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D1 Jobs on CollegeSports.jobs... New opportunity at UCLA, 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... are 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, Wagner and Washington State. Coming soon: Baylor and Colorado. Just $349 for an entire year of access to all dossiers. (link)
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A couple of nuggets on AD search timelines: Colorado is moving fast with the possibility of a hire before Christmas, Oklahoma is expected to have its new leader by mid- to late-January & Austin Peay is targeting early February. All per CollegeAD. (link)
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The D1.dossiers for Oklahoma & Austin Peay are ready to assist with interview prep & the dossier for Colorado will be ready in short order. Coastal Carolina AD Chance Miller on his use of a dossier: “The D1.dossier was extremely helpful for the interview process by identifying the key stakeholders and providing the current landscape at Coastal Carolina. It saved me a tremendous amount of time from having to research and gather it myself. I appreciate the service and highly recommend it to my counterparts around the country.” (link)
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College Football Playoff lobbying has shifted into full gear with Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark stating during an interview last night at the Arizona-Arizona State game: “BYU, I think they've been underappreciated all season long. When you compare them to a Notre Dame, there is no comparison when you think of strength of record, strength of schedule and win-loss. l've got a lot of confidence in the CFP committee. I'm sure they'll get it right.” (link)
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Meanwhile, Texas HC Steve Sarkisian had this to say after last night’s win over previously unbeaten Texas A&M to finish the regular season at 9-3 (6-2): “I think more importantly, what message do we want to send to the head coaches and the athletic directors around the country? You want us not to schedule Ohio State? Because if we’re a 10-2 team right now, this isn’t a discussion. We’re in the playoff, but we were willing to go up there and play that game. [...] When you play five top-10 ranked teams in the regular season, and you go 3-2, you beat three of them, and you schedule an Ohio State in out-of-conference play, I surely don’t think we want to punish us to do that, because what are we all going to do? [...] This whole idea that, ‘Hey, well, you lost to Florida,’ well, the team that played for the national championship last year lost to Northern Illinois at home.” (link)
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In parting ways with Football HC Bruce Barnum, Portland State AD Matt Billings acknowledged that Barnum’s challenges were structural as much as competitive, and that replacing him is only one piece of a broader attempt to revive the program. Billings sees signs of latent interest – including nearly 10K fans for a recent downtown game at Providence Park – and believes fundraising and community connection can grow with the right hire. Billings: “I came into this job and I knew what I was walking into. There’s no AD job in the country that’s easy. It’s different problems than I’m dealing with, but everybody’s got problems. I believe in the place, I like the challenge and I like the people that I’m working with. Excited to get this hire done and turn the page.” (link)
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In his interview leading into halftime of yesterday’s Egg Bowl against Mississippi State, Ole Miss Football HC Lane Kiffin offered this about the midfield skirmish moments before & pointed to Bulldogs AD Zac Selmon: “We're just trying to play clean football, man. We're trying to execute and play really good football. For a whole sideline to try to fight and leave their own sideline, including their athletic director, I've never seen anything like it. We're trying to play football here. We're not trying to start a fight so our university can get credit for fighting people.” (link)
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The Mountain West could have four teams finish with 6-2 conference records, if UNLV wins today. Boise State, New Mexico and San Diego State are each 6-2 having wrapped up their regular seasons yesterday. So who participates in the MWC Football Championship game? It will be determined by a composite average of computer metrics and announced tomorrow morning. Per the league’s release on who will host: “The metrics used to determine the game’s participants will be a composite average of Connelly SP+, ESPN SOR, KPI and SportSource rankings. Once the two participants are determined, the tie will revert to a head-to-head comparison to determine the host, proceeding again to the metrics if the teams did not play each other this season.” (link)
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Stanford taps former Cardinal QB Tavita Pritchard as the 37th football head coach in program history. Currently the QB coach for the NFL’s Washington Commanders, Pritchard will begin his new role following the Commanders’ game against the Denver Broncos tomorrow and officially introduced via press conference on Tuesday. (link)
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Think of your Director of Football Operations: They are often the unsung heroes of your program, coordinating countless moving parts, solving problems before they arise, and ensuring seamless execution behind the scenes. They manage the logistical complexities so that coaches can coach and athletes can compete. That's exactly the value of D1.relocation - your own Director of Relocation Operations. When you move to a new community for a new job - or when you as an administrator are onboarding new staff and their families - let D1.relocation be your own DORO, handling all the logistics of what is often a stressful time. From selling and buying homes, to vetting moving companies, setting up utilities, finding new schools and doctors, and coordinating complex financial transitions – your DORO orchestrates it all. D1.relocation isn't merely to transport your belongings from point A to point B. It's to transport your family from one chapter to the next with minimal stress and maximum support. It's about delivering peace of mind, ensuring that when you step onto that new campus, you and your family are settled, supported, and ready to thrive. (link)
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More People & Places…
➤ CollegeAD reports NEC Assoc. Commissioner for Sport Services Benjamin Shove has exited the league office. (link)
➤ The Wire on Collegiate Sports Connect keeps you in-the-know on all administrative movement in college athletics, with changes at the following institutions this week: Arkansas Pine Bluff, Dartmouth, Florida Gulf Coast, Florida State, Fordham, Fresno State, Georgia Southern, Houston, Howard, Lipscomb, Northwestern, Oregon State, Sacramento State, St. Thomas, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, UAB and William & Mary. (link)
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Split Zone Duo’s Richard Johnson traces how the MAC went from a nationally relevant, talent-producing league in the early 2000s to what he characterizes as a weeknight property with diminished competitive stature. While other leagues secured lucrative media rights deals, the MAC’s ESPN weeknight strategy, Johnson submits, depressed attendance, generated limited revenue and gradually eroded the league’s relevance. Once the richest non-power conference 20 years ago, the MAC now sits near the bottom of the FBS revenue table, and its best programs have either left or been poached. Coaching career paths tell the same story. Urban Meyer, Brian Kelly, and PJ Fleck once used MAC HC jobs as springboards. “Now coaches can hang in the MAC for a long time, do pretty well, but just never get the call.” The league still produces upsets, sparks regional passion and retains coherent geography, but Johnson concludes its old identity is gone. That said, Johnson maintains: “College football needs the MAC for a very simple reason. Do you see this here? This is the American Midwest. And these are the Midwestern schools in the Big Ten. A lot of people in the Midwest love college football, but only so many of them can fit into Big Ten schools.” More. (link)
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Clemson’s Military Appreciation Day flyover on November 22 featured a C-17 cutting across Memorial Stadium at the exact final notes of the national anthem, and The Post and Courier’s Jon Blau notes the plane nearly missed its mark by 45 seconds as Senior Day ceremonies ran long. To adjust, Lt. Col. Scott Huebel’s Charleston crew killed time with sharp turns and fought glare and a bug-splattered windshield to locate the stadium. Huebel: “Aviation is hours and hours of boredom interrupted by moments of sheer terror.” The aerial photography component required even more coordination: Clemson creative staffers Blaze Watson and Kyle Coulter shot stills and video from a door-less helicopter 2,000 feet above the C-17, a setup that required FAA waivers delayed for weeks by the federal shutdown. Maj. Trey Kennedy and Maj. Ian Fields secured approval only days before kickoff, and helicopter pilot Scott Dunn guided the shoot, telling his passengers: “If you look over at me and you see me nervous, then you should get nervous.” The timing ultimately hinged on Clemson alum Maj. Alisha Stroble and spotter Maj. Taque Pitino, who synced the aircraft to the Tiger Band by radioing live cues from the stadium roof as fireworks hit the “rockets’ red glare.” Huebel had to push the C-17 to max power in the final seconds to hit the 4:25 PM target. More. (link)
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As part of The Athletic’s GM Spotlight Series, Manny Navarro examines FIU GM Jose Jefferson’s first year working alongside HC Willie Simmons to help the Panthers clinch bowl eligibility for the first time in six years. Jefferson: “It’s the first time we’ve beaten the traditional rivals — Western Kentucky, Middle Tennessee and FAU — in the same season in like, six, seven years. Just a lot of firsts — and that’s the exciting thing, just moving the needle. Everybody here is excited. There’s juice in the building, juice on the campus, so it’s just been a really great experience. … There’s a lot of hats to be worn here and my goal is just to get it to where the head coach just has to go to win ball games. … evaluate our program, I look at our ergonomics. I take care of our roster management. I take care of NIL. I take care of our revenue. I oversee and help with operations. It’s a mixed bag here. … I am blessed to do what I’m able to do. … The hardest thing I would say about this job is basically trying to have people understand how to work with you … because a lot of people have never worked with a GM. … There’s no blueprint to what we’re doing. I mean, people can say there is, but there really isn’t. So you really kind of gotta take the bull by the horns and run with it. It’s been a good, really good experience.” Lots more. (link)
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Baylor President Linda Livingstone explains why she chose to retain Football HC Dave Aranda: “I just felt like that much instability with a new athletic director coming in was not going to set them up to be able to make strategic and thoughtful decisions about how best to support the football program going forward. They'd be rushed to make decisions that might not actually be in the best long-term interest of the institution, especially with all the other openings that are out there at very key institutions that we would be competing with and would be much later in the cycle than everybody else.” Speaking about the department’s strategy as a whole, Livingstone explains there is a need for both stronger operating support and more robust external NIL aligned with Baylor’s values. “How do we work with our donors and ways to support what we're doing? How do we grow a broader sponsorship base? How do we think about outside NIL? Doing it in a legitimate way for legitimate NIL at fair market value that's external to the $20.5M or so that we can spend internally. … And I think the schools that are going to be successful over the long run are going to have really robust outside NIL models that are legitimate by the rules and consistent with the philosophy of what NIL was intended to be to begin with.” Full podcast. (link)
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With Harvard and Yale’s qualification for this year’s FCS playoffs, Ivy league Executive Director Robin Harris is hopeful the duo can continue proving that the conference can compete on a national level while retaining elements of collegiate athletics’ old ways, such as instituting its own set of practice limitations, playing just 10 regular season games and not opting in to the House settlement. Harris: “We do believe that by consistently and regularly demonstrating our ability to be successful athletically while remaining true to our principles and values, it demonstrates—we hope to other schools—that it is possible to have a more measured approach instead of what’s going on out there. I don’t think what’s going on outside the Ivy League is sustainable. So I do remain hopeful and sometimes optimistic that others will follow our lead.” Per Sportico’s Jacob Feldman: “The limitations don’t seem to have slowed down the Ancient Eight in other sports. The offer of an Ivy League degree has helped schools continue to recruit in an age of paid players. Cornell won a championship in men’s lacrosse in May. Princeton made the field hockey title game last week, losing to Northwestern Sunday. … The Ivy League sponsors 34 sports, even as other athletic departments consider cutting non-revenue-generating teams.” Harris: “It’s a reaffirmation of what we already knew. This structure really does work.” (link)
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Football Files…
➤ Oregon State has agreed to terms on a five-year deal with Alabama Asst. HC/Co-Offensive Coordinator JaMarcus Shephard to become the Beavers’ next HC, per ESPN’s Pete Thamel. (link)
➤ Vanderbilt Football HC Clark Lea has received what’s reported to be a six-year contract extension. VU AD Candice Storey Lee: “Clark Lea embodies what is possible at Vanderbilt, and I am proud to continue this journey with him leading our football program. From the very beginning of Vandy United, we unapologetically set out to build a model to sustain excellence in athletics and today simply reaffirms our commitment.” (link, link)
➤ Ole Miss HC Lane Kiffin told SEC Network’s Marty Smith that Mississippi State fans broke into the Rebels’ locker room twice last night, including stealing QB Trinidad Chambliss’ jersey at 3 a.m. (link); Here’s the first-person footage. (link)
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Front Office Sports’ David Rumsey examines the reasoning behind Georgia Tech’s decision to sell today’s game against Georgia for $10M to play at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, noting the instance marks the first time since GT’s Bobby Dodd Stadium opened in 1913 that the matchup is not being played on either school’s campus. With the Yellow Jackets currently on the fifth of a six-game contract with AMB Sports and Entertainment (AMBSE) to play one home match-up per year at the 71K-seat facility, AMBSE significantly increased its payment guarantee to convince the Yellow Jackets to give up their biennial home game against the Bulldogs. The deal was struck under former GT AD J Batt, who at the time estimated the $10M payment would amount to roughly five times the revenue a normal home game would generate. AMBSE controls ticket sales as the game’s operator, so the matchup is expected to include just as many, if not more, Georgia fans as Georgia Tech supporters. More. (link)
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In the current college football environment, contracts are no longer just metaphors, per the Columbia Missourian’s Zach Sweet, who observes that “with fewer opportunities to fix depth issues through the portal, programs are leaning harder into long-term planning, which increasingly involves multiyear NIL and revenue-sharing deals. …On paper, the idea of two- and three-year contracts sounds straightforward. In practice, it’s anything but.” According to Extra Points’ Matt Brown, multi-year deals are becoming more common but are far from universal. Brown: “There are different schools of thought. Some staffs want shorter deals so they don’t overcommit and get stuck. Others see long-term deals as a tool to retain players who might be tempted to hit the portal after a big season.” Sweet: “Despite the risks and the uncertainty, it isn’t hard to see why Missouri and coaches like [Eli] Drinkwitz are willing to lean into multiyear contracts in specific cases. … For the program, a two-year contract offers a measure of stability, a chance to bet on a player’s upside and protect against immediate poaching. For the player, it offers security, as long as the terms are fair.” Brown: “You might give a long-term deal to someone you think you won’t be able to afford if you have to renegotiate every 10 months. The hope for both sides is that by signing a long-term deal, you’re getting better value in Year 2 or Year 3.” More. (link)
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The transfer portal officially opens on Jan. 2 and is “guaranteed to be fast and furious,” per ESPN’s Max Olson, who notes with the elimination of the spring portal window in April, programs now have just one opportunity to get things right if they hope to win big in 2026. Why will the transfer portal be wilder than ever? Olson believes hundreds of student-athletes will be “already off the board” when the portal opens. Another factor will be an already chaotic coaching carousel shaking up the portal. Olson: “Athletic directors are watching Indiana achieve the impossible with back-to-back College Football Playoff runs under HC Curt Cignetti and dreaming of similar fast flips. … A new head coach attempting to bring a dozen or more players with him from his previous school is probably going to be the norm in December.” The last factor Olson cites is the “over-the-cap challenge,” with coaching agents telling Olson it's “the No. 1 topic they're raising with athletic directors as they discuss this year's vacancies: How much cap room do you have and what's your plan for spending over the cap?” An anonymous agent: “There is no f---ing cap. The ADs are trying to figure out how to do this, but here's the thing: All it takes is one school not following the rules and taking the best players. It's going to be a free-for-all after that. If a team prioritizes a kid, they're going to find a way to make it work. They're going to pay a guy what he's worth -- if not more -- regardless of the rules if they value him enough.” More. (link)
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According to Players Era Festival CEO Seth Berger, this year’s 18-team men’s event is profitable, while the inaugural four-team women’s event will be a "slight loss," similar to how the men's event barely broke even in its first year in 2024. Berger: “We wanted to start Players Era with the first goal of meaningfully compensating players for their NILs within the guidelines of then the NCAA, now the CSC. So first and foremost, we didn't start Players Era with the goal to make money. So the combination of all the economics of Players Era have created, already in year two, a profitable men's event, which is way faster and way earlier than we thought.” (link)
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Boise State Asst. Professor Sam Ehrlich provides the latest on the court battle over Rutgers Football student-athlete Jett Elad’s eligibility, noting: “The NCAA filed a Thanksgiving Day emergency motion to stay the new TRO that would [allow] … Elad to play this weekend, arguing that it ‘flout[s]’ the Third Circuit's opinion overturning the preliminary injunction.” However, the Third Circuit Court rejected the Association’s appeal, meaning Elad will play. (link)
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Adidas has gifted the Washington Women’s Soccer team custom cleats for today’s NCAA Elite Eight match-up against Duke to honor Huskies teammate Mia Hamant, who passed away earlier this month after a courageous battle with kidney cancer. (link)
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“Sparky” is back at Mountain America Stadium for tonight’s Territorial Cup match-up against Arizona, courtesy of the Arizona State grounds crew, which has created a special nearly full-field graphic of the Sun Devils’ mascot. Take a look. (link)
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The Howard Football team’s digital presence has undergone a dramatic transformation under junior strategic-communications major Justin Smith, who became the program’s Head of Social Media in August after pitching a player-focused storytelling strategy. Smith tells Howard University News Service’s Olivia Brown that he emphasizes showcasing athletes “in all lenses,” not just performance but personality, academics, leadership and community impact. The shift has worked, generating over 3M impressions in 20 weeks and producing the program’s two best-performing posts ever this fall (19,200 likes on one post; 10,900 on another). Smith directs a team of 11 students and has built a structure that mirrors a professional marketing operation, assigning roles by creative strength rather than credentials. Smith’s approach helped fuel a stronger internal creative culture and extend the brand during major moments, including Howard football’s first NIL deal with Clear Eye View, where he served as creative director on just two days’ notice. Overall, Smith says his philosophy centers on experimentation, iteration and elevating student-athletes as people: “I see the algorithm as one large experiment.” (link)
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(NEW!) Director, Business & Finance (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): Advance the business side of championship athletics. Manage budgets, guide teams, and enhance fiscal performance in vibrant Los Angeles. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Senior Learning Specialist (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
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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.
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Coordinator of Business Operations (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
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Head Women's Soccer Coach (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
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Women’s Indoor Volleyball Head Coach (California State University – Bakersfield / Bakersfield, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Coach II, Softball (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
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Assistant Men's Soccer Coach (University of Illinois Springfield / Springfield, IL): (DII) More details HERE.
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Assistant Director, Marketing & Fan Engagement (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
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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.
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Director, R NIL (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
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Manager, R NIL Fulfillment & Operations (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
Financial Aid Counselor - Athletics & Scholarships (University of Northern Colorado / Greeley, CO): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director for Student-Athlete Administration & Revenue Share (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
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Associate Athletic Director/Director of Development (Temple University / Philadelphia, PA): 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.
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Assistant Commissioner for Sport Services (NEC / Bridgewater, NJ): More details HERE.
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Intern Athletic Trainer (Soccer, Lacrosse) - Sports Health Performance (University Athletic Association, Inc. at the University of Florida / Gainesville, FL): More details HERE.
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Associate Athletics Director, Sports Medicine - Football (UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletic Director, Ticketing Operations (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
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