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D1.jobs... Did you know that 2,198 jobs were posted on D1.jobs in 2023 by 418 different schools, conferences or companies? Whether you're trying to reach the tens of thousands of administrators who read D1.ticker every day, or the 40K+ coaches that engage with Coaches.wire, post HERE to maximize the reach of your job openings.
D1.ticker’s Sport Administrator Database... has been updated for 2024. Sixty-five schools submitted changes in the past few weeks. You'll find every sport administrator assignment at every DI department around the nation for 55 existing & emerging sports. Efficiency play for scheduling, best practices, coaching & staff searches, etc. Free signup & usage. Please reply to this email if your school’s list needs an update. (link)
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Congratulations to South Dakota State on its second consecutive FCS title, this time with a 23-3 win over Montana. (link); Jackrabbits HC Jimmy Rogers on the value of student-athlete development: “I don't think it's just developing scheme or developing athletically, it's developing the full person. The mind controls your actions, how to respond from adversity. This team has been battle tested. A lot of this team has gone through a ton of heartache, and they've learned from it, and we've stayed consistent in our approach moving forward. Largely due to that is the leadership that's on this football team and guys like these two. We're blessed to be a part of a team full of a bunch of guys like the individuals that we have. They're special people before they are football players. They're hungry to win and very consistent day in and day out, and they love each other.” (link); The game’s attendance of 19,512 marked the fifth-largest in 14 years the game has been played in Frisco and the biggest since North Dakota State's win over Jacksonville State to end the 2015 season (21,836). According to Stats Perform’s Craig Haley, the 2023 FCS playoffs had an overall attendance of 226,972, the third-highest in history. (link)
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SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey was "disappointed in the acrimony" that followed the final College Football Playoff ranking. "I didn't need so many incoming emails I received. I can only imagine hearing from those on the selection committee who are volunteers what they received. I think some of the statements made in the immediacy of selection were disappointing to me as a colleague, and I would maintain that the strength of our league – sure we lost some games – but as I look at what were the four best teams, I would maintain that we had two of those four. But again, the selection committee makes that decision, and we respect the decision. ... I think three or four times we've had the fifth-ranked team. Do I think every decision has been perfect? No, but that is the authority we allocated." Meanwhile, ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips tells ESPN’s Heather Dinich he is “absolutely going to support our student-athletes, member schools and our conference at every moment. Period. That was precisely what occurred. This was an historic decision. For the very first time an undefeated, Power 5 conference champion was excluded. To be certain, I very much look forward to working with my colleagues to continue to refine the CFP and shape the future of college football." While Sankey worries whether the backlash will dissuade others from volunteering on the committee in the future, Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti says: “I think there's so much love for the game and how important the job is people will always stand up to do it. It's our job to make sure those people feel safe and comfortable." (link)
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Nike Co-Founder Phil Knight joins the Navigating Sports Business podcast and talks about the state of college athletics. Knight tells Navigate CEO AJ Maestas he was saddened by the “unnecessary” breakup of the Pac-12, but the “world of sports as we’ve known it has really suffered from weak leadership at the NCAA level, and it’s hard to put that genie back in the bottle.” Knight notes that the passion surrounding college sports is uniquely American and “that’s kind of hanging by a thread right now with the weak leadership and the wild, wild west of the portals and NIL and where we go from there. The first proposal from the executive director of the NCAA is very worrisome. It just misses the whole point. There’s nobody really that's looking out for sports. In the vacuum that the NCAA created, the television networks stepped in and they provide leadership, but they're not really interested in the sport. They're interested in the TV eyeballs and the revenues from the ads. So, we’ve got leadership that really isn’t interested in the sport as it is, and so it’s a worrisome situation and nobody for sure knows where it’s going to go. And there’s no mandate that says American sports has to succeed.” Knight believes current college sports leaders are “trying to squeeze too many elements into one bottle. You’re not going to unpay athletes, particularly in football. … So, it really makes sense to me to have three different divisions (football, men’s and women’s basketball and Olympic sports)” that are governed separately because trying to come up with a solution that addresses all three divisions is “basically impossible.” Lots more from Knight, including his role in supporting Oregon. (link)
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Alabama AD Greg Byrne joined AthleticDirectorU’s Steph Garcia Cichosz at the 2023 Women Leaders National Convention for a conversation about creating and maintaining a “championship culture” for personal success. Byrne shares his thoughts on habits and routines, goal setting and getting into the “flow state.” Byrne also shares the “aha” moment that took place during his tenure at Oregon nearly 30 years ago in which he realized that strategic thinking included three aspects: honoring a school’s past and history; focusing on today’s on- and off-the-field performances; and creating a vision for the future. Byrne: “Even though you’re going to have challenging things to deal with and you hope that they're minimal to where they don't negatively impact people's futures, you're still going to have challenges any time you deal with that many people. So, when you have those things come up, make sure you take a step back don't react emotionally to it. One of the things as time has gone on for me I've done a much better job of is taking a step back and saying, ‘Okay, we'll get through this, but let's think about things we need to do that are right. … You have to make the right decisions for the young people in your program, for your university and for your department as a whole, and if you keep those things as your focus on your decision-making you'll get through it.” (link)
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Washington is the first Adidas-sponsored school to play for a championship in the College Football Playoff era, per JohnCanzano.com’s namesake, who explains the 10-year, $119M deal struck in 2018 helped UW “erase a cash deficit and stay within range of the Nike-fueled Oregon Ducks” while allowing Adidas to “plant a flag in Seattle.” Now, one source tells Canzano: “It just paid off for Adidas. They got their investment back.” The Huskies receive $5.3M in cash from Adidas each year along with another $5.6M in product and $1.1M for marketing, and Canzano notes UW will also receive a cash incentive from Adidas for winning the Pac-12 championship and is in line to receive a “national championship” bonus from Adidas should they win tonight. (link)
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The Wall Street Journal’s Rachel Bachman highlights Washington’s investment in its football staff and the role it played in keeping OC Ryan Grubb in Seattle when Alabama HC Nick Saban came calling. Simply put, the Huskies “gave him a ginormous raise.” So big, in fact, that his $2M salary is nearly half of HC Kalen DeBoer’s $4.2M salary, a “higher percentage of his head coach’s pay than any other assistant in college football. By contrast, Michigan’s offensive coordinator is paid $1.15M, or just 14% of Jim Harbaugh’s $8.3M salary. … Collectively, no school in a major conference spends a higher share of its coaching budget on assistant coaches than Washington.” (link)
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It’s Personnel…
+ A slew of promotions at West Virginia as Deputy AD Steve Uryasz has been bumped up to Executive Deputy AD and Chief Operating Officer, Senior Assoc. AD Natasha Oakes to Deputy AD/SWA, Senior Assoc. AD Brittney O'Dell to Executive Senior Assoc. AD for Student-Athlete Services & Wellness, April Messerly from Senior Assoc. AD to Executive Senior Assoc. AD for Capital Projects, Facilities & Event Management, as well as Michael Fragale has been elevated from Senior Assoc. AD to Executive Senior Assoc. AD for Communications. (link)
+ Looks like Presbyterian Asst. AD for Strategic Communications Brent Stastny has been elevated to Assoc. AD for Strategic Communications. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ Navy promotes Women’s Golf Interim HC Kylee Sullivan to the permanent post. (link)
+ Michigan Men’s Basketball HC Juwan Howard gave the reins to AC Phil Martelli for this weekend’s matchup against Penn State in the Palestra. Howard made the decision to commemorate Martelli’s return to his hometown of Philadelphia and a venue he coached in for years while leading Saint Joseph's. (link)
+ This morning’s edition of Coaches.wire is ready for your perusal (link)
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ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit weighs in on the future of the bowl system once the College Football Playoff moves to 12 teams. “I think the 12-team playoff is going to create a lot of buzz. How many games will that be, seven total? You have the quarterfinals, the semis and the national championship. … I think we’re headed to – I’m a college basketball fan; we all get our bracket out – March Madness. Tell me about the NIT; how’s that going for you? You know, who is even in the NIT? That’s where the bowls are going next year. I think you eliminate the bowls. Nobody wants to play in them, don’t play bowls. Just have the 12 teams — we’ll get excited about those – and if you want to add maybe five or six more bowls outside of that, then do five or six. But, we’re getting to a point where it’s ridiculous. We’re putting 6-6 teams in bowl games nobody cares about. If players don’t want to play in them, hell with it, don’t have bowl games anymore.” (link)
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The city of Richmond intends to delay buying VCU’s Sports Backers Stadium as city leaders and developers prioritize building an MiLB park within the Diamond District redevelopment, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Eric Kolenich, who adds: “In an effort to lower costs, the city will defer $25M owed to [VCU]. The move is designed to get the baseball stadium across the finish line, as the city quickly approaches a 2026 deadline. But the delay freezes VCU’s ability to build an athletics village.” VCU is counting on the $25M to build a new track and field facility, which will be the first phase of the athletics village. The school was originally slated to break ground last year but has put the planning process on hold. (link)
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On3’s Jeremy Crabtree talks with several football recruits at the Under Armour All-American Game about NIL and how it impacted their recruitment. One recruit explained the biggest offer he received was for roughly $1M over three to four years. "Before all that was even brought up, I had to work my way up, build relationships with the staff and all that properly. Relationships and then development [were factors]. I wanted to win, too. Mostly, we talked about NIL on official visits, and it was mostly before I committed after it kind of blew it down. They would call me and text my phone." Another recruit emphasized the importance of getting NIL offers in writing: "If it ain't on paper, don't believe it. And my family was making sure that I was getting everything that was being told. I definitely do think some schools are going to make it sound good. But some schools try and make it sound too good. They definitely are fronting on the numbers." (link)
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The Michigan-focused Champions Circle raised $100K in matching contributions in less than three hours over the weekend, prompting four more donors to match up to $200K more in pledges by midnight. As of publication this morning, the Champions Circle X feed indicates the tally is above $500K. (link)
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Social n Sport’s Jessica Smith offers a list of items to consider focusing on this year in sports and social media “based on observations, lessons learned and insights from others.” First, Smith calls for an end to “martyr syndrome” in which people who work in sports complain about missing life moments. “The reality is that too few organizations keep a perspective on what we do. We encourage people to make sacrifices, chalk it up to being part of the business, and then create a vicious cycle of martyr syndrome because people who grew up in sports have zero ideas of what some semblance of balance looks like. And in the end, we create burned-out, jaded people in what should be an incredibly fun industry to be part of. … Working in sports is fun. And it should be. But if we don’t find a way to let people RSVP ‘yes’ to those important life moments and not feel guilty about it, our industry will not keep the best and the brightest.” Smith also believes that “if you are investing in video content, you should invest in YouTube. While the platform is slower to build than other social platforms, I would argue that YouTube has one of the strongest and most stable audiences out of any social network,” with 2.7B active monthly users and roughly 122M active users per day. And “thanks to YouTube Shorts, this platform is no longer just for long-form video; it’s a platform that will support an entire video ecosystem. The teams that invest in YouTube and follow best practices will find a video ecosystem that works hard and delivers for them.” Lots more, including Smith’s thoughts on intentional branding, having more fun with content, and the power of access. (link)
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In case you missed Sunday's email...
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Michigan Football HC Jim Harbaugh continues to advocate for student-athletes to be paid. During yesterday’s presser in the lead up to the National Championship game: “I would say this, anyone who is profiting from the student-athletes right now, myself included, coaches, somewhere between 5 and 10 percent, take 5 to 10 percent less -- that would go for any administrator, any coach, any conference, any university, NCAA -- 5 to 10 percent less and maybe a 10 percent tax from the television station more, into one pot for the student-athletes. Maybe that's a start, a way. But some conversations here on how to get it done, because I don't know if people know this, but I've been told maybe 17 percent is going up, the TV contracts are going up another 17 percent next year. Ever-growing. Ever-increasing revenue that it be right for the student-athletes, not just football, all student-athletes, to share in.” (link) (link)
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North Dakota State AD Matt Larsen equates what Frisco is to FCS programs to what Omaha is to baseball programs or Oklahoma City is for softball teams: “When you think about a championship location, every FCS program at the beginning of the year, their goal is to get to Frisco.” Today marks a record 14th time Frisco has hosted the FCS title and the NCAA contract for the game to be held there has two years remaining, plus an option for the game at the end of the 2026 season. NCAA Dir. of Championships and Alliances for DI Football Ty Halpin: “Frisco, obviously, is interested in retaining the game. We do have interest from others. ... We’re way ahead of talking about any of that. Our experience here in Frisco has been unbelievable.” (link)
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Montana AD Kent Haslam’s decision in 2017 to bring back Football HC Bobby Hauck was met with opposition, but Haslam stuck by Hauck and is now in Frisco to watch the Grizzlies play for the FCS Championship today. Haslam: “I've learned in this business to not get too high with the highs or too low with the lows. There's a lot of those, both ups and downs. To be able to step back and soak it all in, it is rewarding. But it's rewarding because it's so much fun to watch other people succeed in this business. They're rare, so you grab those moments and hold on to them. … When you're winning you're a genius, when you're losing you're not. It takes a lot of hard work and a little bit of luck. It takes things lining up perfectly. If you get good people that focus on the right things, good things happen regardless.” (link)
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Washington Football HC Kalen DeBoer is 25-2 in his two seasons on Montlake with one massive kick to go. Of course, the AD who hired DeBoer is no longer with the Huskies & currently leads another Pac-12/Big Ten department. The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner wonders if USC AD Jen Cohen’s hire of DeBoer will lead to more Power 5 big chair opportunities for women (there are currently six female P5 ADs, a number that doesn’t include Iowa Interim AD Beth Goetz) & gets this from Women Leaders in Sports CEO Patti Phillips: “Do I think it will help open doors? Absolutely. It helps amplify the story that women can lead. Football is driving realignment — it’s driving the whole industry. And it’s hard for women to get recognition in the space.” Phillips also notes Football HCs are rarely an impediment to a female AD: “They are pretty open to it. But that’s because most of them are from a newer generation. It’s the presidents and chancellors who need convincing. They’re in a bubble, and they get pressure from their donors and former players. [...] We’re chipping away; you can see the slow cultural shifts. Huge wins are important, and Jen’s move is a big story right now in the Power Five. The DeBoer hire was transformational.” (link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger gets reactions from leaders around the industry on Michigan’s upcoming appearance in the College Football Playoff natty, despite multiple headline-grabbing negative developments around the program, including two different suspensions this season for Wolverines HC Jim Harbaugh. An unnamed Power 5 AD: “That’s a good football team. They are a very good football team, but this shows my concern with the NCAA process. This is our system and it’s unfortunate. The system allows it, which is why we’ve got to change so much.” A former NCAA investigator on the sign-stealing situation: “There will be a robust conversation about it being Level I violations. Without a lot of precedent, it’s tough to say, but you’ve got a competition advantage and it would be significant here.” On the flip side, an anonymous SEC administrator: “I don’t have a problem with them being there. There are much more egregious things going on right now in college football.” (link)
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Women’s basketball stakeholders react to the NCAA’s new media rights deal with ESPN, and Connecticut HC Geno Auriemma says it’s a “great step forward and it really shows how much progress has been made in just one year really. I think this definitely paves the way for a units program similar to the men. There’s still a lot left that we can accomplish and I look forward to it.” South Carolina HC Dawn Staley also weighs in: “I would much rather see it stand on its own. But there’s progress, and I know things won’t happen overnight. There’s progress. This deal lends some respect to our sport, and that’s what we’re searching for.” Former MAAC Commissioner Rich Ensor contends that “once schools see a return on their investment in a given sport they’ll invest more in the sport. No question that it will drive more focus if you have revenue sharing (via NCAA Tournament units). It’s a way coaches can increase their own salary scales because many times salaries aren’t equitable between men’s and women’s (programs). That’s because a lot of times the men’s program brings in a lot more revenue than the women’s.” (link)
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Interesting nugget from Oregon State Men’s Basketball HC Wayne Tinkle on the Pac-2’s coming short-term alignment with the WCC: “We’ll see. Everybody knows that it’s a temporary deal. It’s going to be real interesting in a couple of years when some of the grant of rights are up in some of the other conferences as us and Washington State join hands and try to rebuild to see what direction that goes. A lot of us are talking. We’re already hearing rumblings that some schools that are leaving the Pac-12 aren’t happy. We’ll see, if maybe two years out there aren’t some looking to come back with us.” WCC Commissioner Stu Jackson subsequently tells JohnCanzano.com’s namesake the future alignment of college athletics could look different: “There is a scenario and a vision that may include playing other sports and Olympic sports regionally.” (link)
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Big Sky Commissioner Tom Wistrcill, Summit League Commissioner Josh Fenton and Summit League Associate Director of Digital Content & Video Services Kienan Dixon join The Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman to discuss the Summit League-Big Sky Challenge. After the two commissioners unveil their artistic renderings of each other’s conference logos (Fenton’s was clearly influenced by Post-Impressionists like Van Gogh while Wistrcill’s interpretation could be best described as “Accidental Cubism”) Fenton notes it’s yet to be determined whether the challenge will go beyond the initial three-year deal but adds: “Before we’ve even played a basketball game people are talking about it. You’re talking about it. We’re doing this. Supposedly, Tom and I made media headlines based on arm-wrestling that may or may not take place. … The overall promotion and publicity of our conferences because we’re doing this I think is a positive thing.” Wistrcill adds: “We want this to be a long-term deal. … We’re trying to do it so teams can not only get home games, like opponents get a chance to win games, we think it’s going to help our NET. It’s going to help me and the other committee members evaluate our conferences better when it comes to Selection Sunday. The bottom line is it’s great for college basketball when everybody’s getting home games, and up north we all struggle, so this is a great first step for us. We’re actively looking for other conferences about doing other things like this too.” Goodman then speaks for all of the college sports world – if not all of the civilized world – when he points out the arm-wrestling competition needs to happen regardless of whether the Challenge ends in a tie. (link)
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Action Network’s Brett McMurphy says the 2024 Oregon at Hawaii season-opening football matchup has been scrapped. The two schools now have two of three games remaining in the series that is “still scheduled, sources said.” Hawaii now seeks one more game for the upcoming campaign. (link)
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Due to a leak in the roof at Maryland’s Xfinity Center, Saturday’s contest between the Terps’ women’s basketball team and Purdue was canceled. No word yet on the rescheduled date. (link)
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The NFL was responsible for 93 of the 100 most-watched broadcasts of 2023, including the entire top 20. Aside from the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, the State of the Union Address and the Academy Awards, the entire top 100 is comprised of football broadcasts, including three college games, although Sportico’s Anthony Crupi reports the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament championship game finished just outside as the 101st most-watched broadcast. Among NFL teams, the Dallas Cowboys led the league with an average of 25.2M viewers per game across 13 national TV appearances while accounting for 18 of the year’s 100 biggest audiences. The Kansas City Chiefs claimed 16 of the top slots while the Philadelphia Eagles were responsible for 15. More from Crupi. (link)
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Senior Associate Director of Internal Affairs (Louisiana State University / Baton Rouge, LA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletic Director - Director of Nutrition for Olympic Sports (University of Missouri Athletics Department / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer (Athletic Trainer II) (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Behavioral Health Therapist (West Virginia University / Morgantown, WV): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Athletic Trainer - Track & Field (University of Wyoming - Athletics / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Director for Center for Sports Medicine and Performance (Indiana State University / Terre Haute, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant Strength Coach (University of Miami / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Bloomsburg Athletics / Bloomsburg, PA): (DII) More details HERE.
Mental Health Therapist /Clinical Professor (University of Oregon Athletics Department / Eugene, OR): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Sports Performance (University of North Carolina Wilmington / Wilmington, NC): More details HERE.
Mental Health and Performance Clinician (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Trainer - Volleyball (UCF Athletics / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director, Psychological Health & Performance (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (DePaul University / Chicago, IL): More details HERE.
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There are no current opportunities in this field.
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Assistant Director - Development & Member Services (IPTAY / Clemson, SC): More details HERE.
Graduate Assistant - Ticket Operations & Sales (Auburn University Athletics / Auburn, AL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Ticket Sales & Operations (The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga / Chattanooga, TN): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics Development and Revenue Generation (Drake University / Des Moines, IA): More details HERE.
Ticket Office Sales Representative (Accounting Clerk) (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Asst. VP, Ticket Operations- (Legends at Miami Hurricanes / Coral Gables, FL): More details HERE.
Ticket Manager/Sales & Operations (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
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