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The NCAA Volleyball Championship field is set with top seeds Nebraska, Kentucky, Texas and Pittsburgh, respectively. The Big 12 led all conferences with 10 teams in the field, followed by the Big Ten (9) and the ACC (7). Rounding out the top 16 are, in order, SMU, Stanford, Arizona State, Louisville, Texas A&M, Creighton, Wisconsin, Purdue, Minnesota, Indiana, USC and Kansas. (link)
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Ole Miss Football HC Lane Kiffin has officially accepted the same post at LSU and will not coach the Rebels going forward. Kiffin tells ESPN’s Marty Smith: “This was a very challenging, difficult day. We went through a lot last night with [Ole Miss AD] Keith Carter trying to figure out a way to make this playoff run work and be able to coach the team. And at the end of the day, that's his decision and I totally respect that. I understand that decision. I just totally wish the team the best of luck, wish that I was coaching. ... I just hope they play really well and go win the national championship." According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel and Mark Schlabach, Kiffin’s five-year contract in Baton Rouge is worth roughly $12M per year with the potential for bonuses. Thamel and Schlabach also report that Ole Miss promoted DC Pete Golding “to the school's permanent coach soon after Kiffin left the football building for LSU.” (link, link)
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A group of Ole Miss supporters saw Kiffin off at the airport in much the same spirit that Goose greeted that MiG at the beginning of Top Gun. (link)
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Yahoo’s Dan Wolken argues that Lane Kiffin’s decision to leave Ole Miss for LSU less than three weeks before the College Football Playoff exposes not the “professionalization” of college sports, but the lack of professionalism within its leadership structure. Wolken notes that SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey has spent years warning Congress about NIL chaos while ignoring behavior by coaches that would be unthinkable in any well-run pro league. “It’s historic, it’s unfathomable and it’s a disgrace. … But this is also the product of an ecosystem where players changing jobs on a whim or for a paycheck is a crisis that needs to be dealt with immediately and regulated through a literal act of Congress, while coaches getting paid $10M a year wrecking their own teams gets met with a shoulder shrug. … If the leaders of college sports aren’t willing to make this as much of a priority as opt-outs and portal windows while it turns their national playoff into a punch line, they’ve lost all sense of perspective on what’s good or bad for the game.” (link)
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Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde calls the Lane Kiffin-Ole Miss-LSU saga a “disgraceful, yet inevitable” failure of the entire college football system, with plenty of blame to go around across coaches, administrators, agents and the SEC’s leadership structure. Forde characterizes superagent Jimmy Sexton as a central enabler of the sport’s “Cult of the Coach,” driving buyouts and midseason negotiations without consequence. At the league level, Forde criticizes SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey and other college football leaders: “The damaging, nonsensical recruiting calendar drives these problems, and everyone in charge continues to shrug at it. Spasms of outrage blow up, then are allowed to die down because nobody really seems to care about football cheapening its postseason. … Lane Kiffin is the first to cross the Rubicon by lighting a season and his reputation on fire. But he had co-conspirators in the act. Is this going to become the corrosive norm?” (link)
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The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel submits that Kiffin’s departure represents a watershed moment that will change the sport’s hiring calendar, incentives and postseason integrity. Mandel: “The only thing that could prevent more situations like this from occurring is if the SEC instituted its own rule prohibiting its members from poaching another’s coach before the season is over, which exists in the NFL. Even better, all the conferences would come together and institute a rule like that which applies across the sport. Granted, like a lot of things in college sports, that might be considered an antitrust violation.” (link)
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Auburn has selected USF Football HC Alex Golesh for the same role and has inked Golesh to a six-year deal worth an average of $7.4M annually, according to Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger, who notes: “Golesh's deal with Auburn is built with heavy incentives, including bonus money for each win after eight. A 12-win season, for instance, could put him at more than $12M in compensation.” On3’s Justin Hokanson gets more specific, reporting that “at nine wins, Golesh earns an additional $1.5M, and the bonuses escalate from there. Should Auburn reach 12 wins, Golesh’s total compensation for that season would rise to $12.25M. Those figures do not include any College Football Playoff bonuses, meaning a big postseason run could push the total even higher. (link, link); USF GM/Chief of Staff Andrew Warsaw is following Alex Golesh to Auburn, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. (link)
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Florida has named Tulane Football HC Jon Sumrall as its next HC. According to Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde, Sumrall will coach the Green Wave in the College Football Playoff should the team make it. ESPN’s Pete Thamel reports Sumrall and the Gators are working to finalize a six-year deal with an AAV of nearly $7.5M. (link, link); On3’s Pete Nakos reports Florida is finalizing a deal with former Jacksonville Jaguars GM David Caldwell to be the Gators' next GM. Caldwell currently serves as Senior Personnel Director for the Philadelphia Eagles. (link); Meanwhile, Tulane is working with CSA Search & Consulting to find its new leader. (link)
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Arkansas has selected Memphis Football HC Ryan Silverfield for the same role. (link); CBS’ Brandon Marcello reports Silverfield will sign a five-year deal worth $33.5M. (link)
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Michigan State has parted ways with Football HC Jonathan Smith and has tapped former Northwestern HC Pat Fitzgerald to replace him. (link, link)
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Kentucky will part ways with Football HC Mark Stoops today, according to several outlets. Stoops’ contract calls for a $36M buyout, all of which is due within 60 days unless the sides negotiate a different separation, and On3’s Chris Low reports: “Stoops was never going to walk away on his own, but when Kentucky approached him about a separation, he said he would be willing to negotiate an agreement allowing UK to spread out payments over a number of years instead of paying $38M buyout within 60 days of his firing.” (link, link)
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Coastal Carolina is parting ways with Football HC Tim Beck. (link)
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New Mexico has agreed to a new five-year contract for Football Head Coach Jason Eck. ESPN’s Pete Thamel reports the deal includes an increase in average salary to $1.75M from $1.25M. (link)
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NC State Football HC Dave Doeren will return for a 14th season, Wolfpack AD Boo Corrigan confirms, adding: “Dave has built a program that is centered on culture and player development – on and off the field. You can see his passion for this program and the student-athletes in how hard our team plays and competes. I look forward to continuing to find new ways to support him and the football program.” (link)
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Boise State will host UNLV for the 2025 Mountain West Football Championship. Boise State, New Mexico, San Diego State and UNLV all finished with 6-2 records in conference play, and because all four teams did not meet this season, the tie was broken by a composite average of the following metrics: Connelly SP+, ESPN SOR, KPI and SportSource rankings. (link); Lobos AD Fernando Lovo in a statement: “While we respect the tiebreaking procedures that the Mountain West has in place, including the computer metrics that determined the championship game participants, we are disappointed that our student-athletes, winners of six straight games and with victories over two of the league’s top three teams, including San Diego State and UNLV, will not have the opportunity to compete for a championship next Friday. This team earned that chance with its play. … Our focus now turns to preparing for the program’s first bowl appearance since 2016.” (link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger tells Puck’s John Ourand he believes college sports is barreling toward more formalized athlete pay and likely collective bargaining, with or without Congress. As for what the industry will look like in three years, Dellenger explains: “I know how they want it to work, how their intention is for it to work, but I think legally it’s going to be hard to work. And so in three years you're probably going to have football rosters of at least $30M, $35M, maybe upwards of $40M, and you're probably going to have frustration among administrators that the clearinghouse isn’t doing what they intended it to do. And you're going to have ideas like collective bargaining start to come to fruition.” Dellenger on the Big Ten’s private equity saga: “It would be hard for me to see it happening in the next year. Michigan’s board is not moving on it. This needs the vote of all the presidents. All 18 presidents were pretty much on board and all the athletic directors except one were pretty much on board, but the Michigan Board of Regents and some other boards, when they found out more about the deal, were told they didn’t have authority to vote – that this was a presidential decision and that was that. And that frankly pissed them all off. A lot of them were angry they didn’t have any voice in a $2.4B deal. They said publicly: ‘We approve things that are much less, why are we not approving this?’ Michigan’s board told their president: you are not to vote on this. USC’s athletic director was the one AD in the room against it, aligned with her board. There was a thought the Big Ten would go forward with just 16 and they issued Michigan and USC a document – here’s what will happen if you don’t vote for it. Some took it as a threat, and that really ended the deal.” Full podcast. (link)
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Hawaii football student-athlete and Lou Groza Award finalist Kansei Matsuzawa provides another reminder of why college football is awesome. Come for the leis, stay for the emotion. (link)
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The Lane Kiffin Saga appears to be nearing an end as multiple reports indicate Kiffin intends to lead LSU next season & will meet with his Ole Miss squad this morning at 10am. (link, link)
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Still in the balance is if Kiffin will coach Ole Miss in the post-season with high-profile voices, such as ESPN College GameDay’s Kirk Herbstreit & former Alabama HC Nick Saban, lobbying on Kiffin’s behalf. However, the general consensus across the sports media landscape has the Rebels turning to a new leader for its anticipated College Football Playoff run. Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde suggests a middle ground: “It’s disgusting to think that the school and Kiffin would use this once-in-a-lifetime season as leverage in competing power plays, but welcome to college football. The more the coaches and administrators talk about putting the ‘student-athletes’ first, the less you should believe them. If I were calling the shots in this case, I would ask the team leaders—captains or a leadership council, whichever Ole Miss uses—what they believe gives them the best chance for a successful playoff. If that means Kiffin staying aboard, Ole Miss needs to swallow its bruised pride and let him do it. This is not the time for an ego play. And given Kiffin’s hands-on role as the play-caller and primary offensive strategist, not having him would seem to be a net negative.” (link)
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In the latest edition of The NACMA Timeout Podcast, MAAC Commissioner Travis Tellitocci visited with NACMA President and Fairfield AVP/Deputy AD Zach Dayton to discuss the conference's newly announced Brand Repositioning Project, a strategic initiative designed to redefine the league's identity. Tellitocci: “I think a lot of the genesis of this project really goes back to the ongoing challenge that we have, which centers around the confusion of our name and our acronym. You know, many times we’re referred to as the other MAC. Obviously, the Mid-American Conference is an FBS football conference. So there's a lot of confusion there with the Mid-American. We're often referred to as the MAC that doesn't play football, the MAC with 2 A's, so we've heard it all. As we've gone through this process, I think we've really tried to get to a place where we come out with an identity where we don't have to be on our back heels explaining our name every time that we say it. Obviously, there is a little more brand recognition in the Northeast, but once you go outside of the Northeast, that's where a lot of the confusion sets in. I'm very aware that we have a rich history that dates back 45 years. I think as we have discussed this project, we all know that we have to be very strategic and very thoughtful that we want to keep that history and tradition moving forward. So those are discussions that we're having right now. What does this look like in terms of a repositioning, not necessarily a rebrand or a refresh, but how do we position ourselves to stand apart and not have to explain our name anymore?” More from Tellitocci. (link)
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Dayton men’s basketball has yet to commit to an MTE in the future. With the exception of the 2020 pandemic year, every year since the 2010 season Dayton has played in a traditional eight-team multi-team event, though the ESPN Events Invitational became a four-team tournament this year. Where Dayton will play in 2026 is still up in the air for a number of reasons, including shifting scheduling strategies during the revenue-sharing era. Flyers AD Neil Sullivan on the future scheduling strategy: “Dayton has typically been in demand. Our fans travel. We’ve performed well in (the November tournaments). But there’s so much unknown that I couldn’t give you an answer for next year yet. … Right now, we operate in six-month increments. so it’s changing that fast.” More from Sullivan. (link)
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Morgan State extends with Under Armour, a partnership that first started in 2020. The extension also includes a continued partnership with BSN Sports, ensuring “broad support” throughout the duration of the new five-year agreement. (link)
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“This will be the best place to see a football game in America, college or NFL.” That’s Ryan Sports Management CEO Pat Ryan Jr.’s opinion of Northwestern’s new Ryan Field, which is the first brand-new stadium being built for a power-league college football program since Baylor’s McLane Stadium debuted in 2014. The new Ryan Field will offer 320K more square feet for fans but 12,500 fewer seats with a more vertical design, moving every seat — all of which are padded and purple — closer to the playing surface than all but its courtside counterparts in basketball arenas. The hope is the new set-up will offer a true home-field advantage while providing an in-stadium experience to compete with television. Ryan Jr.: “Our bet is we’re doing it different, but we’re doing it very intentionally different. If we’re right, hopefully, it’ll be helpful to others. And if we’re wrong, well, it’s one of a kind. … By getting rid of these last set of seats, which are the most expensive to build, the hardest to sell, lowest price, lowest fan satisfaction, it allows you to make the experience for everybody else more magical. Think of it as the death of the nosebleed.” More. (link)
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The College Sports Commission’s University Participation Agreement is dead, according to Heitner Legal Founder Darren Heitner, who observes the agreement, in its current form, “died the moment [Texas attorney general] Ken Paxton put his objections in writing and sent them not just to Texas universities but to every state attorney general in the country.” What’s still unclear, however, is what will replace it. Heitner: “The CSC will likely attempt to salvage its framework by revising the most problematic provisions. But the fundamental tension remains. How do you create a unified governance structure that accommodates fifty different state legal regimes? How do you impose binding arbitration when public universities in multiple states cannot legally agree to it? How do you enforce penalties based on future, unspecified rules when constitutional debt limitations prevent such open-ended obligations? These aren't minor drafting issues. They're fundamental structural problems that may prove insurmountable. The broader question is whether the CSC model, a private entity wielding comprehensive authority over public universities, is viable at all. The participation agreement's problems aren't bugs. They're features of an inherently flawed approach that attempts to impose private corporate governance on public institutions bound by constitutional constraints.” (link)
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In examining consolidation within the sports tech industry, SBJ’s Joe Lemire reports that Hudl’s rapid expansion continues, with the Lincoln-based company now serving 325K teams across 40 sports and making 18 acquisitions to date. Hudl Co-Founder/CEO David Graff says the company evaluates build/partner/buy options with discipline: “We are a technology company first, so we have that natural bias towards build, but over the years, we’ve done a great job of taking a pretty agnostic, very data-driven approach to really looking at all three dynamics and then really assessing them on each of their own merits, regardless of where our natural bias may be.” Meanwhile, Catapult CEO Will Lopes outlines where the broader industry sits on the tech adoption curve: “The sports world is somewhere between the digitization and optimization space, depending on which sport and which leagues you’re talking to.” Overall, Lopes believes disruption is still early: “I am so bullish on the industry that I don’t know if acquisition is a necessary path for growth. I actually think the world of sport has not been disrupted by technology yet.” (link)
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There is optimism inside ESPN that DraftKings will be a better long-term betting partner after ESPN and Penn Entertainment terminated their 10-year, $2B deal two years in. ESPN VP of Betting and Fantasy Mike Morrison called the DraftKings move “absolutely the best next step for us in the betting space” and said ESPN wanted a partner “that’s scaled, that puts an emphasis on innovation, that has similar ways of operating as ESPN does.” Morrison also noted ESPN’s unified internal push behind betting content impressed DraftKings: “We began to really get all of the company – on the content side, the product side, technology, marketing, responsible gaming, sales – really aligned that this betting initiative is a really big thing. We began to pull a lot of resources in the company and effort around storytelling and framing in ways that we hadn’t yet done. I think [DraftKings Co-Founder/CEO] Jason [Robins] and DraftKings saw that, and by their own admission, they were both impressed and at times surprised. They said, ‘We didn’t think you would develop everything that you did.’” Meanwhile, Robins says DraftKings sees ESPN as a major distribution engine and points out that one goal of its ESPN, NBC, and Amazon partnerships was expanding NBA share: “NBA is a sport that, relative to NFL, we’ve had lower share in. Part of it was for years our chief competitor had the Turner deal, and we had nothing.” (link)
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The Wall Street Journal’s Robert O’Connell and Jared Diamond examine the collision between prop-bet integrity concerns and the enormous financial upside that keeps sportsbooks and leagues tied to them. Prop bets, they observe, drive disproportionate profits via same-game parlays, but they are also the easiest entry point for manipulation, creating escalating pressure on leagues already navigating scandals across the NBA, MLB and NFL. O’Connell and Diamond note that SGPs (single game parlays) built on prop combinations deliver far higher margins than standard bets, with New Jersey reporting an 18.7% hold on parlays in September versus 9% on traditional wagers, and Illinois showing more than 55% of all online betting revenue coming from parlays. That profitability is why sportsbooks resist large-scale restrictions, as Westgate SuperBook VP of Marketing Jay Kornegay put it: “They’re so popular with operators, and so profitable for operators. They would push back on a plan to cut them all off.” (link)
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More than half of 183 employers surveyed by the National Association of Colleges and Employers rate next spring’s Class of 2026 graduate-hiring job market as poor or fair, per The Wall Street Journal’s Lindsay Ellis, who notes the outlook rates as the “most pessimistic” since the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. A cooling job market and companies tracking an uncertain economic outlook has led to mass layoffs and more conservative hiring practices while the growth of artificial intelligence portends the potential for deep job cuts. Ellis: “For college seniors, that means they are also competing against junior workers who have been recently laid off. The unemployment rate for recent college graduates was 4.8% in June, greater than overall unemployment that month and the highest June level for recent graduates in four years. … Overall, employers say they expect a 1.6% increase in hiring for the Class of 2026, down considerably from their plans for the Class of 2025 last fall.” More. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Assistant Athletics Communications Director (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): This role provides assistance with planning and implementing communications strategies as they relate to the goals and objectives of UTSA’s 17-sport NCAA Division I athletics program. More details HERE.
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