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D1 Jobs on CollegeSports.jobs... New opportunities at Army, Colorado State, and Lycoming (DIII), below. Whether you're trying to reach the tens of thousands of administrators who read D1.ticker every day, or the 29K+ coaches that engage with Coaches.wire, post HERE to maximize the reach of your job openings.
D1.dossiers... Washington State is hot off the press. D1.dossiers are also ready for the AD openings at Austin Peay, Cal State Bakersfield, Charlotte, Delaware, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, San Francisco, South Carolina State, Southern Utah, Texas Southern, UC Riverside and Wagner. Coming soon: Baylor, Colorado and Louisiana Monroe. Just $349 for an entire year of access to all dossiers. (link)
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Congratulations to Northwestern on capturing its second consecutive field hockey national championship. (link)
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Congratulations to North Carolina women’s tennis student-athlete Reese Brantmeier and Columbia men’s tennis student-athlete Michael Zheng on winning individual national championships. Congrats are also in order for the North Carolina State women’s duo of Victoria Osuigwe/Gabriella Broadfoot and the Virginia men’s duo of Mans Dahlberg and Dylan Dietrich on winning this year’s doubles championships. (link, link)
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The FCS Playoff field is set with North Dakota State, Montana State, Montana and Tarleton as the top four seeds, respectively. Also notable: Harvard and Yale made the field in the first season Ivy League teams are eligible. Here’s the full bracket. (link); First four out: Monmouth, Presbyterian, Southern Utah & Austin Peay. (link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger points out that Texas Tech President Lawrence Schovanec “actually signed the [College Sports Commission] agreement along with at least a few other Big 12 schools. However, [Board of Regents Chair Cody] Campbell and Tech's board is encouraging modifications be made to the document - a reason for the General Counsel's letter and discussions with the commissioner.” More from Campbell: “Texas Tech University is in strong support of the House Settlement, and want rules to be established by the College Sports Commission that will bring some measure of order to the current chaotic situation in college sports. However, these rules must comply with State Law and University bylaws, must be practical, reasonable, and must account for the input of member institutions. We will not sign the current form of the agreement, as indicated in the advisory letter from our General Counsel, below. Several other P4 universities share the same opinion, although most have been less outspoken. … I appreciate the commerciality, flexibility, and understanding of [Big 12 Commissioner] Brett Yormark and the other P4 commissioners.” (link, link); Dellenger later adds: “Tech believes that Schovanec inadvertently signed the participation agreement and its GC requested that it not be considered binding. Campbell and Yormark's discussions Sunday were described as constructive and the two will continue to talk about modifications to the agreement.” (link)
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Former West Virginia/Ohio State President Gordon Gee in an Op-Ed for The Hill calls on college leaders to consolidate media rights and optimize football scheduling to generate more revenue. Gee writes: “Adding it all up, college sports programs are set to lose several billion dollars this year alone. Unless these losses are addressed, many schools will be forced to cut sports and scholarships. In fact, more than 40 Division I Olympic sports programs have already been cut since last May. Conferences and schools are feeling this desperation, and we are in danger of fear-based, shortsighted decisions winning over thoughtful, sustainable solutions. Look no further than the messy process playing out now publicly in the Big Ten as its members fail to align around a proposed private equity deal that key member schools have already decided is not the answer. … I have met with industry experts and believe these two simple changes (unifying media rights and revamping schedules) will generate many billions in incremental annual revenue, making every school far more money than it ever could otherwise. … There are no gotchas. This is not a super league; all schools are included. All stakeholders make more money. Conferences, commissioners, and tradition stay. College football will continue to be owned and controlled by the conferences and schools, not government or some outside entity.” Full op-ed. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
➤ Cal has relieved Football HC Justin Wilcox of his duties and will name senior analyst/former Washington State HC Nick Rolovich as Interim HC. (link); According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Cal is set to owe Wilcox nearly $10.9M. (link)
➤ Florida State Football HC Mike Norvell will return for the 2026 season. Seminoles AD Michael Alford: "Our responsibility is to do what gives Florida State the strongest competitive position – not just today, but for years to come. Florida State has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in its football program over the past few years with high expectations. Chairman [Peter] Collins, President [Richard] McCullough and I are aligned in partnering with Coach and improving our ability to compete for championships. Our mission is unwavering in putting Florida State football at the forefront of college athletics." (link)
➤ Cal Poly has parted ways with Football HC Paul Wulff after three seasons. (link)
➤ Hampton has parted ways with Football HC Trent Boykin. (link)
➤ North Alabama AD Josh Looney confirms Football HC Brent Dearmon will return next season. (link)
➤ Take a look at this morning’s edition of Coaches.wire, which tracks the coaching staff changes across all college sports from the past few days. (link)
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Oklahoma AD Joe Castiglione says the long-anticipated $450M west-side renovation at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium is a “truly transformational plan” that “has to happen for the future of Oklahoma athletics,” even as it reduces capacity by around 7,000 seats in favor of high-yield premium inventory and modern amenities. Castiglione stresses that OU “did not start out thinking we were going to reduce the capacity at all,” but says the combination of chairbacks, concourse expansion, structural work and premium build-out meant “we knew at some point as we worked through the design we were going to lose some seats in the process in this phase.” He also notes that the decision was grounded in “market trends and fan behavior and ticket demand and ticket pricing,” adding that “there are a lot of stadiums that probably would be considered as overbuilt” and that the seat reduction is “the outgrowth of having to create the elevated experience. … The fans who actually buy the tickets and come every game over time continue to let us know what they would like to see, how they would want an elevated experience.” (link)
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North Texas’ power brokers quietly convened at The Star in Frisco last month to discuss how UNT could go about retaining Football HC Eric Morris as Oklahoma State and Arkansas have reportedly shown interest. The Denton Record-Chronicle’s Brett Vito reports Mean Green AD Jared Mosley and key donors, including real estate developer and former UNT player Rex Glendenning plus longtime supporters Don Lovelace and Dan Smith, left the dinner with a plan to significantly escalate Morris’ compensation, NIL backing and infrastructure support. Mosley says UNT is “in a position to more than double our revenue-share pool for student-athletes, enhance our salary pool for assistants, along with putting together a competitive compensation package to put coach Morris in the top end of head coaches in the American Conference.” Glendenning has floated a $3M base, while outlining an NIL and revenue-share build: “The university has agreed to pitch in $1.6M to $1.7M. The alums who are active come up with another million. Now you’re in the game. It’s not like Texas Tech, which is spending $25M, but you almost have to have around $2.5M to $3M to play.” (link)
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Sportico’s Daniel Libit uses Massachusetts as a case study in the perils of FBS ambition and reports that former faculty athletics council co-chair Nelson Lacey – once a leading proponent of UMass’ 2011 FBS move – now says the school should consider admitting defeat. Lacey tells Libit the FBS “experiment” always carried long odds but seemed worth a “few-million-dollar” gamble for potential enrollment, fundraising and reputation gains. UMass, Libit notes, has instead opted to double down by joining the MAC, investing millions in stadium upgrades, and committing to top-tier coaching and player compensation within the league. Minutemen AD Ryan Bamford believes the program has actually suffered from too little institutional investment: “For a program to have $2M or less from [the school’s] general operating funds, that’s not a lot. When you consider that the university budget is about $1.8B – billion with a ‘b’ – and we’re getting less than $2M to go to football, I think that tells the story of why we are where we are. You get what you pay for.” (link)
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The Bengal’s Braxton Gregory profiles Idaho State AD Pauline Thiros, who says: “I want to leave a lasting legacy. One that shows we’ve built something sustainable and meaningful. Something bigger than just wins and losses. … I want my student-athletes to remember me as someone who really cared about them. I want them to know that I was someone who loved them. Many student-athletes from other institutions or even from here don’t know their administrators personally. I want to be the person they remember for really loving them.” In discussing how she goes about her daily business, Thiros notes: “It’s about building relationships with people. When you show that you care about the whole person athletically, academically, and personally, that’s where true success comes from.” Thiros has managed to balance being a single mother to her children but acknowledges that true work-life balance isn’t realistic in her role. 80-hour workweeks are common, but she embraces the intensity because of her passion for the job. Still, family is a priority, and she says: “There were certain things I wasn’t going to miss, no matter what was going on at work.” (link)
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All roads lead to Ann Arbor, where both ESPN’s College GameDay and Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff will set up shop ahead of the Michigan-Ohio State game on Saturday. (link)
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CBS’ Matt Norlander details how the Players Era Festival is rapidly reshaping November college hoops, dangling unprecedented NIL money while destabilizing legacy MTEs. The long-term plan is a 32-team men’s field beginning in 2026, with projected payouts “purportedly upward of $30M.” Players Era already has 26 of 32 future spots spoken for, anchored by long-term deals with Houston, Kansas, Baylor and others, as well as a looming Big 12 agreement auto-slotting the league’s top eight teams starting in 2026. One Big 12 administrator calls it,“the future of college basketball, and if you don't adapt you'll get left behind. Norlander goes on to underscore the collateral damage: ”Maui’s tournament is a stark downgrade from last season's epic eight-team field. The 2025 Battle 4 Atlantis bracket is objectively its weakest ever. One operator warns: “When you hurt the traditions, you hurt the sport.” A top-10 coach adds: “Maui's gonna die, just because everyone needs money and we're doing anything we can to get it to pay players.” Some bluebloods like Kentucky remain cautious, with HC Mark Pope estimating the Wildcats would need “close to $5M” for three neutral-site games to offset lost home revenue. Lots more. (link)
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On Montlake’s Christian Caple uses Ole Miss Football HC Lane Kiffin’s recent comments about the importance of player compensation to frame the new reality of what makes a job “good” in the post-House, revenue-sharing era: third-party NIL capacity now outweighs history, tradition or geography. Kiffin remarked that the key differentiator is how much “real” NIL a school can generate, and Caple notes Washington has arrived at the same conclusion, as evidenced by shuttering the Montlake Futures collective and standing up Dawgs Unleashed. CSC data shows 12,100 approved deals averaging $7,186, versus 394 non-cleared averaging $25,380, indicating enforcement is rejecting inflated offers, and Huskies Football HC Jedd Fisch observes: “Most teams that we are going to be competing against will be almost equal when it comes to revenue-share dollars. So then it becomes baseball. You go from football to baseball, then it becomes the teams with the highest payrolls of third-party NIL. It is not going to be based upon your revenue-share dollars. … Right now, currently, almost every team in the top-25 [has] a collective. And I think that a lot of those collectives are shifting to marketing agencies, and what they’re doing is, they’re beginning to say, ‘OK, we’re going to collect X-amount of dollars, and then we’re going to create a marketing space…to represent the kids.’ There’s also, for us, Dawgs Unleashed. For other universities, they all kind of have an in-house entity that is also out there trying to fight for and do corporate sponsorships and land different deals for the kids. And then there’s revenue share. … It seems as if as 2025 has evolved, programs are using the three-prong approach to be able to get to what looks to be about $25M rosters, to $35M rosters, to be able to compete and win a championship.” (link)
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Have a look: Vanderbilt has an ad running in LaGuardia Airport calling themselves “New York’s SEC team.” (link)
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Jordon Hudson, the girlfriend of North Carolina Football HC Bill Belichick, says she is “suing” Meadowlark Media podcaster Pablo Torre, who has dedicated numerous episodes of his show to the couple’s relationship. Awful Announcing’s Drew Lerner: “It’s unclear under what pretenses Hudson would be suing Torre over. Any sort of libel or defamation lawsuit would face a high bar considering Hudson’s status as a public figure and the generally robust protections journalists are afforded under the First Amendment. Torre took little time to respond to Hudson’s claim, joking that she likely would be declining an invite to appear on his podcast.” (link)
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Congratulations to the Oklahoma State men’s cross country and NC State women’s cross country teams for winning their respective NCAA championships yesterday. It was the Cowboys second win in three seasons and the fifth in program history. For the Wolfpack, it was their fourth title in five years. (link)
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Texas Tech Board of Regents Chair Cody Campbell confirms the report by Front Office Sports’ Amanda Christovich that at least two Power 4 schools were considering not signing the College Sports Commission agreement and that Texas Tech’s general counsel authored a memo outlining concerns and advising the Red Raiders not to sign. Campbell: “This reporting is accurate. As Regents at a State school, we have the fiduciary responsibility to monitor, evaluate, and approve (or deny) significant commitments and contracts that affect the members of our University system. There are certainly significant issues with the current form of this CSC agreement, but I have no doubt that with proper engagement and feedback (very much unlike the Big 10 process we just witnessed) the Big 12 will be able to reach a form of agreement that will align with State Law and appropriate university governance and best practices, and we will get this thing done.” (link)
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More from Florida State AD Michael Alford’s visit with the On The Record with Rick Horrow podcast. On if the recent extension for Indiana Football HC Curt Cignetti and the former Florida Football HC Billy Napier/former LSU Football HC Brian Kelly buyouts change leverage relative to guaranteed years versus buyout amount in coach contract negotiations: “It is interesting coming out of the House settlement. That's something that you're going to look at, does the market change? Does it get to more of an NFL model contract with the head coach? I think it is going to change a little bit. I don't know if it'll ever change that much down to a four-year deal and no buyout. NFL contracts are different with coaches, but I think the model is going to be changing. We're looking at it right now, collectively. I talk to ADs across the country about what they are doing in their new coaches' contracts. Just looking for every little piece of advice as you move forward and renegotiate any coach from a volleyball coach to a head football coach. I think the model's going to change moving forward because we are now rev sharing with our student-athletes of about $22M a year going up. … So, we need to look at how we model our coaches' contracts to set along with that.” (link)
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Pittsburgh AD Allen Greene sits down with The University Times’ Susan Jones to discuss potential cuts to expenditures as the Panthers push for more revenue: “You’re giving up notoriety or stature or culture; something sacrifices in everything that we do, because our margins are so tight. And I know it doesn’t seem like it, because of the money that we’re spending on all these different things. But there are aspects where we need to spend, because other schools are doing the same, and if we want to compete for prospects and athletes, there’s a price for admission. … The other areas where we can reduce, we absolutely reduce.” Greene on the potential for sports outside of football and men’s basketball to be revenue generators: “The only way that it gets close is if we charge a heck of a lot of money for tickets, like we would do for football. There’s a difference between value and revenue. And when people talk about anything other than — by and large, football and men’s basketball — they’re really talking about value and not talking about revenue.” (link)
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Santa Clara AD Heather Owen says the House settlement has forced mid-major programs to reassess how scholarships and future revenue-sharing are funded. That said, Owen is prioritizing honoring existing commitments: “I want to ensure we fulfill all agreements that we have in place with all student-athletes. That’s a nonstarter for me.” She acknowledges Santa Clara must get creative against resource-rich competitors, remarking: “If we’re going head-to-head with another school for a student-athlete and that school can offer a full scholarship and we can’t, that’ll be a problem. We’re actively trying to raise money to add scholarships. That’s the goal.” As Santa Clara prepares for sweeping NCAA financial changes, Owen sums up the challenge: “We’re trying to stay relevant as a mid-major in this changing landscape. It’s tough, but that’s the work ahead.” (link)
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According to Jefferson County Jail records, UAB football student-athlete Daniel Mincey was arrested and booked on charges of aggravated assault and attempted murder Saturday afternoon. This followed an incident Saturday morning at the Football Operations Building in which two Blazers football student-athletes were stabbed. The names of the two victims have not been made public, though both are in stable condition. UAB would not confirm that Mincey was involved, however he was the only UAB player arrested on Saturday. (link)
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Former Alabama Football HC Nick Saban shared his thoughts on the Ole Miss Football HC Lane Kiffin situation via his chair yesterday on ESPN’s College Gameday: “Everybody should be thinking about the players … what’s best for the student-athletes. Players should be able to play for his coach for the entire season. Players shouldn’t be penalized if a coach leaves because the [CFP] committee has the opportunity if a player or coach doesn’t participate they can sync you in the rankings. … We need to take a better approach to the business aspects of college athletics. … We should match the academic calendar with the football calendar. … If we did all that in May and then had some kind of OTA days or something in the summer time instead of spring practice, we wouldn’t have all these issues and players could actually finish the year. This is not a Lane Kiffin conundrum. This is a college football conundrum that we need some leadership to step up and change the rules on how this gets done in terms of coaching searches and opportunities to leave." More from Saban. (link)
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Portland State parts ways with Football HC Bruce Barnum and his coaching staff. (link)
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Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman reports that a top-10 program is set to sign a multi-year agreement to join the Players Era Festival starting next season. Also, the Players Era is “likely to expand from 18 to 32 men’s teams, per source.” (link)
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Schools that have invested in an unlimited jobs bundle with CollegeSports.jobs have saved an average of $2,154 in 2025 compared to what they would have paid to advertise the same number of jobs on a single-posting basis. The unlimited bundle option promotes your opportunities on the CollegeSports.jobs board AND in both D1.ticker and Coaches.wire plus targeted D1.jobs emails sent to all D1.ticker subscribers in the same area of expertise as your opening - while giving your department a significant savings. Sign up your school today to start saving! (link)
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ICYMI: The latest edition of CRO.ticker features Axios’ Sara Fischer breaking down the implication of the potential sale of Warner Bros. Discovery, which could create a “March Madness behemoth,” JohnWallStreet’s assertion that streaming platforms don’t automatically deliver young audiences, Real Madrid’s plans to sell up to 10% of a newly formed commercial entity and more. Check it out. (link)
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After sending out 30 FOIA requests targeting athlete compensation data from mostly mid-major institutions, Extra Points’ Matt Brown shares his findings. Between the period running from July 1 to Nov. 1, 2025, Central Michigan distributed $290,390 over 57 transactions with $140K going to men’s hoops, $80,540 to football, $53,100 to women’s hoops, $12,500 to baseball and $4,250 to volleyball. Eastern Kentucky spent $514,730 over 123 transactions with the following breakdowns by sport: men’s basketball ($265,056); women’s basketball ($125,042); football ($87,753); women’s track ($20,400); men’s track ($18K); and volleyball ($7,479). Sam Houston processed only eight payments, all to men’s hoops totaling $40,482. Brown: “Three schools … isn’t nearly enough of a data set to yield any sweeping conclusions. My suspicion is that many athlete contracts for football (and/or women’s contracts around volleyball) will be backloaded to incentivize athletes to remain with schools instead of hitting the portal. … I'm a little surprised to see Sam Houston and Bowling Green spent more money on basketball than football, at least during this particular time period. (EKU, as an FCS institution, makes a little more sense to me.) I’m not expecting anybody in the MAC or CUSA to commit $10M to football payroll or anything, but football rosters are a teensy bit larger than basketball, so I assumed total spending would skew more towards football.” More. (link)
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There is growing concern among U.S. coaches about NIL-driven recruiting services marketing Kenyan distance runners directly to college programs, according to Deseret News’ Doug Robinson, who notes BYU Director of Track and Field/Men's Cross Country HC Ed Eyestone calls the practice a shortcut that is displacing American athletes. Robinson also explains that German-based firm Scholarbook Premier has contacted programs offering “world-class runners” for a fee, with agents acting as intermediaries to route NIL money to foreign athletes in their home countries. The competitive shift is already dramatic, as Robinson points out that at the NCAA Cross Country Championships, 43% of men’s competitors and 38% of women’s competitors were foreign athletes, with multiple top-10 programs fielding rosters composed almost entirely of Africans. Coaches told Robinson the trend discourages U.S. development and accelerates roster-spot loss at a time when NCAA roster limits are already shrinking. Eyestone and former Weber State HC Paul Pilkington say NIL rules allow agents to collect payments abroad and place older, fully developed runners—some in their mid-20s with professional racing backgrounds—into the NCAA system. Pilkington says schools with larger budgets simply “pay the recruiting service or agent who then pays the athlete,” creating de facto payrolls. (link) Relatedly, yesterday’s individual NCAA men’s and women’s cross country champions are both Kenyans, in New Mexico’s Habtom Samuel and Alabama’s Doris Lemngole. (link)
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Moody’s Ratings expects another difficult financial year for U.S. colleges with the agency recently issuing a negative outlook for FY26 amid economic uncertainty and shrinking margins while institutions navigate enrollment pressures, rising expenses and political headwinds under the Trump administration. From Moody’s report: “Institutions with large master’s degree offerings will be particularly vulnerable to shifts in student demand if prospective students are not able to fully access the private loan market.” Higher Ed Dive’s Ben Unglesbee: “Moody’s estimates 3.5% growth overall in revenue, down from 3.8% in 2025. For smaller colleges, the 2026 increases could be even smaller — 2.5% for small public institutions and 2.7% for small privates. Expenses, on the other hand, will grow 4.4%. … While that represents more modest inflation compared to this year’s 5.2% increase, it’s still higher than revenue growth and will eat into institutions’ margins.” More. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Head Women's Volleyball Coach (Lycoming College / Williamsport, PA): This position is responsible for Lycoming College’s NCAA Division III women’s volleyball program and will be expected to abide by regulations of the NCAA Division III and the Landmark Conference. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Director, Performance Nutrition (Army West Point / West Point, NY): Provides individual and group nutrition counseling and education to enhance the performance of AWPAA cadet-athletes. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Learning Specialist (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): This position will oversee the SASS Content Tutor Program, collect data to improve learning, provide summer academic support, and implement academic programming to support student-athletes’ growth. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Associate Athletic Director for Student-Athlete Welfare and Success (Marshall University / Huntington, WV): More details HERE.
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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Coordinator of Business Operations (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Athletics Director, Business and Finance, Nevada Athletics (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director/Deputy Athletic Director Finance & Business Operations (Wichita State University / Wichita, KS): More details HERE.
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.
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Head Coach, Women's Flag Football (University of North Alabama / Florence, AL): More details HERE.
Head Coach, Volleyball (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
Assistant Men's Soccer Coach (University of Illinois Springfield / Springfield, IL): (DII) More details HERE.
Head Women's Soccer Coach (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Field Hockey Coach (Ball State University / Muncie, IN): More details HERE.
Head Football Coach (Northern Michigan University / Marquette, MI): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Rowing (Robert Morris University – Pennsylvania / Moon Township, PA): More details HERE.
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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Executive Associate Athletics Director, Strategic & Football Communications (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Director of Communications (University of Massachusetts – Amherst / Amherst, MA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Communications (University of Alabama at Birmingham / Birmingham, AL): More details HERE.
Assistant Commissioner/Director for Public Relations and Creative Communications (Horizon League / Indianapolis, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Marketing (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Director, Production and Broadcasting (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
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.
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Financial Aid Counselor - Athletics & Scholarships (University of Northern Colorado / Greeley, CO): More details HERE.
Assistant Director for Compliance Services (University of Connecticut / Storrs Mansfield, CT): More details HERE.
Assistant Director for Student-Athlete Administration & Revenue Share (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director (Athletic Compliance) (Prairie View A&M University / Prairie View, TX): More details HERE.
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Assistant/Associate Athletics Director for Development (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director, Eagles Club (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
Director of Annual Giving (Virginia Athletics Foundation) (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Development - Major Gifts (SUNY University at Albany / Albany, NY): More details HERE.
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.
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Executive Associate Athletics Director, Strategic & Football Communications (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director for Sports Medicine/Athletic Healthcare Administrator (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director/Deputy Athletic Director Finance & Business Operations (Wichita State University / Wichita, KS): More details HERE.
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Athletics Groundskeeper (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
Director of Equipment Services (University of New Hampshire / Durham, NH): More details HERE.
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.
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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Athletic Trainer (University of California – Riverside / Riverside, CA): More details HERE.
Athletic Training Intern (Multiple Positions Available) (Louisiana State University (LSU) / Baton Rouge, LA): More details HERE.
Director of Performance Nutrition - Basketball/Olympic Sports (Baylor University / Waco, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director for Sports Medicine/Athletic Healthcare Administrator (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (California Polytechnic State University – San Luis Obispo / San Luis Obispo, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (University of California – San Diego / La Jolla, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Sports Performance Coach (Virginia Commonwealth University / Richmond, VA): More details HERE.
Registered Dietitian (Athletics) (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
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.
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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Account Executive - Little Rock (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
Post-Graduate Ticket Operations Intern (University of Memphis / Memphis, TN): More details HERE.
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.
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