoe of Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton, ahead of Game 1 of the NBA Finals. Check it out.

Editors’ Picks

NHL Not Opening Expansion Bids—but Houston, Atlanta Still in Mix

by Eric Fisher
The question of additional franchises will stay in a more unstructured process.

Vince McMahon Has Dumped Close to $2 Billion of TKO Stock in 2 Years

by Ben Horney
The embattled WWE founder is fighting sexual assault allegations in court.

Wrexham Looking to Sell Stake at 19,000% Valuation Growth: Report

by Alex Schiffer
The club is now one promotion away from the Premier League.
Advertise Awards Learning Events Video Shows
Written by Eric Fisher, Alex Schiffer, David Rumsey, Colin Salao
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Or Moyal, Catherine Chen

If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here.

Update your preferences / Unsubscribe

Copyright © 2025 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016

Subscribe To Our Daily Newsletters

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.