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D1.ticker’s Men’s and Women’s Basketball Comparative Rankings… The final edition of the 2023-24 comprehensive rankings is available. Enjoy & thanks to D1.relocation for its support. (Men’s link; Women’s link)
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NCAA President Charlie Baker sits down with AthleticDirectorU’s Jason Belzer to discuss the future of college athletics, including the development of the NCAA’s fan database, transparency issues in NIL, the impact of sports wagering on the integrity of competition and his belief in the power of the student-athlete voice. Belzer asks whether the NCAA has gotten too big in the way it is governed and structured, and Baker says: “It’s not so much about how big it is. It’s about how diverse it is. When you literally have hundreds of schools that spend less than $5M on sports and hundreds that spend less than $10M and hundreds that spend less than $20M and 70 that spend more than $150M and over $200M in some cases, your issue there is less about size and more about spread…which is why I do think the bigger challenge is to stop thinking everybody’s the same. … Let’s give the more heavily resourced schools the ability to do more and then leave it up to the schools to make decisions because the way it’s set up now, you can’t do that. Some of the schools have said to me a number of times that they would like to do more, but the way we currently organize and operate makes it hard for them to do that and they’re right.” Baker also contends that if all student-athletes became employees tomorrow, “it wouldn’t work for 90% of the schools. … If you’re spending $5M on sports and you’re making $500K on those programs and you now have to create an employment infrastructure that sits on top of it, I think you’re going to basically just say, ‘We can’t do this.’” He adds: “Many [student-athletes] worry a lot about what that employee status would mean to their ability to succeed academically if they can’t perform as an employee. … If the issue is compensation, we can solve that one and if the issue is some of the other concerns that people have about voice and influence, they sit on all of our major committees – student-athletes do – and their voice is being heard in a big way.” Lots more in the full interview on ADU, which includes a full transcript. (link)
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Washington State AD Pat Chun joined D1.ticker/Fox Sports’ Bryan Fischer from the NCAA Convention in Phoenix to break down what has transpired over the past year, working on scheduling solutions with the Mountain West and WCC, communicating unity with Oregon State to fans and donors and lots more. Looking ahead to the Cougars’ long-term plans, Chun says that’s the “billion-dollar question for a billion-dollar industry that is fundamentally broken right now. I think when you look at Charlie Baker's proposal or where media rights are taking us where all these court cases are at right now, I think that these are the changes on the horizon. It’s either going to happen to us, it's going to happen for us, maybe we can dictate some of it but that is complicated as well. … Who would’ve guessed two years ago that we would look like this today with essentially unlimited transfers with NIL and collectives the way they are, with a Pac-12 no longer existing? You could have never guessed that two years ago. It’ll be amazing what we look like in two years from now.” Full Q&A on Connect. (link)
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March Madness…
+ Here’s your full Women’s Tournament bracket. (link)
+ The last four in for the women’s tourney: Auburn, Arizona, Vanderbilt & Columbia. Last four out: Penn State, Washington, Miami (FL) & Villanova. (link)
+ Full transcript of Women’s Committee chair & Pac-12 Senior Assoc. Commissioner for Sports Management Lisa Peterson going inside the selections & seedings. (link)
+ Here’s your full Men’s Tournament bracket. (link)
+ Full transcript of Men’s Committee chair & SWAC Commissioner Charles McClelland on reasoning behind the selections & seedings. (link)
+ Boise State, Colorado, Virginia & Colorado State were the last four in on the men’s side. Oklahoma, Seton Hall, Indiana State & Pittsburgh were the first four out. (link)
+ Less than a week after former Nebraska AD Trev Alberts left for the same job in College Station, the Huskers and Texas A&M have been matched up against one another in both the men’s and women’s hoops tournaments. Alberts: “You can’t make this up! Congratulations to Coach Taylor and Coach Williams.” (link, link)
+ The Athletic’s Justin Williams points out that “for those intrigued, confounded, or annoyed by the NET: Indiana State, 29th entering the day, becomes highest-ranked team of the NET era not to receive an at-large bid. St. John’s at 32nd is second-highest. NC State at 33rd in the NET in 2019 previously held the distinction.” (link)
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More Postseason Hoops…
+ Here’s the WNIT field with the full bracket set for release today. (link)
+ Here are your full NIT & CBI brackets. (link)
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SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey talks with The Daily Coach about his career and reflects on how an incident in which he collapsed in an airport while he was commissioner of the Southland Conference changed him. He cites a book by John Ortberg called The Life You’ve Always Wanted in which Ortberg says “something to the effect of ‘Don’t seek balance in life. It’s not too big of a goal, it’s just not enough.’ That re-shaped my thinking about decision-making and principles and how I would live. I learned I needed the opportunity to take a break every so often, to refresh mentally, and I made that an every-two-month objective. … I also went through an annual evaluation of myself after that. Where was I from a friendship perspective, with my family, from a fitness standpoint, financially, with my faith? That’s part of my career decision-making process as well.” Sankey also addresses the increasing amount of turnover among coaches and says: “I can repeat what I hear, which is that it’s hard right now. Most of the people involved as head coaches have worked through their career with a sense of stability around their team from year to year. That’s changed. It doesn’t mean everybody just leaves, but the opportunity to depart is there. The economic opportunities around the student athlete with Name, Image and Likeness have changed, and the combination creates a discomfort. One of my concerns is that if we cannot wrap our arms around an effective answer, we can lose a lot of good people who say, ‘This is not where I want to spend my life’s energy because of the challenges of leading.’ I don’t think that’s everyone, but you’ve certainly heard that theme.” More from Sankey. (link)
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Men’s basketball is on pace for its most efficient offensive season ever “mostly because of how the block/charge foul is being officiated,” according to The Athletic’s CJ Moore. Big 12 Coordinator of Officials Curtis Shaw in October reviewed 100 charges called the previous season, 96 of which would now be blocks, and remarked: “It’s almost impossible to take a legal charge anymore.” In practical terms, “kids aren’t just jumping in front of each other,” Auburn Men’s Basketball HC Bruce Pearl says. Meanwhile, Moore notes that “last season, the average percentage of possessions that ended in a non-steal turnover was 8.9%. This season, that’s down to 7.8%, the lowest rate it has been in the 25 years that the [KenPom] has tracked play-by-play data. Turnovers are also at a record low.” As such, scoring has increased with teams scoring 106.4 points per 100 possessions, compared to 104.8 last season. Baylor HC Scott Drew says of the new rule: “Most coaches are really thrilled with the rule from the standpoint of the game is a lot freer, a lot more open. Fewer collisions, less risk of guys getting injured when you used to have games where there were five-to-10 charges being attempted; that’s a lot of collisions. It’s a lot more like the NBA game, which I know people enjoy.” At least one coach isn’t enamored with the new rule, as Texas A&M HC Buzz Williams argues: “If every 50/50 call is 100% a block, it’s just become the NBA. Let’s score a bunch of points. Let’s make it pretty, et cetera. But I think we have to figure out, are we going to keep playing defensively the same way because so much of what we’re doing … I don’t know if you can keep playing that way.” (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ Ohio State removes the interim tag from Men’s Basketball HC Jake Diebler, who has agreed to a five-year contract. (link)
+ Central Arkansas will tap Alabama-Huntsville (DII) Men’s Basketball HC John Shulman for the same post. (link)
+ Despite not having a signed contract, Arizona State Men’s Basketball HC Bobby Hurley is likely to return to the Sun Devils’ sidelines next season, according to The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner, who writes: “Any argument for a coaching change must include the risk-reward calculation: What’s the likelihood of hiring someone who represents an indisputable upgrade, especially without a permanent athletic director to manage the search? We are increasingly convinced it doesn’t matter who’s in charge.” (link)
+ The full rundown of coaching staff changes across all of college sports can be found in this morning’s edition of Coaches.wire. (link)
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Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale has committed to “providing additional NIL opportunities” for each eligible Houston men’s basketball student-athlete to pay for their families’ travel to the NCAA Tournament. The opportunities are being facilitated via the Cougars-focused LinkingCoogs collective. (link)
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Late Kick Live’s Josh Pate explains he worries college football TV viewership will wane, telling SEC Network/ESPN’s Paul Finebaum that “audience patterns, as you well know, are always well downstream of decisions that get made, sometimes years downstream. What I worry about is if you’re sacrificing what the public at large would define as the spirit of college football, is there a tipping point? Does the seesaw start to swing to where you see mass groups of people do what they did with pro wrestling, do what they did with NASCAR? Is college football immune to that because there’s been no other form of entertainment in the history of this world that’s been immune to that. I think it would be very shortsighted to think college football is immune to that.” (link)
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The Wall Street Journal’s Isabella Simonetti and Robbie Whelan profile ESPN Chair Jimmy Pitaro as he endeavors to remake the company. Simonetti and Whelan underscore previous reporting which stated that ESPN’s league partners – particularly the NFL – were angry at being kept out of the Spulu loop. They report Pitaro called NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell shortly before the company’s press release went out, “which the NFL didn’t see as a legitimate heads up, according to people familiar with the matter. Irritating the NFL, which decides which networks carry which games and can be a major ally for ESPN in the streaming business, was risky.” In the following days, Pitaro reached out to NFL Network CEO Brian Rolapp to smooth things over, and a spokesperson for the NFL says: “The NFL’s relationship with ESPN is as strong as it has been in years and much of the credit for that goes to Jimmy’s leadership.” Within the company, Pitaro’s proponents credit him with being a consensus builder, and former EVP for Content Connor Schell says his willingness to admit what he doesn’t know has helped win over colleagues. “I think there’s a lot of people who would’ve come into the job and been afraid to admit that maybe they had never been in a production truck before. Jimmy instead turned that into a huge strength.” Simonetti and Whelan also posit that “how Pitaro handles the next two years and the launch of the new streaming joint venture, expected in the fall, will go a long way in determining his chances” of succeeding Disney CEO Bob Iger. Full profile. (link)
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The Disney board has identified four leading internal candidates to succeed CEO Bob Iger, according to Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw. Those candidates are Disney Entertainment Co-Chairs Dana Walden and Alan Bergman, ESPN Chair Jimmy Pitaro and Disney Parks and Resorts Chair Josh D’Amaro. Shaw: “These candidates all have major challenges in front of them. Put another way, they have a chance to prove they deserve the top job. Can Bergman get Marvel, Star Wars and Pixar back on track? Can Pitaro figure out how to transition ESPN to the internet? Can Walden build Disney+/Hulu into a credible competitor to Netflix? If the answer to those questions is yes, don’t they merit promotion?” The board will also consider outside candidates. (link)
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In case you missed Sunday's D1.ticker edition…
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The Athletic’s Kyle Tucker catches up with SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey to get more color on Sankey’s March Madness expansion and access positions: “We send 11 seeds to Dayton because that was an agreement to start. But some of those 11 seeds have proven that they go a long way in the tournament. So we do have, I think, a healthy need for review. I understand access, I understand the special nature (of Cinderellas) and certainly respect that, but right now in college athletics, nothing is static. [...] The first time I made a comment, within two minutes, people said, ‘That’s the worst idea.’ Well, that’s actually not an intellectual exercise. I hope there’s some effort to think through things. You have to give credit to teams like Saint Peter’s a couple years ago, Florida Atlantic’s run. There are great stories and we certainly want to respect those great stories, but things continue to change. There’s nothing wrong with a review, and again, I think that’s the healthy kind of conversation that should take place. No time pressure, no expectation among teams. Should we be looking at how we’ve allocated teams for 30 years? Are there other things that should be considered? Sure. That doesn’t predict only this or not that. I think that’s all part of the conversation.” (link)
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Iowa State AD & DI Men’s Basketball Committee member Jamie Pollard via X last night: “This is my fifth year doing this - never have enjoyed Sat night because of how hard it is to select the final teams. This year is harder than all my previous years combined. Just gut wrenching knowing some very good teams will unfortunately not be dancing.” (link)
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Yahoo’s Dan Wetzel reiterates his position that the College Football Playoff negotiations are a far bigger threat to the future of college sports than NIL or student-athlete employment. “If the Big Ten and SEC are able to set a playoff up in direct contrast to how college sports have always operated — codifying more guaranteed access, more guaranteed on-field competitive advantages (including a bye) and more guaranteed money — then the operation may be passing the point of no return. This isn’t just about hoarding power — although that’s part of it. It’s about eliminating other teams and leagues from being able to compete on the field, therefore further destabilizing other conferences. We just saw the century-plus-old Pac-12 perish for no particularly good reason. The ACC and Big 12 might be next.” Wetzel calls the SEC and Big Ten’s maneuvering “particularly preposterous” because given their track record, they would’ve likely dominated the number of spots in the CFP anyway. He goes on to write: “This is what Congress should be focused on, not whether players only care about money these days. They might. If so, they learned some of it from the ADs and commissioners who are willing to transfer portal entire athletic departments after another league tampered and offered a better NIL package via ESPN or Fox.” (link)
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Former Nebraska AD Bill Moos comments on the exit of Trev Alberts from Lincoln: “I’ll point out in my book that at Nebraska, the regents are elected. That means they have a constituency from their respective districts. So, when there’s a perceived issue, one of their constituents can call the regent, and then it’s like any other elected position in that he or she wants to keep their jobs, so they stick their noses in it. Many times a regent would pick up the phone and get after me themselves. Meanwhile, most of the 90,000-plus fans are content. They’re happy. They just want to win games. [...] You know what else creeps in and takes a foothold? It’s the attitude of, ‘This is how we’ve always done it.’ I used to say, ‘Well, you haven’t done it right since 1997.’” Former Huskers AD & legendary Football HC Tom Osborne also chimes in: “As I’ve told you before, the fan base is extraordinary. The facilities right now are in pretty good shape. We obviously don’t have a huge population base. But we’ve been able to attract good athletes. You have to work hard at it because there aren’t large numbers of so-called four- and five-star athletes. There are some, and you have to make sure you keep them here. You also have to develop players. But I think overall, it’s a very good job.” A bit more from On3. (link)
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Clemson is the latest athletic department to partner with Collegiate Sports Connect for talent networking, identification, recruitment and acquisition processes. Tigers Asst. AD for Personnel Engagement & Development Jordy Kirr: “We are excited to partner with College Sports Connect because we work tirelessly to bring the best to the Clemson Family and to develop people once they’re here. Clemson is a unique place that demands unique people, and it is crucial for us to be up-to-date on the latest professional trends and innovations. … Our relationship with Collegiate Sports Connect is another incredible tool in our toolbelt to be able to attract and retain the right people for our organization.” (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman reports UTSA is finalizing a deal with Alabama Men’s Basketball AC Austin Claunch to become the next HC for the Roadrunners. (link)
+ Canisius Men’s Basketball HC Reggie Witherspoon will not return for a ninth season. (link)
+ According to the contract for NC State Men’s Basketball HC Kevin Keatts, winning the ACC tournament results in more than $5.5M in extra money headed his way thanks to an automatic two-year contract extension being triggered (now runs through April 15, 2030), an automatic $400K pay bump that begins next season and stays in place for the remainder of the deal and a $100K bonus for winning the ACC tourney plus at least a $10K bonus for the automatic bid to the big dance. (link)
+ Earlier in the week Long Beach State and Men’s Basketball HC Dan Monson agreed to mutually part ways at the conclusion of the season, and yesterday the Beach captured the Big West Championship and a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Monson after the win: “When Jim Harbaugh says who's got it better than him, someone's got to tell him Dan Monson... I have the 1999 run at Gonzaga, but as Mark Few said over text, why don't we have a run in the first year and a run in the last?” (link)
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ESPN has assigned longtime reporter Holly Rowe as the beat reporter specifically for Iowa’s Caitlin Clark for the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament. Rowe: “We have had a presence on the ground covering the special moments with Caitlin this year, and I have been at every one of her games where she set a record. I see it as an extension of the dedicated coverage we have had with Caitlin all year. I think there is an intrigue and appetite for all things Caitlin.” ESPN VP of Production Sara Gaiero: “(Holly) has been on the Caitlin Clark beat, if you will, tracking and following her and being present with her when she broke records earlier in the year. That level of coverage is needed and necessary and warranted this year. It’s not something we’ve done for the previous first and second rounds for a specific player.” (link)
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SBJ’s Terry Lefton reports from the Licensing Summit in New York, where women’s sports was among the main topics. Sports & Fitness Industry Association President Tom Cove observes that the popularity of Caitlin Clark and Alex Morgan notwithstanding, grassroots athletic participation by girls and women is the most noteworthy trend. “Flag football for girls is now a varsity sport in a lot of high schools. In 10 years, 45 states will have that.” In discussing Clark specifically, he tells Lefton: “The question going forward is whether the Caitlin Clark effect can take the WNBA. We think the platform is there now, but it probably wasn’t 20 years ago. … We’ll be interested to see if her shoe becomes ‘the shoe’ for women basketball players. Now, a lot of them are wearing LeBrons or KDs.” To that end, WNBA Growth Strategy Lead Caiti Donovan remarks: “Everything that we are doing, the wholehearted focus is on translating that 3.2M viewership from Sunday night (when Clark broke the NCAA scoring record) into 3.2M viewers for Caitlin Clark’s first game. We are wholeheartedly focused on what and how and where and why the NCAA [women’s basketball] fan is and how we are translating them into our business.” Another high-profile topic was the amount of effort teams and leagues are putting into fan engagement, and NFL VP of Football Development Strategy Roman Oben says: “Every fan wants more content now and I’ve seen it evolve from when players sat behind a table and signed autographs, because that’s what they were getting paid for, to today’s player, who has brand identity and is coming into the NFL with a bunch of NIL deals and social media following. … Today’s former athlete has a way better platform of engagement and walks away from the game with fans of their own brand and a social following.” (link)
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Interesting development: Both Ole Miss & Indiana Men’s Basketball programs say they won’t consider participating in the NIT in order to focus on roster management. (link, link)
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Pac-12 Networks anchor Ashley Adamson signed off of last night’s post-game show from the Pac-12 Men’s Basketball title game between Oregon-Colorado with a Springsteen quote as the network continues its final go-round: “Everything dies, baby that's a fact. But maybe everything that dies, someday comes back.” (link)
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Earlier this month, the Conference Commissioners Association voted to move the early signing period for football from the third Wednesday in December to the Wednesday before the conference championships earlier in the month, a move designed to put signing day before the transfer portal opens in late December. The traditional first Wednesday of February signing day would remain and there is discussion of a third signing day in June, but the Alabama Football Coaches Association wants none of that, releasing this statement: “There is a proposed early June signing period for high school players. This would mean that athletes would sign with colleges prior to their senior football season. We believe this is not good for high school football as it would lead to possible re-classifying, senior opt-outs and other issues. Therefore, the ALFCA stands strongly against this proposal. We hope that the decision makers will honor our concerns as a coaches association and urge other state associations to share their concerns about the June signing period.” Auburn High School HC Keith Etheredge is among those opposed: “I think a lot of seniors won’t even play their final year if they are already signed. They’ve hurt high school football with all this. It also adds work for the college coaches and puts even more on these high school kids, who are already dealing with a lot. I don’t think they are even thinking about that.” (link)
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JohnWallStreet examines why sports properties spend so much time and effort trying to attract people they think might become fans instead of focusing on the core fan base, and New York Mets Head of Data and Analytics Craig Swaisgood notes the core fans are “the ones who prioritize the team or sport with their discretionary income. … The narrative is typically how do we expand the pie, how do we bring more people in? And you need to keep your eye towards that. But if you’re talking about maximizing revenue, that’s not going to be the most lucrative play.” While the Mets may have as many as 5M fans worldwide, Swaisgood points out that “we have deeply valuable data on about 150,000 to 200,000 fans. Those are the people that we have real insights into. That’s where we make our money. … Run any model you want. Extracting more from the core fanbase is the most efficient way to grow the top line.” Those fans, Swaisgood continues, “have self-selected. They’re choosing what they like with their wallet. Getting them to do more of that is an easier sell.” JWS notes the “other 4.8M can be useful when selling (or upselling) a sponsorship package, or in generating broader exposure for the franchise. Those fans may also consume team-related media. But the club understands ROI will be comparatively low if it directly markets to those individuals rather than its low six-figure core.” Lots more, including how to utilize CRM to target fans based on the data collected. (link)
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Michigan Football AC Greg Scruggs was arrested around 3 a.m. Saturday morning on suspicion of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. The new defensive line coach has been suspended indefinitely while details of the incident are reviewed. Wolverines HC Sherrone Moore: “Greg made an unfortunate mistake and was arrested for operating a vehicle while intoxicated. He made no excuses and has taken accountability for his actions.” (link)
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Graduate Assistant - BroncoLife (Student-Athlete Development) (Boise State Athletics / Boise, ID): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Student-Athlete Development (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): PI237986694 More details HERE.
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Women's Head Basketball Coach/PE Instructor (University of the Virgin Islands / St. Thomas, VI): (NAIA) More details HERE.
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Technical Coordinator, Volleyball (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletics Director of Marketing and Fan Experience (Troy University / Troy, AL): More details HERE.
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Manager of Football Creative (Air Force Academy Athletic Corp / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
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Associate Athletics Director, NIL Innovation & Strategy (DePaul University Athletics / Chicago, IL): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Compliance (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director, Member Events - Black and Gold Club (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Director of Leadership Giving, Athletics (University of New Hampshire / Durham, NH): More details HERE.
Director of Events and Engagement (Tiger Athletic Foundation / Baton Rouge, LA): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Director of Development, Intercollegiate Athletics (Pennsylvania State University / University Park, PA): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate Athletic Director, Chief Development Officer (University of Southern California / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Championship Resources (Louisiana Tech University / Ruston, LA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director/ Chief Financial Officer (Columbia University / New York, NY): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (Kalamazoo College / Kalamazoo, MI): (DIII) More details HERE.
Assistant Vice President for Athletics Development / Senior Associate Director of Athletics (Drexel University / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
Chief Executive Officer (Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) / Open): To apply, e-mail: kyle@bowlsbysportsadvisors.com
Director of Athletics (University of Northern Iowa / Cedar Falls, IA): To apply, e-mail: kyle@bowlsbysportsadvisors.com The D1.dossier for this position is available HERE.
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Athletics Facilities Front Desk Assistant (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Head Groom (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Graduate Assistant - Operations (Louisiana State University / Baton Rouge, LA): More details HERE.
Athletic Equipment Specialist - Football (Western Michigan University / Kalamazoo, MI): More details HERE.
Director, Sports Administration and Championships (Mountain West Conference / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Assistant Commissioner, Sports Administration and Championships (Mountain West Conference / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Sports Administration and Championships (Mountain West Conference / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Operations Coordinator - Facilities and Game Operations (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Equipment Manager (Football) (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Graduate Assistant - Event Operations (Boise State Athletics / Boise, ID): More details HERE.
Rhino Sports Account Manager - Liberty University (REVELxp / Lynchburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Equipment (Stanford Athletics / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Equipment Manager - Olympic (University of Wyoming - Athletics / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
ATH PROFL 3 BYA (Manager, Facilities & Operations) (University of California, Davis / Davis, CA): Job # 64997 More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Equipment Operations (UCF Athletics / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director/Director of Executive Operations (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
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Director of Sports Nutrition, Football (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Sports Medicine / Athletics Health Care Administrator (Barry University / Miami, FL): (DII) More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): PI237957334 More details HERE
Director of Football Performance Nutrition/Dietitian (University of Colorado Boulder / Boulder, CO): More details HERE.
Director of Operations - Sports Medicine (University of Wyoming - Athletics / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director/Director of Nutrition for Olympic Sports (University of Missouri Athletics / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director, Sports Nutrition (Stanford Athletics / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer-Intercollegiate Athletics (University of Illinois Chicago / Chicago, IL): More details HERE.
Senior Performance Coach (UC San Diego / La Jolla, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer, Football - Division Intercollegiate Athletics (University of Illinois / Champaign, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Strength and Conditioning (Harvard University / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Athletic Training (West Virginia University / Morgantown, WV): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer II (California State University, Dominguez Hills / Carson, CA): (DII) More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Athletic Training (Oakland University / Rochester, MI): More details HERE.
Director of Sports Psychology (University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Athletics Department / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
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Director, Corporate Sales (University of South Alabama / Mobile, AL): More details HERE.
Associate Commissioner / Chief Revenue Officer (Conference USA / Dallas, TX): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Ticket Operations (University of Georgia / Athens, GA): More details HERE.
Director of Ticket Operations (University of Tennessee at Chattanooga / Chattanooga, TN): More details HERE.
Director of Sales (University of Louisiana at Lafayette / Lafayette, LA): More details HERE.
Director, Analytics & Ticket Sales Strategy (Auburn University Athletics / Auburn, AL): More details HERE.
Ticket Office Assistant (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Ticketing - Division Intercollegiate Athletics (University of Illinois / Champaign, IL): More details HERE.
Ticket Sales Representative (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Ticket Operations, Department of Athletics (R0006608) (Wake Forest University / Winston-Salem, NC ): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Ticket Operations (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
Senior Account Manager For Ticket Service & Retention (University of Washington / Seattle, WA): More details HERE.
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