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The News & Observer’s Jadyn Watson-Fisher analyzes the ACC’s resurgence in men’s basketball, fueled by new coaches, increased budgets, and a strategic scheduling overhaul that has the league poised to exceed its recent average of just five NCAA Tournament bids. As of Dec. 22, the conference boasted nine teams in the NET top 50 (tied with the SEC for the most) and led all leagues with 16 Quad 1 wins, a sharp turnaround from last season when it finished with only five top-50 NET teams. ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips’ perspective: “There’s no question the ACC is significantly better, and I’m pleased and energized by the league’s collective successes already this season. The improvement is a tribute to our coaches and student-athletes, along with the tremendous support and commitment to competing at the highest level by the chancellors, presidents and athletic directors. The success of our teams in the nonconference portion of the season will position us well as we enter conference play and ultimately look ahead to March.” ESPN analyst/former Virginia Tech HC Seth Greenberg adds: “Investment equals expectation, and I think that the ACC and administrations and athletic departments decided they want to not just have a basketball team, but back to being the ACC; a dominant conference. If you look at it, the return on the investments have been pretty good. ... I think the league is getting back its depth. The talent level is way up. Recruiting is way up. Style of play has been terrific." (link)
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Bowl Season Executive Director Nick Carparelli believes bowl games and the College Football Playoff can co-exist through the current era of postseason transition, remarking: “We certainly have our issues that need to be resolved, but there’s probably not one issue that college athletics faces in general that doesn’t need to be reevaluated. At this point in time, we’re going through a major transition in the sport, and we’re excited to talk to our conference partners once bowl season’s over to work with them to decide, what does bowl season need to look like in the future?” On potential CFP expansion and if it will detract from bowl games: “I think it’s inevitable that it goes to 16 — and I think it should be — but let’s get to a number that makes sense and stick with that for a period of time and really evaluate how that works for college football. I think anything beyond 16 seems a little far-fetched to most people. Sixteen is going to require every team who wants to win a championship to win four games. Even the NFL doesn’t play more than four postseason games. So, I think 16 is where we probably will end up, and the bowl system will adjust just fine. There are still more than 16 teams in any given season that have earned the right to play in the postseason and to celebrate a successful season. Because let’s not forget, the definition of success is very different, depending on the football program.” More. (link)
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Football Files…
➤ Michigan is expected to hire outgoing Utah Football HC Kyle Whittingham to lead the Wolverines’ program, per multiple sources. (link)
➤ Ohio removes the interim tag in naming John Hauser as the Bobcats’ new Football HC. (link)
➤ Penn State is reportedly hiring Colorado State Football Chief of Staff Justin Cummings-Morrow in a high-level recruiting role, per On3’s Pete Nakos. (link)
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On3’s Pete Nakos examines the 2025 transfer portal market and breaks down how much impact players will likely cost programs looking for a quick talent upgrade. He suggests the quarterback market could stretch from $750K to as much as $4-5M with a flood of high-end talent, including Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby and TCU’s Josh Hoover, available. This past season at least five QB’s made as much as $3M, while more than 20 starters across the country made at least $1M. Offensive linemen, specifically offensive tackles, could command a range from $500K to $1.2M, but seven-figure deals are becoming more prevalent with the going rate for an elite offensive tackle running between $990K and $1.2M. This year’s running back market has the chance for multiple running backs to earn over $1M out of the portal with a potential pay range stretching from $350K to $1M. Additional ranges cited by Nakos by position include: defensive line – $500K to $1.5M; wide receivers – $400K to $1M; and defensive backs – $300K to $850K. More. (link)
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“Santa Claus is delivering mid season acquisitions…this s*** is crazy!!” That was UConn Men’s Basketball HC Dan Hurley’s reaction when news broke that the NCAA had cleared 2023 NBA Draft pick James Nnaji to begin playing immediately at Baylor. Yahoo Sports’ Dan Wolken highlights the move as an example of schools “merely doing what the NCAA has given them the green light to do as it waits and hopes for some kind of antitrust protection from Congress that would allow for the actual enforcement of the rulebook rather than a mishmash of eligibility rulings.” The NCAA finds itself in an incredibly difficult spot. Wolken: “Its executives and attorneys understand that each time the line of demarcation moves, as it has here, it chips away at the NCAA’s ability to ensure college sports are played by college students, not people who bypassed that opportunity and want to suddenly turn back because NIL has become so lucrative. But the NCAA also sees a legal environment with a deluge of eligibility cases, with some judges granting sixth and seventh years to players.” More. (link)
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CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander analyzes data which suggests this year’s quality at the top of men’s college basketball is unusually strong with seven teams currently boasting an adjusted efficiency margin of 30.00 or higher via KenPom, and two additional squads, Vanderbilt and Illinois, also north of the 29.00 threshold. Norlander adds that despite the expected number-trimming effects that will come from intra-conference play, “there's still a realistic chance that 2025-26 will yield the strongest group of national title contenders since at least 2014-15,” when Kentucky, Wisconsin, Duke, Villanova, Arizona and Virginia all ended the year above +30.00 in adjusted efficiency margin. Norlander: “On Christmas Day in 2024, the top 10 teams in the AP poll weren't winning as much or by more on average than this season's cream of the crop. Right now, the collective record for the AP's top 10 teams -- Arizona, Michigan, Iowa State, UConn, Purdue, Duke, Gonzaga, Houston, Michigan State and BYU -- is 113-7. A year ago at this time the AP's top 10 were 105-13, a win percentage difference of 0.53 points. And a year ago on Christmas there were four teams at +30.00 in efficiency margin, not seven, and only five at +29.00 or better instead of the nine we've got as of today. … As we ready for league play, I think the list of schools that can win a national championship — teams truly capable of winning six games in the Big Dance, a massive ask — fills up to 12, an abnormally high number for this time of year.” More. (link)
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Texas self-reported six sports wagering-related NCAA violations from Jan. 1 through Oct. 28 per the Austin American-Statesman’s David Eckert, who notes all six involved wagers placed on daily fantasy sports websites. Between the six individuals, there were 121 total wagers placed at a combined total value of $1,096.08 with two bettors having wagered on events involving Longhorns’ sports teams. Eckert: “Of the six individuals described, three remain employed by Texas. Two were ‘immediately’ terminated when the compliance department learned of their charges, while one no longer works with the university. … All six violations were flagged by ProhiBet … but the violation descriptions described a disconnect between ProhiBet and PrizePicks, a popular daily fantasy website where five of the individuals made wagers. According to the documents, PrizePicks ‘modified their frequency of checking against the ProhiBet,’ allowing four individuals into the account. … One violation came from wagers made on Underdog, a different daily fantasy website. In January, the time of the violation, Underdog was not participating with ProhiBet, according to documents.” More. (link)
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U.S. Reps. Chris Deluzio (D-PA) and Dan Goldman (D-NY) have introduced the Honest Oversight of Ticketed Dining and Onsite Grub (HOTDOG) Act, directing the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to conduct a nationwide study of concession pricing practices at sports venues by examining the prices of comparable food and drinks inside and outside stadiums, that were constructed or are operated with public subsidy funds; pricing practices such as dynamic pricing, service fees, and promotions; transparency of concession prices to consumers, and other types of pricing policies. The bill also requires the FTC to issue a report to Congress detailing the results of the study and any recommendations for legislative, regulatory, or industry action to improve affordability and transparency. Sports Fans Coalition Executive Director Brian Hess: “The HOTDOG Act will shine a much-needed light on exploitative pricing practices and help identify solutions that make attending games affordable for working families again. When taxpayers invest hundreds of millions into stadiums, they deserve transparency about why a hot dog costs three times what it does on the street outside.” More. (link)
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U.S. GDP grew by an annual rate of 4.3% in Q3, the largest growth in two years, beating the projections of 3.2% and last quarter’s increase of 2.5%. The Wall Street Journal’s Chao Deng and Harriet Torry add: “Rising consumer spending was partly driven by healthcare, including outpatient services, and at hospitals and nursing homes. International travel, legal services and spending on products like personal computers and software also contributed. Artificial intelligence-related spending helped, too, though the pace of growth appeared to cool from the second quarter. Overall business investment growth slowed to 2.8% in the third quarter from 7.3% in the prior three months. The report offered fresh evidence that consumers continue to lift the U.S. economy, even as inflation remains higher than the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, hiring remains sluggish and consumer-confidence readings reflect a dour overall mood.” (link)
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Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry suggests fixing the crisis of college football with “common sense.” Here’s one part of Landry’s thesis, while also using an Ice T maxim to defend his involvement in the recent LSU coaching change: “The recruiting calendar forces teams to make coaching and roster decisions during a tight in-season window each year. A school that loses a coach late in the season may have only days to find a new one before high school recruits sign and college players jump into the transfer portal. This compressed timeline is what causes schools to pay huge buyouts and poach other schools’ coaches before the season is over. It makes no sense. But to those critical of LSU’s coaching search and my role in it, I say: don't hate the player, hate the game! We did what we had to.” Landry goes on to say centralized governance & consolidating media rights would “save all of college sports.” More. (link)
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More from SMU AD Damon Evans with SBJ’s Ben Portnoy on the school’s new venture, Mustang Partners. Evans: “When you take a look at things and how rapidly evolving the landscape of college athletics is, you’ve got to take a look at your structure that you’ve had in place in the past. What we realized is that past structure is not our future structure. The purpose of Mustang Partners is really to bring all of our revenue streams together into what we would call one integrated whole. ... It’s also worth noting, while it unifies all these external-facing and revenue-producing units, there’s going to be special emphasis placed on commercial NIL. Because, as we know, that is a big topic. We got to look at trademark and licensing growth. Special events are going to be significant for us. Storytelling is going to be really key in bringing it all together because telling that story will help people understand better what we’re trying to accomplish and, at the end of the day, better monetize certain areas for us and drive more revenue. … Right now, it’s still going to be internal, in-house. There’s not a new LLC being created at this point in time.” (link)
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Florida State quarterback Thomas Castellanos has dropped his attempt at gaining another year of eligibility & will instead enter the NFL Draft. (link); Meanwhile, Ole Miss signal caller Trinidad Chambliss is seeking a sixth year stemming from not playing at Ferris State (DII) in 2022 due to “chronic tonsillitis and its related complications.” Chambliss is being represented by Tom Mars & the NCAA indicated earlier in the month it was inclined to not issue the waiver. Mars: “The NCAA is attempting to impose a higher burden of proof on a young man who is without any fault, has satisfied all the requirements of the NCAA rules, and who's been an outstanding representative of college football -- both on and off the field.” More from ESPN’s Pete Thamel. (link)
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The Montana-Montana State FCS semifinal game on ABC was the most-watched FCS playoff game on record, averaging 2.8M viewers. The ESPN2 broadcast of Illinois State-Villanova drew 400K viewers, making the 1.6M average the most-watched semifinals since 2009. For comparison, last year’s FCS semifinals, both on ABC, averaged 1.58M viewers. Viewership for the six FCS playoff games so far on national TV is up 13% YOY. (link, link); ESPN’s College GameDay’s back-to-back shows to open the College Football Playoff First Round averaged 2.4M viewers. From Oklahoma: 2.6M viewers, up 51% from the final two hours of the 2024 Friday show with a peak of 4.3M. From Texas A&M: 2.2M viewers, up 6% from the 2024 Saturday finale with a peak of 3.2M. (link)
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North Carolina is in the process of purchasing and implementing ProhiBet, with the expectation that the system will be operational by the end of the 2026 spring semester. UNC already uses the base-level technology from Integrity Compliance 360 (IC360), but opted into the higher level of monitoring after the NCAA rule change approved in October would have allowed college athletes and athletic department staff to bet on professional sports, per Tar Heels AD Bubba Cunningham. UNC officials emphasized that education will accompany the technology rollout. (link)
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With news that European big man James Nnaji will join Baylor for the second half of the hoops season, here’s a full list of NBA Draft picks - including Nnaji who was selected by the Detroit Pistons with the 31st pick back in 2023 - who are now eligible to play college basketball. (link)
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North Dakota hires Fairleigh Dickinson Volleyball HC David Nguyen for the same role. (link)
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Former North Florida Volleyball HC Kristen Wright is the new HC at Cal State Bakersfield. (link)
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Missouri Asst. AD/Dir. Of Football External Relations & Recruiting Brad Larrondo is headed to Washington State for a “lead front office role,” per CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz. (link)
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The Wire on Collegiate Sports Connect didn’t take vacation for the holidays. Check out the administrative staff movement at Arkansas, Auburn, Dartmouth, Evansville, Florida, Fresno State, Illinois, Incarnate Word, Iowa State, James Madison, Kentucky, Lamar, Maryland, Memphis, Miami (FL), Missouri, Oklahoma State, Penn State, Princeton, the Southeastern Conference, Texas A&M, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, Texas Tech, Tulsa, USC, USF, UT Arlington and Villanova. (link)
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New Mexico Senior Assoc. AD for External Relations Kasey Byers joins the latest Career Hustle podcast to discuss his return to Albuquerque and the strategy behind the Lobos' creative output under AD Fernando Lovo. Byers advocates for a content philosophy rooted in "knowing where your feet are," rejecting the industry tendency to "rip off and duplicate" in favor of leaning into the specific culture of the city and institution to create authenticity. “I always had a rule and said if you're going to bring me something another school's done, shut it off. I'm not going to watch it. Just who are you as a person? What's your quirkiness? ... And just combine it with what we're doing. And when you do that, it's authentic and people fall in love with it." On the evolution of external relations, Byers emphasizes the need to treat student-athletes as "a brand within your brand,” explaining that “when you give them that space to be front-facing in ways that are strategized, that always leads itself to them feeling that their image and likeness is being appreciated and strategized by where they are. ... Courtney Morgan, who's the GM of Alabama football right now, is a close mentor of mine and taught me… about how you tailor things to these kids' personal interests outside of football and how that can wrap in because if you make content with these players outside of the sport and outside of campus, fans will love that.” Byers adds that “we see athletes too much as either just a number on the back or a face mask over a face. And that philosophy has to change." Full Q&A. (link)
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Puck’s John Ourand analyzes Netflix’s eventization strategy following the Jake Paul-Anthony Joshua fight, noting the platform successfully "owned the culture" for the night, a blueprint it replicated for Christmas Day by packaging now-meaningless NFL games with Stranger Things episodes and a halftime show featuring Huntrix, a fictional band that Ourand helpfully explains is from something called KPop Demon Hunters. Netflix VP of Sports Gabe Spitzer reinforces that the approach is "an event strategy more than a sports strategy," highlighting that boxing draws roughly 45% of its audience from outside the U.S. compared to just 10-15% for the NFL. Spitzer also cooled rumors on MLB out-of-market rights, telling Ourand: “Obviously, there’s an added cost for a subscription to MLB. It’s not in our model right now. We have multiple tiers of pricing for a Netflix subscription, but what we want is to give the audience that choice. When they come in, they’re going to be able to watch whatever they want, whenever they want—whether you have the ads tier or the premium tier." (link)
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NBC Sports President of Acquisitions and Partnerships Jon Miller joined the Sports Media Podcast with Richard Deitsch to discuss the network's strategy behind securing long-term rights for major properties like the Olympics, Premier League, and NBA. On the Olympics, Miller emphasized that NBC's $7.75B extension through 2032 and subsequent extension through 2036 reflect the Games’ unique ability to "touch every part of our company," from affiliates to Peacock. He also dismissed concerns about tech giants encroaching on sports rights, telling Deitsch: "Look, it's no secret that when the Premier League deal came up the last time, there were offers that were made by a combination of folks, including streamers, that put more money on the table than we put on the table. But the Premier League at that time decided that what we were doing for their sport and the league in this country is where they wanted to be. ... They see the benefit of being associated with a big media company like an NBC or a Disney or a CBS Paramount or a Fox. They see the promotion, they see the way the affiliates get behind it. So I'm not so sure that they want to pull the majority of their product off the widest distribution platform there is." Full podcast. (link)
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(NEW!) Assistant Athletic Trainer (Swim & Dive) (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): The position plays a vital role in safeguarding the health, safety, and performance of student-athletes while upholding NCAA, university, and medical compliance standards. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Assistant Athletics Director for Football Academics (Texas A&M University / College Station, TX): More details HERE.
Student Services Coordinator (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Senior Academic Advisor, Student Athletes (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
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Sr. Executive Associate AD, Business Strategy & Capital Projects (University of Miami / Coral Gables, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director, Business Administration (Florida State University / Tallahassee, FL): More details HERE.
Chief Financial Officer (University Athletic Association, Inc. at the University of Florida / Gainesville, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Business Affairs (William & Mary / Williamsburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Business Operations (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Director of Business Services (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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Director of Recruiting Strategy (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Volleyball (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Director of Scouting and Player Personnel (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Men's Soccer (Butler University / Indianapolis, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Women's Lacrosse (Eastern Michigan University / Ypsilanti, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Volleyball Coach, Recruiting Coordinator (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Volleyball Coach (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Soccer (Brown University / Providence, RI): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (University of California – Los Angeles – UCLA / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Men's Tennis Coach (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Women’s Flag Football Head Coach (Newberry College / Newberry, SC): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Softball (Contractual) - (250000U5) (Towson University / Towson, MD): More details HERE.
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Assistant Women's Volleyball Coach (Bryant University / Smithfield, RI): More details HERE.
Assistant Track & Field Coach (University of Illinois Springfield / Springfield, IL): (DII) More details HERE.
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Director of Creative Services (University of Central Arkansas / Conway, AR): More details HERE.
Coordinator, Digital & Social Media (Big Ten Conference / Rosemont, IL): More details HERE
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Creative Geniuses! (University of Nevada / Reno, NV): Whatever your creative discipline, send us a note, resume and/or portfolio directly to: jshoji@unr.edu
Assistant Director - Content Creation (University of Arkansas / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Video Content Producer (Washington State University / Pullman, WA): More details HERE.
Associate AD for Strategic Communications (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Fan Experience (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Marketing & Fan Engagement (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
Producer, In-Venue (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX):More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Services - Video (University of Massachusetts – Amherst / Amherst, MA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director, Marketing and Multimedia (University of Iowa / Iowa City, IA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Marketing (Elon University / Elon, NC): More details HERE.
Director of Marketing and Fan Engagement (Eastern Illinois University / Charleston, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Video (University of Utah / Salt Lake City, UT): More details HERE.
Lead Producer | Partnership Content & Special Projects (University of Notre Dame / Notre Dame, IN): More details HERE.
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Associate Director of Compliance (University of Wisconsin / Madison, WI): More details HERE.
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Dir., Philanthropic Giving - Southeast (United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
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Bowden Society Stewardship Coordinator (Seminole Boosters, Inc. / Tallahassee, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Development Operations - Athletics - (25003114) (Temple University / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
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Associate Director of Development, Major Gifts (Texas Christian University / Fort Worth, TX): More details HERE.
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Senior Director of Athletics Development/Senior Associate Director of Athletics (Fordham University / New York, NY): More details HERE.
Director of Development - ion Philanthropy + Fairleigh Dickinson University Athletics (Fairleigh Dickinson University / Teaneck, NJ): More details HERE.
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Sr. Executive Associate AD, Business Strategy & Capital Projects (University of Miami / Coral Gables, FL): More details HERE.
Chief Financial Officer (University Athletic Association, Inc. at the University of Florida / Gainesville, FL): More details HERE.
Commissioner (Ohio Valley Conference / Brentwood, TN): More details HERE.
Deputy Athletic Director/Development (Oral Roberts University / Tulsa, OK): More details HERE.
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Athletics Groundskeeper (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
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Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletic Trainer, Women’s Basketball/Cross Country (East Texas A&M / Commerce, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Strength & Conditioning (Non-Football) (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletic Director Development/Corporate Sponsorships (Northwestern State University of Louisiana / Natchitoches, LA): More details HERE.
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Senior Director of Ticket Operations (Texas A&M University 12th Man Foundation / College Station, TX): More details HERE.
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Account Executive, Ticket Service & Retention (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Ticket Office Sales Representative (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
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