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Facing a Nov. 21 deadline for two-thirds of Division I member schools to submit paperwork in order to rescind a proposed rule change allowing college athletes and staff to bet on professional sports, a source tells CNN’s Dana O’Neil: “As of right now, we are not meeting that threshold.” If the needed 241 (out of 361) DI schools do not respond, the change will go into effect on November 22. (link)
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Texas Tech Board of Regents Chair Cody Campbell joins Tulane Sports Law Director Gabe Feldman to dive into a number of topics. On the subject of private equity: “I think it depends on what context and what the deal is, but I think what the Big Ten is looking at doing right now is absolutely insane. I can't make sense of it on any level because these are some of the financially strongest institutions in the country. Some of them even have AAA credit ratings or AA-plus. They can go out and borrow money at 4% or less. Why would they take capital that's going to cost them 15 or 16%? If they hit their growth projections or more, why would they take that money? That's just handicapping themselves forever. Again, it goes back to this agency conflict where the people who are in charge, ostensibly, are incentivized by trying to do well in the next two or three years. They don't care what happens in the future. They're willing to mortgage 10 years from now to be more competitive in the short term, and that's a bad deal. […] Not all the schools need to borrow money. Some of them are doing just fine. Some of them have donors that are willing to step up for it. Some of them have other sources of capital, they can borrow whatever it is. Let private equity go out and do individual deals with individual institutions that need the help to get through this transition period that we're going to have until we get to the point of sustainability. Ultimately, with the requirement that they have to maintain all their sports, and again, potentially outside capital could allow that to happen by being involved in that way.” More. (link)
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In her most recent “The State of Troy” letter to fans, USC AD Jen Cohen updates on the school’s position regarding the Big Ten’s proposed investment deal: “As we continue to evaluate the merits of this proposal or any others, our University leadership remains aligned in our stance that our fiduciary obligation to the University of Southern California demands we thoroughly evaluate any deals that could impact our long-term value and flexibility, no matter the short-term benefit. We greatly value our membership in the Big Ten Conference and understand and respect the larger landscape, but we also recognize the power of the USC brand is far-reaching, deeply engaging, and incredibly valuable, and we will always fight first for what's best for USC. [...] I believe our work on this issue has exemplified exceptional alignment, and I am confident we are all committed to the most positive outcomes for USC Athletics. As with any of the challenges and opportunities this new era presents, USC is well positioned to lead toward sensible and effective solutions.” More from Cohen. (link)
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CaneSport’s Gary Ferman profiles Miami (FL) President Joe Echevarria, the 69-year-old former Deloitte CEO whose hands-on, fully aligned leadership has reshaped the Hurricanes’ athletic trajectory. Echevarria, who walks through the smoke behind the team and embeds himself on sidelines and in locker rooms, says Kirk Herbstreit’s 2021 critique of Miami’s alignment “wasn’t true. But the focus on it was true.” At the time, Herbstreit remarked: “To me, college football – you look at the powerhouse programs: Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State – president, AD, head coach, same vision. They’re aligned in their vision for what needs to happen. Recruiting, budget, staff, whatever a team needs. That’s what it takes. Miami doesn’t have that. So I don’t think it matters who the head coach is. Until you get a president and an AD and a coach together on the same page, I guess football doesn’t matter.” Echevarria recalls telling then-President Julio Frenk that Miami needed to invest because “it’s a new day. You have to invest. Like any business, you invest, but I expect a return. … I expect the right culture, the right attitude, do all the right things. And then the on-field performance, I expect improvement every year.” He calls Miami “a glorious place,” praises the global power of The U brand, and underscores his philosophy: “If you aren’t going to be great at something, why bother?” Echevarria says it won’t be due to lack of investment if Miami falls short, adding: “I’m 69 years old, having the time of my life, bro.” More. (link)
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Coastal Carolina AD Chance Miller has been issued a public reprimand by the Division I Baseball Committee for misconduct that occurred at the Division I Baseball Championship on June 22. In addition, he also cannot attend the next regional-round game for which his team qualifies. Members cited Miller for berating the NCAA national coordinator of umpires in a public setting and later NCAA staff in the hallways of Charles Schwab Field Omaha. It was the committee's understanding that Miller was frustrated by an umpire's decision to eject Chanticleers Baseball HC Kevin Schnall and AC Matt Schilling during game two of the championship series of the Men's College World Series. (link)
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Towson plans to expand the Athletics Field House and transform the first floor of the Towson Center Training Room through a $40M project, according to The Towerlight’s Zach Daly. Slated to begin in spring 2026, Phase 1 of the project will add 12.6K square feet of space to the Field House with $28M of enhancements going toward unifying weight rooms and turf training areas into a sports performance center along with a fueling zone with food and drinks for student athletes. Phase 2 is scheduled for completion by the end of 2026 and will include changes to the Towson Center gymnasium by adding two enclosed courts and a 15K square foot indoor turf. (link)
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Creighton has officially broken ground on its 50K-square foot Sports Performance Center, part of the school’s $300M Fly Together initiative, that’s set to be completed by 2027. Included in the Bluejays’ emerging Athletic Village, the center will feature approximately 10K-square feet of new strength and conditioning space, an outdoor training area, a dining hall, areas for academic advising, sports medicine, and psychology services, and gathering spaces. (link)
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The Washington State Board of Regents approved a $12M, privately-funded upgrade to the videoboard, lights and sound system at Gesa Field. The Cougars have raised $6M in pledges and another $725K in commitments, but need to raise $8M by December 15 to get the project complete by next Football season. (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Louisiana President Joseph Savoie will retire at the end of this calendar year after 17 years at the helm. (link)
➤ Texas A&M Men’s Tennis HC Steve Denton inks a new contract that could keep him in Bryan-College Station through 2030. (link)
➤ Butler Men’s Soccer HC Paul Snape resigns after 15 seasons leading the Bulldogs. Elevate has been retained to assist with the coaching search process. (link)
➤ North Texas Women’s Soccer HC John Hedlund announces plans to retire at the conclusion of the 2026 season after 32 years in charge. (link)
➤ Eastern Michigan Baseball HC Robbie Britt resigns after two seasons leading the Eagles to become the Boston Red Sox’s Field Coordinator. (link)
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Our sincerest condolences go out to the entire Old Dominion community and the family and friends of former ODU AD Dr. James Jarrett who passed away Thursday. (link)
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San Diego State launches its “Finish the Climb” fundraising initiative designed to raise $2M in support of the Aztec Football program’s Recruitment & Retention Fund. The campaign is expected to help shore up resources needed to attract top-tier talent, retain high-character student-athletes and sustain a competitive edge in an evolving college football landscape. As part of the campaign, an anonymous donor has also pledged a $1M challenge gift, which will be unlocked when Aztec Nation raises $1M in matching support. AD John David Wicker: “Finish The Climb gives Aztec Nation a real opportunity to invest in our program’s future - defining who we are, what we become, and how we compete at the highest levels.” (link)
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Villanova Moorad Center for the Study of Sports Law Executive Director Andrew Brandt tells the Lafayette Daily Advertiser’s Cory Diaz that LSU is overwhelmingly likely to owe former Football HC Brian Kelly his full $54M buyout, characterizing the contract as airtight and the school’s legal footing as weak. Brandt says the deal obligates LSU to pay Kelly $800K-per-month for the next five years and that the only plausible escape route would be if LSU can point to — and publicly disclose — something “egregious” enough to justify a for-cause firing. He questions LSU’s claim that Kelly was never formally terminated and notes: "I'm anxious to see what happens, what theories LSU has on how they could not pay Kelly the contract and why they think he has not been terminated. Could he just show up to work if he hasn't? That's a little bit of a question in my mind. No one has uncovered a strong case as to why LSU would not have to pay Kelly." (link)
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Disney will boost total content spending by $1B to $24B in FY26, driven primarily by sharply higher sports rights costs at ESPN, including the new $2.6B-per-year NBA deal that nearly triples Disney’s previous annual outlay. CEO Bob Iger and CFO Hugh Johnston told investors the company remains disciplined but is increasing spending “as we continue to invest in high-quality sports rights at ESPN, new and existing franchises at our film studio, and television content.” Johnston acknowledged the NBA renewal creates cost “bumpiness” with most of the impact coming in the back half of FY26, and defended the investment by calling the NBA “a phenomenal property” that, like the NFL, delivers “scale audience, which is obviously super-attractive to advertisers and therefore is strategically beneficial to us as well.” (link)
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The Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s Mac Engel reports that “one person familiar with the situation” at Baylor suggests Bears AD Mack Rhoades “will not be back, and that this will be a ‘housecleaning’ for the Baylor athletic department. Head football coach Dave Aranda’s job security remains a point of concern, and speculation, within the Baylor community.” Engel also points out that the timing of the situation is suboptimal. “If Baylor is ready to move on from Aranda, replacing both the AD and head football coach at the same time is challenging. Normal procedure is the school wants its AD to lead a vetting process of coaching candidates. With many jobs already open for 2026, top coaching candidates are already being contacted to line up interviews. [...] If the Rhoades situation is contained, and only a little embarrassing, the cleanup is minor. A four-week investigation period is not good. Four weeks could feel like four months.” (link)
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The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner submits that Washington State’s dismissal of AD Anne McCoy by new WSU President Elizabeth Cantwell signals an “aggressive, relentless approach” to athletics as WSU navigates revenue sharing, NIL and a rebuilt Pac-12. Cantwell, who spearheaded Utah State’s jump to the new Pac-12, is viewed as all-in on football and men’s basketball. For McCoy’s successor, Wilner urges Cantwell to seek input from trusted former WSU leaders such as former AD Jim Sterk, former Northern Arizona AD Mike Marlow and San Diego State AD John David Wicker, while not over-relying on search-firm direction. Wilner also suggests Cantwell may consult her former Utah State AD Diana Sabau, though he’s skeptical she’d take the job. Beyond internal ties, Wilner stresses donor-activation as the top priority: “You don’t need Cougar blood to achieve that,” pointing to former Cougs AD Pat Chun’s success versus McCoy’s struggles in NIL fundraising. Names floated as potential candidates include: Toledo AD Bryan Blair, Purdue Deputy AD Ken Halpin and Eastern Michigan AD Scott Wetherbee. Regardless of direction, Wilner writes WSU enters the search with one decisive advantage: “Their president wants to win.” (link)
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American Conference Commissioner Tim Pernetti joins SBJ’s Austin Karp, maintains “there’s more money being left on the table than people want to know about. And for me, I would never — and I did this at Media Day — I commented about unified media rights, and I would never make a comment like that in a flip manner without any real information to back it up. … There’s billions of dollars being left on the table. And the reality is in the future, does it make sense for everybody to unify their media rights or not? I mean, only the future will tell us that, but right now we’re at a moment in time where there’s government intervention, there’s legislation on the floor of the House that could change the future of college sports.” Pernetti on 2030 conference realignment movement: “I think it’s going to be somewhere in the middle. I don’t think it’s going to be a tremor. I think there’s going to be real movement come 2030, and I think the industry is sort of set up for that based on how the media rights agreements are set up and what their termination dates are. … I was part of that whole earthquake in 2012. The reality is when the media contracts start to come around the corner two years prior, things start to move and there’s a lot of conversations that are already being had out there.” (link)
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If Indiana can find football success so quickly, why can’t Maryland? CBS Sports’ John Talty notes the Terps have lofty goals similar to the Hoosiers' rapid rise at a school also known more for basketball even if UM’s new athletics “brain trust” would prefer a little more runway than IU Football HC Curt Cignetti’s remarkable two-year turnaround. Terps AD Jim Smith: “If we're good with a three-year plan, which is what I'm working with, then I think we're in the top tier of the Big Ten within three years in football.” The big question, per Talty, is how to make it happen? Talty: “From Smith on down, the mentality has shifted to say-yes-then-find-a-way. It's what has already made Smith and his new team popular with Maryland fans.” Smith: “Indiana started a plan about four years ago. They started investing in football a while ago and then they got Curt and then it skyrocketed. It wasn't hire a coach and everything's going to be OK. Put all the things in place to be successful and that's what they've done. [...] What I've learned is 14M people live within 100 miles of College Park. When you start talking specifically about football and how far people will travel, that is a huge number of potential fans to develop. There really isn't a lot of competition for Division I football in that radius, so it gives us, what I believe, is a strategic advantage.” More. (link)
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Title IX objectors in the House settlement tell Sportico’s Daniel Libit they “respectfully disagree” with U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken’s decision that Title IX suits connected to the outcome should be remedied in other courts. The objectors say it’s “not a realistic or effective remedy.” (link)
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The NFL sent a memo to team officials yesterday indicating that in light of recent gambling scandals in other sports, the league has worked with lawmakers, regulators and sports betting partners in recent weeks to limit and, where possible, prohibit prop bets in the NFL. Measures taken include assigning integrity representatives (former law enforcement officials) to each team to monitor suspicious activity, support investigations and oversee compliance; using third-party technology to monitor all betting activity; establishing the NFL Global Security Operations unit to monitor social media, insider threats and other suspicious activity; and working closely with sports betting partners, lawmakers and regulators on integrity best practices. Full memo. (link); NCAA President Charlie Baker reacts to the news: “Very glad to see the NFL take this issue on. The NCAA has been working to put an end to prop bets for 2 years. They’re integrity risks and lead to abusive behavior toward student-athletes.” (link)
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New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin has announced that two former Rutgers wrestling student-athletes — Michael Cetta, 23, and Nicholas Raimo, 25 — were among 14 people charged in what prosecutors describe as a multimillion-dollar illegal sports betting ring tied to the Lucchese crime family. Charges include first-degree racketeering, first-degree money laundering, second-degree conspiracy, and multiple gambling-related counts. Both face up to 40 years in state prison if convicted of the top charges. Platkin says the pair were among “a number of college athletes” operating sportsbooks “at the direction of the Perna enterprise,” noting the operation relied on “Gen Z gamblers and a network of subagents…namely college students and college athletes.” Cetta, a cousin of alleged ringleader Joseph R. Perna, wrestled four seasons for Rutgers. Raimo, labeled a “high-level agent,” wrestled at Rutgers from 2021–23 after transferring from Arizona State but never competed in a match. Rutgers declined comment. (link)
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Former ESPN President Steve Bornstein sat down with Puck’s John Ourand as the pair dove into a number of topics, including what property Bornstein believes has tons of upside: “The one sport that I think truly has a lot of room to grow, that has some attention, but not enough attention, is women’s volleyball. I’ve been making a living for the last 40 years on identifying underserved sports—I look at women’s volleyball and see a big upside. The game I follow is the college game. … Women’s volleyball, to me, has every element of what makes a compelling sports story. I just don’t think it gets the attention it needs, and that it will get. Volleyball is a sport that’s primed to grow big.” (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Alaska President Pat Pitney will retire this spring after the May board of regents meeting. The university is contracting with WittKieffer to help select Pitney’s successor. (link)
➤ Purdue has promoted Assoc. AD/Senior Director of Development Nick Logan to lead its fundraising operations, per CollegeAD, which reports: “He takes the position on an interim basis in the wake of Tim House's departure.” (link)
➤ The Wire on Collegiate Sports Connect showcases the latest administrative staff movement at the likes of Duke, Holy Cross, Pac-12 Conference, Pittsburgh, St. Bonaventure, Tennessee, USC, Utah State, UTRGV, UT San Antonio and Washington State. (link)
➤ Baseball leads the way with the most coaching staff changes of any sport over the past few days. Check out the full list across all collegiate sports in this morning’s edition of Coaches.wire. (link)
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The Aflac logo will be on the field at Ole Miss’ Vaught-Hemingway Stadium for the game against Florida on Saturday night. (link)
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UMBC has launched the Retriever Club, the official engagement and fundraising arm of UMBC Athletics. Areas to support include sport-specific giving, donations to the UMBC Athletics General Fund, and Endowment Funds. Giving levels start at $1-99 and to up to $25K+. (link)
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The Texas A&M University System Board of Regents on Thursday approved several projects, including a major Player Development Center at Blue Bell Park for the Aggies baseball program. The $28.3M center will feature expanded batting and pitching labs, sports medicine facilities, a home clubhouse, strength and conditioning spaces, and team meeting rooms. (link)
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The Texas State University System Planning and Construction Committee has approved a $2.5M upgrade to Lamar’s football locker room. The project still needs approval from the TSUS Board of Regents, which is slated to meet next week. (link)
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Illinois has added UAB to its home football slate in 2026. The Blazers were previously scheduled to open the 2026 campaign at home against Alabama A&M, but that game will no longer be played. UAB has also added two home games against Samford in 2026 and 2027. (link)
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TCU has added Grambling State to its 2026 home football schedule. (link)
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Under Armour will separate from Stephen Curry’s Curry Brand by October 2026 as part of an expanded 2025 restructuring, and Sportico’s Eben Novy-Williams notes this marks a sharp turn after UA Founder/CEO Kevin Plank said two years ago he “couldn’t imagine Under Armour without Stephen, or Stephen without Under Armour.” The company said it will spend an additional $95M as part of its expanded 2025 restructuring plan — a cost that includes separating the Curry Brand, terminating more contracts, writing down assets and covering added severance — as UA stock remains about 90% below its all-time high and the company continues its years-long pullback from major U.S. properties such as MLB uniforms and college sponsorship deals in favor of individual star deals with Curry, Tom Brady and others. Novy-Williams notes that long-term sponsorship commitments have fallen from a 2017 peak of $1.36B to $429.6M in the latest SEC filing, with only $117.3M due beyond five years. UA projects its global basketball business will do $100–$120M in revenue in FY26, including the final Curry Brand sales. Curry tells Front Office Sports the breakup with Under Armour was a "mutual business decision" and that Curry "owns his logo, IP, marks, etc., and will take them with him." (link, link)
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(NEW!) Senior Associate Athletic Director/Deputy Athletic Director Finance & Business Operations (Wichita State University / Wichita, KS): Leads and manages the financial administration, business planning, accounting, and budgeting for athletics. Leads the vision and goals of departments and oversees implementation strategies. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Student-Athlete Development Coordinator I/II (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
Athletic Academic Counselor (University of Maryland / College Park, MD): More details HERE.
Learning Specialist (University of Maryland / College Park, MD): More details HERE.
Assistant Director for Student-Athlete Professional Success (Brown University / Providence, RI): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Transfer & Eligibility Specialist (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Student Athlete Academic Coordinator I/II (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate/Associate AD, Business Development (University of California – Berkeley / Berkeley, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Business and Office Operations (American Conference / Irving, TX): More details HERE.
Reporting Accountant, Athletics (University of Colorado – Boulder / Boulder, CO): More details HERE.
Associate Business Manager - Athletics (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
Athletics Budget & Finance Manager (Auburn University / Auburn, AL): More details HERE.
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Head Women's Soccer Coach (University of Mississippi / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (DOE Goalkeeper Coach) (Grand Canyon University / Phoenix, AZ): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Athletic Strategic Communications (Penn State / University Park, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director/Brand Advancement & Creative Strategy (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Creative Services (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Marketing & Fan Experience (University of South Carolina – Upstate / Spartanburg, SC): More details HERE.
Marketing Coordinator (University of Kansas / Lawrence, KS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Digital Strategy (Stanford University / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Chief Brand Marketing and Communications Officer (College Football Playoff / Irving, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant AD, Broadcast Technologies (University of Georgia / Athens, GA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Marketing, Gonzaga Athletics (Gonzaga University / Spokane, WA): More details HERE
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Marketing and Communications (Loyola Marymount University / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Director of Marketing (University of Tennessee – Chattanooga / Chattanooga, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Marketing & Fan Experience (University of Denver / Denver, CO): More details HERE.
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Associate Athletic Director (Athletic Compliance) (Prairie View A&M University / Prairie View, TX): More details HERE.
Director of Compliance Services - (250000ON) (Towson University / Towson, MD): More details HERE.
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Associate Director of Athletics - Development and Engagement (Rockhurst University / Kansas City, MO): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development & Donor Relations (Virginia Commonwealth University / Richmond, VA): More details HERE.
Senior Director of Development, Penn Athletics (University of Pennsylvania – Penn / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Major Gifts, Virginia Tech Athletic Fund (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director for Leadership Gifts, Virginia Tech Athletic Fund (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development, Donor Relations (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Development (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
Executive Associate Athletic Director, Philanthropy & Engagement (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Director of Development / Associate Athletic Director (University of Nebraska Foundation / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
Director of Development, Major Gifts (Syracuse University / Syracuse, NY): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate/Associate AD, Business Development (University of California – Berkeley / Berkeley, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Marketing and Communications (Loyola Marymount University / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (Wagner College / Staten Island, NY): More details HERE. The D1.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Director of Intercollegiate Athletics (University of California – Riverside / Riverside, CA): More details HERE. The D1.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Executive Associate Athletic Director, Philanthropy & Engagement (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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Head Equipment Manager (University of Maryland / College Park, MD): More details HERE.
Sr. Grounds Technician (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Facilities, Operations & Events (University of Maryland / College Park, MD): More details HERE.
Assistant Dir of Event & Facility Management (University of Utah / Salt Lake City, UT): More details HERE.
Grounds Supervisor (University of Kansas / Lawrence, KS): More details HERE.
Director for Athletic Event Management (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach (Oakland University / Rochester, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director, Sports Medicine - Football (UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Registered Dietitian - Campus Health Clinic (Grand Canyon University / Phoenix, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Ball State University / Muncie, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant or Associate Strength and Conditioning Coach (University of Northern Iowa / Cedar Falls, IA): More details HERE
Athletics Performance Coach - Olympic Sports (Baylor University / Waco, TX): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Non-Football) (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach (Middle Tennessee State University / Murfreesboro, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Performance Dietetics (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Visiting Athletic Trainer (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Strength & Conditioning Intern (Army West Point / West Point, NY): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Brown University / Providence, RI): More details HERE.
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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Assistant Athletic Director of Ticket Operations (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Director of Ticket Operations (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Ticketing - Football (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Ticketing, State Farm Center (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
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