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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

April 3, 2026

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A scheduling dispute in the Big 12 has blown up into something bigger. Now the conference commissioner and a Texas Tech billionaire are openly arguing over who’s actually in charge.

—Amanda Christovich and Dennis Young

First Up

  • ESPN’s long-term plans for NFL Network could position Ian Rapoport and Daniel Jeremiah as the next faces of its insider and draft coverage. Read the story.
  • From azalea prints to Patrons Welcome slogans, golf brands found ways to tap Masters buzz without crossing Augusta National’s legal lines. Read the story.
  • First at FOS: ESPN zeroed in on Matt Jones and Myron Medcalf to fill the open Clinton Yates radio spot. Read the story.
  • Magic Johnson was dropped from a lawsuit tied to a $250,000 NFT investment that never materialized, as both sides agreed to dismiss the case. Read the story.

Yormark, Campbell Fight Over Who Runs Big 12: ‘He Is Not the Dictator’

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Two of the most powerful people in college sports are openly attacking each other by name in the media.

Cody Campbell, the billionaire chair of the Texas Tech board of regents, criticized the Big 12 this week for forcing his Red Raiders team—which he has transformed into a national powerhouse with millions of dollars in NIL money—to play on a Friday night this fall.

“Friday Night Lights are sacred in the Great State of Texas!” Campbell tweeted Monday, referring to the popularity of high school football in the state. He called a possible Friday game between Texas Tech and Houston “absolutely absurd” and tagged the Big 12 commissioner: 

“I know that @brettyormark is not a native Texan, but he’s been here long enough to know better!”

Yormark shot back in a story published Thursday morning.

“Cody Campbell does not run the Big 12,” Yormark told the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. “Our Board and our ADs approved playing 12 games a year off of Saturdays in an effort to raise the profile, narrative, and viewership of Big 12 Football. Texas Tech hosting a primetime game on Friday night delivers that.”

Campbell’s response? He is part of the group that does run the Big 12.

“As commissioner, he needs to remember that he works for the Presidents, and the Presidents work for the Boards,” Campbell told Front Office Sports on Thursday. (Campbell is the chairman of the Texas Tech system board of regents.) “He is not the dictator of the conference. That’s not his role. It is his responsibility to advocate for his members in all cases.”

After the Avalanche-Journal story ran Thursday morning, Campbell joked on X/Twitter: “Apparently Brett didn’t get the memo: EVERYTHING RUNS THROUGH LUBBOCK!!” Texas Tech won its first Big 12 football title last year before losing in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal.

‘Saving College Sports’?

Campbell—who made his billions in oil and gas and is an advisor to Donald Trump—has been at odds with power conference commissioners Tony Petitti of the Big Ten and Greg Sankey of the SEC for the better part of a year. Campbell’s organization has been called out by power conference commissioners before, but Yormark going after Campbell by name in the media represents something of an escalation. 

Through his group, Saving College Sports, Campbell has been pushing his pet idea in the media and the halls of Congress: The power conferences should pool their media-rights deals. According to Campbell, this would generate more revenue than the existing setup, where conferences strike individual deals with rights holders, and that revenue would then fund supposedly endangered women’s and college sports. 

Campbell bought TV ad time last fall during college football games that featured him saying, “To conference commissioners, it’s all about money and control,” and “their greed is bankrupting all but the biggest schools.” Fox and ABC declined to air the ads until the language against the commissioners was softened.

The SEC and Big Ten have refused to get on board with Campbell’s scheme, which they called “well-intentioned but misguided.” They sent a study to politicians in February that they claimed proved it is “likely to reduce revenue over the long term.”

Campbell’s idea has gained some traction in Congress, with multiple federal lawmakers proposing bills that would help facilitate pooling media rights. It is also one of the topics being discussed in President Trump’s subcommittees on college sports, a continuation of his roundtable in early March. The subcommittees began conversations this week, FOS confirmed.

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Time Crunch

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5 weeks

That’s the amount of time the WNBA’s two expansion teams—the Portland Fire and Toronto Tempo—have to build rosters and launch their franchises before the season begins May 8, a compressed timeline driven by delayed CBA negotiations that adds pressure to an already complicated expansion draft.

With the expansion draft set for Friday ahead of the women’s Final Four in Phoenix, the Fire will pick first, and each team can select up to 12 players—but only one unrestricted free agent total, limiting access to top talent. Teams could also protect just five players, down from six last year, widening the pool but not necessarily improving its quality. Read the story.

LOUD AND CLEAR

Streaming Shift

The Augusta Chronicle-Imagn Images

“I think you’ll continue to see more and more on streaming.”

—CBS Sports president David Berson said that this week as the Masters moves further into streaming. The tournament is bringing Amazon Prime Video on as a new media partner.

That shift stands out for one of sports’s most traditional events, which has long limited how and when fans can watch. Augusta is adding more streaming coverage while still keeping its biggest moments on broadcast TV. Read the story.

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Top Seeds Sweep Women’s Final Four

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The 2026 Women’s Final Four features a historic lineup as all four No. 1 seeds—UConn, South Carolina, UCLA, and Texas—advanced to the semifinals. This marks the second consecutive year these exact programs have reached this stage, a feat matched only once before in 1996. The top seeds dominated the Elite Eight, highlighted by UConn extending its winning streak and Texas securing a blowout victory.

Matchups include a South Carolina–UConn title game rematch and a Texas-UCLA showdown. While UConn remains the favorite with a 54-game winning streak, South Carolina and UCLA aim to disrupt their momentum and claim the championship.

Check out the college sports content hub, presented by Invesco QQQ, to read the full story and stay up to date on all things college athletics.

Editors’ Picks

The Masters Ticket Resale Crackdown Continues

by David Rumsey and Daniel Roberts
Augusta National has tightened its grip on the secondary market.

Iowa State Star Audi Crooks Enters Transfer Portal

by Yanyan Li
Crooks, an Iowa native, has one year of eligibility remaining.

MLB’s Deals With Netflix and NBC Off to Strong Ratings Start

by Eric Fisher
The audience figure formed part of a big opening week for the league. 

Question of the Day

Do you think there’s a Big 12 power struggle?

 YES   NO 

Thursday’s result: 57% of respondents said the NFL is not doing enough to address player safety.

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Written by Amanda Christovich, Dennis Young
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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