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NCAA President Charlie Baker tells Sports Illustrated’s Bryan Fischer he’s prepared to use every tool at his disposal to defend the NCAA regardless of what happens in Washington, D.C., in the coming months: “We don’t have a choice. That’s why we’re up to our eyeballs in court cases. We’re going to fight them all.” Here’s more from Baker at Sports Business Journal’s Intercollegiate Athletics Forum in Vegas yesterday…
➤ Baker explains why the NCAA continues to litigate rather than retreat or rewrite policies: “It’s critical for us to play those out as long as we have to. What’s at stake here is a ton of opportunities for the next generation of young people—and they’re not sitting in the courtroom, they don’t have a name, but they are the ones who are going to lose if we’re not successful in this stuff.”
➤ As it relates to eligibility waivers, appeals and lawsuits, Baker argues that a small number of lawsuits has created a disproportionate amount of blowback: “I think there were 1,500, plus or minus, Division I waivers last year. Two thirds of them got approved, which leaves you with about 450 or somewhere in that general vicinity that didn’t get approved. I think 40 have ended up in court—so 90% of the people who didn’t get what they wanted out of a waiver did not go to court. But 10% did and that’s where all the emotion and challenge comes from. And remember, of that 10% we win 60 to 70% of those cases. Now you’re down to a really small number that’s creating most of the angst and most of the confusion”
➤ Baker adds: “The one thing I hear a lot from the membership is that clarity would be nice, especially on things like eligibility. We win way more of those cases than we lose thankfully. But the fact that we don’t win them all means you have coaches and ADs who call me and say what judge you end up in front of has a lot to do with whether or not your player gets approved for another year. There’s a lot of unhappiness about that and I get it. That particular issue more than almost any other really got the attention of a lot of people in Washington to say, ‘O.K., now I understand why you act, why you believe you have a problem here that could use our help.’” (link)
➤ In his conversation with SBJ’s Abe Madkour, Baker remarks that “at some point we’re going to figure out that no one understood when they were legalizing sports betting that they were going to put it on your phone. I was governor of Massachusetts when we passed the sports betting bill, and the whole conversation through the whole debate and discussion was about whether or not restaurants or VFW halls or other places where people gather could get a license to actually offer sports betting. The sentiment was it’s going to be just like it is in Vegas only now you’re going to have to go someplace, but it’ll be someplace local. … I don’t think anybody anticipated that you could literally sit there like this in your living room and bankrupt yourself in the course of 35 or 40 minutes.”
➤ In regards to private equity, Baker still believes caution is the word of the day, particularly as it relates to who makes decisions, how long investors will stay and where best investment opportunities lie. “We talked to Utah about what they did, and I think what they did was really well thought out and really well designed…because they still own the majority of the decision-making, they own the majority of the seats on the board, they got a minimum commitment with respect to how long they’re going to be in and they also talked a lot about what they were seeking to achieve.” (link)
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More from SBJ IAF…
Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark said the College Football Playoff Selection Committee “got it right,” calling Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua’s backlash to the Irish missing the playoff “egregious.” Specifically, Yormark said: “I think overall [the selection committee] did the right job. It’s progress over perfection. The selection process will never be perfect. And our goal as commissioners and the management committee is how do we improve? I will say this and I’m a little outspoken about it. I don’t like how Notre Dame has reacted to it. I think Pete, his behavior has been egregious. … It’s been egregious going after Jim Phillips when they saved Notre Dame during COVID. We all knew and it was very transparent. Hunter [Yurachek] was very transparent about it, the chair, that as Notre Dame and Miami (FL) got closer together, head-to-head would be a factor. BYU lost. If they came closer together head-to-head, it would make a difference in that decision. So I think he’s totally out of bounds in his approach. And if he were in the room, I would tell him the same. We all signed up for it and Hunter, the chair, was very transparent about it. I’m going to reiterate that again. He said more than once as it becomes closer to the rankings, head-to-head would play a role. And I was very taken aback by his approach.” (link)
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American Conference Commissioner Tim Pernetti outlined several structural reforms he believes college sports must pursue, starting with the ability for conferences to jointly negotiate media rights. Pernetti noted that professional leagues prove “a single seller” produces far more value and that “billions of dollars” are being left on the table. He also highlighted the American’s conference-wide commercial strategy, which includes a potential women’s sports deal through American RISE Ventures, and argued the industry “cannot spend another 10 years getting sued. Further, Pernetti called for better governance and suggested that it “may be time for the [College Football Playoff] to become an entity that oversees college football versus an entity that produces an event at the end of the year.” (link)
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The College Sports Commission has now approved $87.5M in NIL value across more than 12,000 submissions through its NIL Go clearinghouse in its first five months, and CSC CEO Bryan Seeley says the next priority is finalizing a membership agreement that will outline rights, enforcement authority and dispute-resolution processes. “Right now, there’s perception among a lot of people that everyone is cheating. … Signing that agreement gets us another step to strong, fast and fair enforcement. That’s what people want.” The document is currently on its second draft, and Seeley notes this iteration “was quite a bit weaker than the first agreement. A lot of the input from the schools was to make it less stringent.” Seeley also explained the goal is 45-day resolutions with a single decision maker and the opportunity for appeals to a neutral arbitrator, mirroring pro-sports models. “If we’re going to find someone violating the rules, we’d better have the evidence.” Seeley stressed that cooperation requirements in the participation agreement are critical: “Delays are not normally caused by the investigators. They’re caused by feet-dragging by the people being investigated. So, you need to have some leverage over people to make sure they don’t drag their feet, and they actually show up for interviews, they provide evidence, they respond to your request for documents.” (link)
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Iowa AD Beth Goetz, SMU AD Damon Evans, Tennessee AD Danny White and Texas Tech AD Kirby Hocutt also participated in a panel discussion to review how they are navigating record-high budgets and escalating expenses. Goetz emphasized aligning sponsors with institutional identity, pointing to the school’s on-field logo partnership with John Deere: “Our fan bases are all getting more comfortable with those sponsorship logos and all of those things, but when they see that shared vision, that shared value system, I think they embrace it a lot better.” Hocutt explained the Red Raiders are taking NIL education directly to donors and local businesses, reframing it as “Opportunity Amid Chaos” and urging corporate partners to see student-athletes as authentic marketing assets: “We’ve got to communicate to our external groups what we need and ask them to lean in where they have businesses. They can market their product through our student-athletes and think differently than they traditionally have.” (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Delaware has elevated Interim President Laura A. Carlson to the permanent post. (link)
➤ CollegeAD reports ULM AD SJ Tuohy will be an "at-will" employee and make $175K in yearly compensation. (link)
➤ Appalachian State Senior Deputy AD/CRO Chris Wood and Senior Assoc. AD Mike Richey have exited the department, also per CollegeAD. (link)
➤ Cincinnati Asst. GM Carter Wilson is expected to be hired as the GM at USF under new Bulls HC Brian Hartline, CBS’ Matt Zenitz reports. (link)
➤ North Texas is expected to hire Texas Director of Scouting Errin Joe as its GM, again per CBS’ Matt Zenitz. (link)
➤ More administrative moves can be seen on The Wire on Collegiate Sports Connect: Arkansas, Auburn, Central Michigan, College of Charleston, Dartmouth, Eastern Illinois, Fordham, Holy Cross, Lafayette, La Salle, Louisiana Tech, Maine, Marshall, Merrimack, Michigan State, the NCAA, Northwestern, Ohio, Santa Clara, St. John’s, Texas A&M, UC Irvine, UMass Lowell, UNC Wilmington, Vermont, West Virginia and William & Mary. (link)
➤ And don’t miss this morning’s Coaches.wire, which details all coaching transactions across the industry over the last 48 hours. (link)
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Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua insists the Fighting Irish will not alter their approach to the football transfer portal in regards to the ACC: “We don’t think about an ACC governor on what we might or might not do in the portal. We have our own governor.” Asked if ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips or anyone else in the league had asked the Irish to lay off ACC talent in the portal, Bevacqua suggested they had not, adding: “Up until this moment, I think the relationship between Notre Dame and the ACC has been unbelievably healthy and mutually beneficial. That’s one of the reasons why we were so kind of flabbergasted by this.” (link)
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Lots of private equity talk in the latest edition of CRO.ticker, including Wrexham AFC securing a minority investment from Apollo Global Management and Bayern Munich holding exploratory talks with EQT about selling a minority stake (to many fans’ consternation). There’s also lots to unpack from NASCAR Senior Director of Consumer Intelligence Damian Arbuckle on making analytics digestible throughout the organization, a look at U.S. Soccer’s “Never Chase Reality” campaign and, of course, more talk on AI, including this from Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai: “What a CEO does is maybe one of the easier things…for an AI to do.” Check it out. (link)
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CBS’ Brandon Marcello reports the “Big 12 will adopt the ACC’s replay transparency in football next season.” (link)
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Texas A&M taps Florida State Women’s Soccer AHC Bobby Shuttleworth for its HC post. (link)
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Fox announces that 18.3M people watched Saturday’s Big Ten Championship between Indiana and Ohio State, making it the most-watched Big Ten title game in the 14-year history of the event. Meanwhile, ESPN reports the SEC Championship between Georgia and Alabama drew 16.9M viewers, and the Big 12 title game featuring Texas Tech and BYU drew 9M viewers. The Duke-Virginia ACC Championship came in at just under 4M, while the American and Sun Belt title tilts generated 2.4M and 1.1M viewers, respectively. (link)
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Nexstar Media Group says viewership of ACC and Pac-12 football games on The CW increased 10% YoY. (link)
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Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw reports the Paramount-Netflix bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery is expected to stretch well into 2026 as Paramount and Netflix brace for a prolonged fight. Warner Bros. has 10 business days to respond to Paramount’s hostile $30/share offer, but is not expected to unwind its recently signed merger agreement with Netflix, which would trigger a $2.8B breakup fee. In the meantime, Paramount continues to weigh its next steps, including pursuing a January 8 tender offer, extending its bid, litigating to block Netflix’s deal, or raising its price. Both bidders have signaled capacity to raise their offers. Paramount CEO David Ellison is courting investors in D.C. and on Wall Street. More. (link)
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INTERESTED IN THE FINANCES OF COLLEGE SPORTS? On December 11 at 2:00 pm ET, the Knight Commission will host a webinar on how to use the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database on Division I Finances. Webinar participants will learn how to access revenues and expenses of Division I public institutions and conferences and how to quickly generate custom reports with publishable graphs. This session will include trends related to football coaching severance payments; data on student fees and institutional funding for athletic departments; and a review of data that define the “revenue-sharing” cap and how the data differ across Division I programs. Click here to register.
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Utah’s Board of Trustees has ratified a “nine-figure” private equity deal with Otro Capital that calls for the creation of Utah Brands & Entertainment, a company to oversee the athletic department’s revenue-generating sources. Otro will take a minority ownership stake in Utah Brands, and hold two board seats, with the university’s Utah Growth Capital Partners Foundation to hold four seats as AD Mark Harlan serves as chair. An additional supporter/investor will sit in the seventh board position. University officials have declined to say how much Otro Capital plans to initially invest because the deal has not been finalized but it is expected to be completed by early 2026. Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger adds: “The project includes a fascinating wrinkle. The university is offering a prominent group of donors the ability to purchase a stake in Utah Brands & Entertainment. … An exit strategy — in five to seven years — exists, and the university holds the right to purchase Otro’s ownership stake.” More. (link, link)
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Utah President Taylor Randall and AD Mark Harlan released a statement regarding today’s announcement of the Utes’ private equity deal with Otro Capital that reads in part: “This new model will enhance operations of key commercial activities and generate a significant influx of funding for Utah Athletics. It will also help enhance the gameday experience for our incredibly passionate fans. Ultimately, it will improve the student-athlete experience, strengthen our programs and ensure Utah Athletics can continue to thrive and compete for conference and national championships–now and into the future. Most importantly, this transition will allow more of the university’s internal resources to remain focused on education (scholarships, access and student success), cutting-edge research and exceptional patient care. By modernizing our athletics model, we are protecting and strengthening our ability to advance our academic mission and deliver societal impact over the long term.” (link, link - resolution, link - slide deck)
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NCAA President Charlie Baker, in conversation with SBJ’s Abe Madkour from the SBJ Intercollegiate Athletics Forum, says just because the post-House world is “messy doesn’t mean it’s not directionally correct,” adding: “I will die on the side of we probably saved college sports billions of dollars that we collectively would’ve otherwise owed if we hadn’t got the settlement and gotten it done.” Madkour follows up by asking if the NCAA would’ve gone bankrupt, and Baker replies: “Oh yeah, not just us. Lots of other people, too. This would’ve had real consequences for the rest of college sports that we don’t talk anywhere near as much about.” In regards to private equity, Baker still believes caution is the word of the day, particularly as it relates to who makes decisions, how long investors will stay and where the best investment opportunities lie. “We talked to Utah about what they did, and I think what they did was really well thought out and really well designed…because they still own the majority of the decision-making, they own the majority of the seats on the board, they got a minimum commitment with respect to how long they’re going to be in and they also talked a lot about what they were seeking to achieve.” Asked whether the NCAA missed a window to get the SCORE Act through the House, Baker replies: “I don’t know. We’ll see.” Full Q&A. (link)
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Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua met with the media to touch on a number of topics, including providing an update on the House cap moving forward: “We are huge proponents of the House settlement. … The numbers you're hearing and the numbers we know that are out there don't compute with the cap number. So, I think we have to be honest and forthright with ourselves and have a set of rules that are realistic and reflect what's happening, reflect major college football in 2025 and beyond. I think the cap's too low. And I think if we keep operating under this rule of where the cap is, most major programs are going to have a heck of a tough time going backwards because you read the same news reports that I do. You read and know about the same roster numbers for NIL and compensation that I do. Instead of making pretend that doesn't exist, let's deal with it and come up with a set of rules that can be followed and then hold people's feet to the fire. On the next steps in Notre Dame’s relationship with the ACC: “To be quite frank, I don't think an apology does anything or unwinds what has happened. But we'll, at the right time, we'll sit down with the ACC leadership and I think have, hopefully, a very frank, honest, productive conversation. But I would tell you that time's not now.” More from Bevacqua. (link)
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With continued instability roiling college athletics, a growing number of ADs are becoming more interested in exploring collective bargaining with their student-athletes, per ESPN’s Dan Murphy, who notes dozens of ADs will meet this week in Las Vegas facing the “cold-slap realization of needing a better plan” after last week’s canceled SCORE Act House vote. Boise State AD Jeramiah Dickey: “I'm not sure I can sit back today and say I'm really proud of what we've become. There is a solution. We just have to work together to find it, and maybe collective bargaining is it. … I'm not smart enough to say [collective bargaining] is the only answer or the best answer. But I think the onus is on us to at least curiously question: How do you set something up that can be sustainable? What currently is happening is not.” Tennessee AD Danny White: “I don't understand why everyone's so afraid of employment status. We have kids all over our campus that have jobs. ... We have kids in our athletic department that are also students here that work in our equipment room, and they have employee status. How that became a dirty word, I don't get it.” More. (link)
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Iowa State AD Jamie Pollard minced no words while speaking out on the current state of collegiate athletics: “I don’t believe our industry is focused on the right part of the problem. We’re focused on all the damn symptoms, you know? We want to blame the transfer portal … and that’s a symptom. It’s a symptom of the problem. The problem goes back a long ways, and what the problem is, contracts are meaningless. … The only thing a coach’s contract does is spell out what you have to pay them if they fail. All the other pages that say all the wonderful things we’re going to pay them if they’re successful only matter if somebody else doesn’t want to pay them more. … Until we get the Congressional … antitrust that major league sports have, we’ll never bring that back in. That’s why the players are getting paid. They saw the greed that agents and coaches have been exploiting for years. I’m guilty of it now too cause you’ve gotta survive right? So, what we just did to Washington State is sad. … That, quite frankly, was one of the things I wondered about. Can I, Jamie Pollard, ethically call [then Washington State Football HC Jimmy Rogers] right now because I know he’s probably going to take the job, but that means he’s leaving that team after one year. But, I didn’t make the rules, I’ve just gotta live by them.” (link)
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The Tallahassee Democrat’s Jim Henry examines Florida State AD Michael Alford’s plan to utilize consultants in helping repair the FSU football program. Former NFL executive Jake Rosenberg and his consulting firm, The Athlete Group, spent last week in Tallahassee “conducting a hard, honest assessment of the Seminoles’ organization to identify areas where clarity and improvement are most needed. The review will offer targeted recommendations regarding staffing and processes. Additionally, it will benchmark FSU’s strategies for evaluating, developing, and compensating players against best practices in college football.” Alford: “I am looking forward to getting that report back. [Football HC Mike Norvell’s] open to it. … I think we are missing pieces in personnel, I think we are missing pieces in evaluation. And we need to win.” More. (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Clemson President Jim Clements announces plans to retire at the end of the calendar year after leading the University since 2013. Outgoing University Provost Bob Jones has agreed to take over as Interim President until a new leader is found. (link)
➤ Lehigh Football HC Kevin Cahill inks a multi-year contract extension after three seasons leading the Mountain Hawks. (link) ➤ North Texas AD Jared Mosley releases a statement on the 2025 Isleta New Mexico Bowl that reads in part: “After several thoughtful conversations with HC Eric Morris over the past week, we mutually agreed that with his impending transition to Oklahoma State, the best path forward for both programs is for Eric to turn his full attention to his new role in Stillwater. … As we look forward to our New Mexico Bowl preparations, I have asked AHC Drew Svoboda to lead the team during this time as our Interim HC. … No one knows our players, our system, and our culture better. … He has enthusiastically accepted this role and is already hard at work preparing our team.” Full statement. (link) ➤ Houston Christian Men’s Basketball HC Craig Doty agrees to a three-year contract extension that could keep him with the Huskies through the 2029-30 campaign. (link)
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SMU is set to announce the creation of Mustang Partners, a unit within the school’s athletic department that will include marketing, sponsorships, NIL, trademark, licensing and more under the guidance of Executive Deputy AD Brian Ullmann, per SBJ’s Ben Portnoy. The LLC-type set-up is expected to include four areas of focus: Mustang NIL, centering on strategies to drive financial and branding opportunities for SMU student-athletes; developing premium amenities at Gerald J. Ford Stadium, Moody Coliseum, and other venues; adding a full-time director of trademarks and licensing to maximize licensing and co-branding efforts in the retail space; and efforts to book special events and concerts at SMU athletic venues, along with rentals of premium hospitality areas for corporate retreats, meetings, and private events. (link)
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PowerMizzou’s Cody Goodwin provides the details of Missouri Football HC Eli Drinkwitz’s new six-year contract extension that starts with a 2026 base salary of $10.25M before rising incrementally to reach a final total of $11.25M in 2031. Drinkwitz will receive an automatic one-year extension for winning eight regular season games, earning $200K greater than the previous last year of the term. There’s also an additional $2M in available incentives, including $1.25M for winning a national title and $400K for securing an SEC crown. The Tigers’ staff pool will grow by $4M to $16M. Should Drinkwitz exit on his own on or before Dec. 1, 2026, his buyout is $5M with 50% of the buyout due within 30 days, with the remaining 50% due one year following the due date of the initial payment, or as a lump sum negotiated and agreed to. If an automatic extension is earned, then all buyouts after Dec. 1, 2026, shall be reset by one calendar year and will not exceed $4M after that date. If Missouri fires Drinkwitz, he’s due 80% of the remaining contract, meaning if he were fired on or before Dec. 1, 2026, he’s due $44.425M. More details. (link)
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New Iowa State Football HC Jimmy Rogers is set to earn annual base compensation of $3M throughout a six-year deal running through Jan. 31, 2032, per the Des Moines Register’s Eugene Rapay, who adds the Cyclones are paying Washington State $4M for Rogers’ buyout. Rogers is eligible for incentives including win bonuses ranging from $250K for seven regular season victories to $1.5M for 12 wins, $500K for finishing in at least a tie for first place in the regular season standings or winning the Big 12 championship, $100K for a College Football Playoff berth and additional payments that span from $250K for securing a CFP first round bye or victory to $1M for a national title triumph. A termination without cause provision will also be included in Rogers’ finalized contract that requires Iowa State to pay 100% of his base compensation for the remainder of his contract. More details. (link)
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More Deals… ➤ Kansas announces a multi-year extension of its partnership with Legends Global to have the company manage all ticketing, premium seating and annual fundraising efforts connected to seating products for the athletics department. Additionally, the Legends Global owner’s representation division will oversee budgeting, scheduling, design review and construction supervision on Phase 2 of the David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium’s east side remodel and related development. (link) ➤ Lehigh announces its football program’s first named coaching endowment as a $2.5M lead gift from Andy and Marybeth Vandergrift will support the HC while formally naming the position, the Vandergrift Family Head Football Coach. Their gift builds on more than $1M previously raised for a $5M coaching endowment set to provide essential funding for the role held by Kevin Cahill. Annual income from the fund shall be used in perpetuity to support the position through salary, benefits, and discretionary resources to advance the strategic priorities of the football program. (link) ➤ Richmond highlights an enhanced partnership with Opendorse to allow its student-athletes full access to the company’s suite of products to elevate their personal brands, share and organize content and navigate potential NIL opportunities. (link) ➤ The Big 12 partners with AthleteApps.com to provide every conference student-athlete from all 16 institutions the opportunity to receive their own mobile app for free, while granting them the tools to control their digital presence, engage fans and monetize their brand, both during and after their athletic careers. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Ticket Sales Executive (Kansas State University / Manhattan, KS): K-State Athletics is seeking qualified applicants for a Ticket Sales Executive, which is a full-time, hourly, benefits-eligible position. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Associate Athletic Director of Compliance (Merrimack College / North Andover, MA): Responsible for oversight of D1 compliance activities & supporting a commitment to institutional control among all college constituents. Come be part of the Agenda for the Future, and rise with us! More details HERE.
(NEW!) Assistant Director of Marketing (United States Air Force Academy / Colorado Springs, CO): Manages, develops, and implements the marketing and fan experience strategy for the Air Force Men’s Basketball, and Women’s Volleyball programs. Assists with the marketing, fan experience for Football More details HERE.
(NEW!) Assistant Athletic Trainer (Eastern Michigan University / Ypsilanti, MI): Assist in the coordination and administration of the health care program of all student-athletes, but will work directly with the track and field team. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): Under the direction of the Head Soccer Coach, the Assistant Soccer Coach assists in coaching the soccer team. The incumbent will promote intercollegiate athletics as an integral part of the university More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Director of Athletic Academic Services (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Athletic Academic Coordinator (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Graduate Assistant for Academics (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Senior Learning Specialist (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Senior Assistant Director (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
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Associate AD for Budget and Planning/Chief Operating Officer (Fort Hays State University / Hays, KS): (DII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director CFO and Rev Share Ops (New Mexico State University / Las Cruces, NM): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director, Finance and Business Operations (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Operations Coordinator - STM Driven (Short's Travel Management / Waterloo, IA): More details HERE.
Director of Athletic Business Operations (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Director, Business & Finance (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
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Head Coach - Men's Soccer (Grand Canyon University / Phoenix, AZ): More details HERE.
Head Coach - Women's Volleyball (University of California – San Diego / La Jolla, CA): More details HERE.
Head Volleyball Coach (Fort Hays State University / Hays, KS): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Women's and Men's Golf Coach (University of Illinois Springfield / Springfield, IL): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (Mount St. Mary's University / Emmitsburg, MD): More details HERE.
Women's Flag Football Head Coach (University of Illinois Springfield / Springfield, IL): (DII) More details HERE.
Head Women's Volleyball Coach (Bucknell University / Lewisburg, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Football Coach, Defensive Line (University of North Alabama / Florence, AL): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Volleyball (University of Missouri / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Head Coach Women's Indoor Volleyball (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Offensive Coordinator, Nevada Football (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Football (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Assistant Volleyball Coach and Recruiting Coordinator (Oakland University / Rochester, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Soccer (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach Sport Operations, Softball - Division of Intercollegiate Athletics (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Head Women's Soccer Coach (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
Head Women's Soccer Coach (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Head Women's Soccer Coach (University of South Carolina – Upstate / Spartanburg, SC): More details HERE.
Assistant Men's Soccer Coach (UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
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 Director of Strategic Marketing & Fan Experience (HR Title: Mktg & Fan Experience Coordinator) (Southern Methodist University – SMU / Dallas, TX): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Athletics Communications (University of South Florida / Tampa, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Athletics, Strategic Engagement/External Relations (Princeton University / Princeton, NJ): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Athletics Communications (University of South Florida / Tampa, FL): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Football Strategic Communications & Public Relations (Ohio State University / Columbus, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director for Marketing and Fan Engagement (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant AD/Marketing (Florida Atlantic University / Boca Raton, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Broadcast Engineer - Gatorvision (University Athletic Association, Inc. at the University of Florida / Gainesville, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Services (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
UPDATED LISTING - Assistant Director, Athletic Communications (University of California – Berkeley / Berkeley, CA): #82874 More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director for Marketing and Fan Engagement (California State University – Bakersfield / Bakersfield, CA): More details HERE.
Associate A.D, Creative Services (HR title: Assoc Dir Creative Marketing) (Southern Methodist University – SMU / Dallas, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Communications Director (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): More details HERE.
Production Assistant I, Football (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Marketing & Fan Engagement (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Graphic Design (Texas Christian University / Fort Worth, TX): More details HERE.
Content Creator, R NIL (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director, Compliance (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Catonsville, MD): More details HERE.
Director, R NIL (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Compliance (Washington State University / Pullman, WA): More details HERE.
Manager, R NIL Fulfillment & Operations (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
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Associate/Assistant Director of Athletics - Revenue Innovation & Advancement (Fort Hays State University / Hays, KS): (DII) More details HERE.
Associate Director of Development, Major Gifts - Athletics (University of Pennsylvania – Penn / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
Associate AD for Athletics Development (Furman University / Greenville, SC): More details HERE.
Major Gifts Officer - Athletics (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director, Development (University of Idaho / Moscow, ID): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director, Development and Revenue Generation / Executive Director of Retriever Club (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Catonsville, MD): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director/Director of Development (Temple University / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Development (College of Charleston / Charleston, SC): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate Athletics Director CFO and Rev Share Ops (New Mexico State University / Las Cruces, NM): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director, Finance and Business Operations (Fresno State / Fresno, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Football Strategic Communications & Public Relations (Ohio State University / Columbus, OH): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director, Development (University of Idaho / Moscow, ID): More details HERE.
Commissioner (Horizon League / Indianapolis, IN): More details HERE.
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Director of Athletics Security and Emergency Operations (University of Southern California / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Athletic Facilities (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Operations Coordinator - STM Driven (Short's Travel Management / Waterloo, IA): More details HERE.
Facilities and Event Operations Graduate Assistant (East Texas A&M / Commerce, TX): More details HERE.
Graduate Assistant: Operations and Facilities (Belmont University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Operations/Athletics (University of Kentucky / Lexington, KY): More details HERE.
Assistant Commissioner for Sport Services (NEC / Bridgewater, NJ): More details HERE.
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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Associate Athletic Trainer, Baseball (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Applied Sport Science Coordinator (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Sports Performance Coach for Men’s and Women’s Soccer (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE
Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Belmont University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer - Softball (Grand Canyon University / Phoenix, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer - Football (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
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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There are currently no job listings in this field.
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Account Executive (University of Arkansas / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director - Ticketing (Kansas State University / Manhattan, KS): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Ticketing Operations (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
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