Start your morning with Buzzcast with Abe Madkour: A record NFL Draft; An NFL vision for the future; Stadium Plan B emerges in K.C. and a Messi-led record in Foxborough
MLB to address uniform issues after complaints

MLB "plans to address its uniform fiasco" with modifications to "include a return to larger lettering on the back of jerseys, remedying mismatched gray tops and bottoms and addressing the new Nike jerseys' propensity to collect sweat," according to the memo distributed to players by the MLBPA yesterday. The changes, which "will happen at the latest by the beginning of the 2025 season," will also include "fixes to the pants, widely panned this spring for being see-through." The MLBPA informed players of the coming changes in a letter that "placed the blame on Nike" and the debut of its Vapor Premier uniform. The union also "absolved Fanatics" of any wrongdoing ( ESPN.com, 4/28 ).
A's fans travel to Sacramento for latest protest
A's fans "made the trip to the team’s future home" of Sutter Health Park in Sacramento on Saturday to "continue voicing their disapproval of the team’s ownership." It was another protest event put on by the fan group Last Dive Bar and the first in the capital region ahead of the A's temporary move to the city. It was "a quiet protest that gained its voice" in the top of the fifth inning of the game between the River Cats and Las Vegas Aviators, with fans chanting "Sell! The! Team! Sell! The! Team!" while donning their green "Sell" shirts and "unfurling their matching flags" ( San Jose MERCURY NEWS, 4/29 ).
Knicks fans take over Sixers' arena over weekend
Knicks fans "took over" the Wells Fargo Center in Games 3 and 4 of the Sixers’ first-round series -- "but especially" yesterday during a 97-92 Knicks victory. The arena "rang with 'M-V-P' chants" for Knicks G Jalen Brunson , who scored a franchise record 47 points, all game, but "it was especially hard to miss after the game." Fans also "came together on the concourse to chant '[Expletive] Embiid' and 'Knicks in five.'" The visiting fans also "put up a Knicks jersey on the statue of Wilt Chamberlain ." 76ers C Joel Embiid said, "I think it’s unfortunate and I’m not calling them out, but it is disappointing. Obviously you’ve got a lot of Knicks fans and they’re down the road and I’ve never seen it, and I’ve been here for 10 years. Yeah, it kind of [ticks] me off, especially because Philly is considered a sports town" ( PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, 4/28 ).
The New York Knicks fans took over Wells Fargo Center today 🤯
— Hoops Nation (@_HoopsNation) April 29, 2024
(via @KrisGerald) #NewYorkForever
pic.twitter.com/1YCnrFQIb3
Aramark Sports debuts new 'Immerse' consultancy
Aramark Sports + Entertainment is rolling out “Immerse” this morning, a newly created consultancy division, that like the company’s recent creation for premium experiences, Aura, packages capabilities it already had into a service offering. Immerse’s capabilities will include research, data insights, and full-scale master planning projects, collaborating with clients to tie together data, trends, goals, and opportunities to create customized plans that lift in-venue F&B quality and performance.
“The trigger for this was not only when our clients came to us asking for this, but when outside partners and vendors started tapping us,” said Jamie Slotterback , who is VP/Marketing on Aramark Sports + Entertainment's Design and Development team and is leading the Immerse effort. “We really wanted to start with where we are experts, really in our wheelhouse, really specializing in F&B and hospitality, not trying to reach into other parts of sports and entertainment."
Immerse will be available as a service to any interested parties, not just Aramark F&B clients. Entities that operate their own concessions in-house and college athletics departments are potential target markets that could benefit from Aramark’s resources, experience, and broad view of the landscape as clients wrestle with whether to introduce alcohol sales or autonomous stores or switch service styles at an underperforming stand.
“They’re still building out (business intelligence) teams across the pro world and F&B, as they build those teams, has not been the primary focus,” said Aramark S+E VP/Data Science, Scott McDade . "And many of them want to know what’s going on outside their four walls."
espnW unveils speakers for espnW Summit NYC
ESPN has unveiled its full agenda and list of speakers for its espnW Summit NYC 2024, which is set to take place next Thursday, May 9 at the 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge. Panels and speakers for this year's event include:
- The Changing College Sports Landscape: Featuring Texas Volleyball coach Jerritt Elliott, UNC Field Hockey coach Erin Matson, Ole Miss Women's Basketball coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin, and Florida State Women's Soccer coach Brian Pensky; moderated by Sarah Spain.
- Q&A with State Farm CMO Kristyn Cook: Will include a sneak peak at the upcoming ESPN+ Original Series Full Court Press following the lives of Caitlin Clark, Kiki Rice and Kamilla Cardoso.
- Live Laughter Permitted with Julie Foudy and Lynn Olszowy: Featuring UConn G Azzi Fudd, Notre Dame G Hannah Hidalgo and South Carolina G Tessa Johnson.
- Women at the Helm: Featured speakers include Hawks CMO Melissa Proctor, WNBA Golden State President Jess Smith and Gotham FC GM Yael Averbuch West; moderated by Julie Foudy.
- The Women of ESPN: Featuring ESPN Social Media Commentator Ari Chambers, ESPN Studio Analyst Ali Krieger and ESPN Host, Analyst & Reporter Andraya Carter.
- The 50th Anniversary of the Women's Sports Foundation: A conversation with Women’s Sports Foundation CEO Danette Leighton hosted by Julie Foudy.
- A keynote conversation featuring Love Squad founder & CEO Ally Love moderated by Sarah Spain.
- The Elle Duncan Show: Live from The espnW Summit NYC: Featuring SportsCenter hosts Elle Duncan and Gary Striewski with Andraya Carter and Chiney Ogwumike (espnW).
Premier League's spending cap vote set for today
Premier League clubs will be asked today to "support a proposal for a cap on spending" for the first time, as a vote in principle on the cap is expected to be taken at a Premier League shareholders' meeting in London -- with "further discussions over details, such as the size of the cap, taken before" the league's Annual General Meeting in June. The proposed cap "would result in the top teams being restricted to spending on transfers, wages and agents a proportion of the amount that the bottom club receives in TV money." The idea is to "try to ensure the Premier League remains competitive" instead of "being dominated by one or two super-rich clubs." Fourteen out of 20 votes would result in the proposal being passed. Clubs are "expected to be assured that the cap would not cause any of them to reduce spending from their present level" ( London TIMES, 4/28 ).
McLaughlin gets needed win for embattled Penske
Scott McLaughlin earned IndyCar's Team Penske "a much-needed victory" after a week "filled with penalties, disqualifications and questions centered around Team Penske’s integrity and attention to detail." McLaughlin defended his win from a year ago at Barber Motorsports Park on Sunday, while Will Power "made it a 1-2 finish for the embattled program." McLaughlin and Josef Newgarden were both DQ’d from the St. Pete season-opener after IndyCar became aware that Team Penske had illegal code in its cars' software ( INDIANAPOLIS STAR, 4/28 ).
The 1-2 finish helped "cap an emotionally charged five days for the drivers, team and series." But for Penske, IndyCar’s largest on-track scandal in recent memory "is not yet in the rearview mirror." Team Penske President Tim Cindric said, "This was a big win for our team. Unfortunately, it doesn’t overshadow our penalty, which we deserved." McLaughlin’s win "won't silence the doubters" -- for some, "nothing will." At least publicly, concerns over Penske’s "perceived conflict of interest" -- with ownership of the series and one of its most high-profile teams -- "remains negligible" ( INDIANAPOLIS STAR, 4/29 ).
Goldman Sachs: No biz trips to Paris during Games
Goldman Sachs has told employees in an email that any trips to Paris between July 24 and Aug. 14 -- the dates when the Olympics will be held in the French capital -- "must first get approval from its finance department." Managers "aim to nix any meetings set up so bankers can attend the plethora of sporting events with the firm picking up part of the tab." A spokesperson said, "In line with previous Olympic games, we have asked our people to effectively manage their spend and ensure coordination with firm sponsored events for our clients during the period of the Paris games" ( BLOOMBERG NEWS, 4/26 ).
This Week's SBJ: Rejuvenating a Franchise
In this week's SBJ , the Texans were floundering until owner Cal McNair and his team rejuvenated the franchise, symbolized by a bold new look. “We recognized that we had been good for 20 years, but was that all we wanted to be,” McNair said. “We wanted to really stretch and try to be great and you can’t do that doing the same thing as you’ve done.” Also, the quest to offer fans unique access, benefits and relationships is driving the renovation of prime real estate inside sports venues. This week's issue also looks into how youth baseball and softball, fueled by increasing participation, are attracting committed investors and seeing huge growth. Also, SBJ Publisher & Executive Editor Abe Madkour takes in Cosm’s immersive viewing experience and describes it as “an offering fans should want.”
Morning Hot Reads: Two Sides
The Chicago DAILY HERALD goes with, " McBears splinter into two parts — Poles forward, Warren lost at sea ." The Bears "split into two distinctive parts in the past five days." One "suggests positivity," while the "other is so self-mocking." The "good vibrations flowed from the football ops department of Ryan Poles ," who came into the 2024 NFL Draft with a "strong hand and did nothing to diminish the anticipation of autumn coursing through his team's fan base." However, the "seaside disconnect wheezed from the starch-tied imagination" of team President Kevin Warren , whose “stadium reveal” event on Draft Eve Wednesday afternoon at Soldier Field proved to be "so tone-deaf, so turgid and so lame that it insulted even diversity, equity and inclusion enthusiasts everywhere."
Also :
- The Suns tried to build a superteam for an NBA that no longer exists.
- Why the NHL should consider radical divisional realignment now that Utah has a team.
Friday night’s "Final Jeopardy!" category was "U.S. Geography"
"At 14,410′, it’s one of North America’s highest volcanoes; a Puyallup name for it can be translated to 'bring the water.'"
Off the presses....
The Morning Buzz offers today's back pages and sports covers from some of North America's major metropolitan newspapers:
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Final Jeopardy....
"What is Mount Rainier?"