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More contract details for new South Carolina AD Jeremiah Donati: The six-year pact starts at $1.9M per year with $100K annual increases. Incentive wise, Donati can earn up to an additional $400K per year highlighted by a department APR score of 986 or above & a GSR of 94% or better, both of which are worth $100K. There’s another $50K on the table for a department-wide GPA of 3.35 or better. Competitive access to NCAA Tournaments, Final Fours & bowl games are worth $25K to $75K. If Donati were to exit Columbia without cause before the end of 2028 he’d owe 70% of remaining base pay, a figure that drops to $500K in 2029 & $250K in 2030. If the university were to make a move, again without cause, Donati would be owed 70% of remaining base pay. The Gamecocks are also covering the full $2.05M buyout Donati owes TCU. All per CollegeAD. (link)
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Michigan AD & College Football Playoff chair Warde Manuel catches up with NOLA.com’s Ted Lewis to discuss his tenure leading the CFP group. On potential changes to the event’s format: “It’s too soon to say it’s broken. I think, let’s not rush it. Let’s see how another iteration goes, and if the commissioners decide to change, then it’s up to them.” As for a future where football pulls away from the rest of the industry framework to create its own entity: “Since I don’t have a crystal ball I’m not sure. But college sports is dealing with a lot off the field (revenue sharing, portal, NIL, realignment, etc.) matters and will continue to do so. College football also will continue to be very popular, but we have to continue to focus on the success of the game and the connections to our student-athletes and the fans.” More. (link)
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Missouri AD Laird Veatch continues to reframe revenue needs for the Tigers: “We’ve got to really engage with not just our donor community, but our corporate partner community. We’ll be pushing on a lot of different levels, and much of it is about working on and maintaining the relationships but also thinking differently than what we have in the past and being willing to get creative with those partners. [...] We’ve talked so much about being the only (power conference) school in the state and the opportunities that are here. We need to unlock that potential, and I think after my time here, I could look back and feel that I was a part of that. That’ll be incredibly rewarding.” In a separate recent interview, Veatch notes: “We call it more competitive excellence because we need the funds we need to grow our overall pie, right? We need to get our revenue that we generate more on par with our counterparts so that we're in a position to pay for that. We're trying to pull all that back in as this now becomes more in-house. So it's trying to streamline and simplify that so fans know there's not these different kinds of confusing zones they can give to. It's really straightforward Mizzou Athletics Fund for game-day-related stuff, if you want to help us above and beyond that, you know, it's the Mizzou Leadership Circle." (link, link)
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USA Today’s Dan Wolken wonders what the future holds for bowl games and notes one “venerable power broker” recently told him: “It’s not sustainable. Is it really a reward when people don’t want to play? The obvious answer might be just don’t do them. I know there's a lot of tradition there, and I'm a traditional (person). I just don’t see how it’s going to work.” While there will undoubtedly be discussion among commissioners on how to best approach non-College Football Playoff bowls when the new CFP contract begins in 2026, Wolken notes: “The reality check here is bowl season, for all its problems, is inexorably linked to ESPN’s December programming schedule. In fact, ESPN owns and operates 17 of those games itself and has broadcast agreements with nearly all of the others. Good luck convincing college football's most important business partner that bowl games are no longer worthwhile when they’re filling television windows over the holidays that generate more viewers than the NBA, college basketball or NHL regular season games that would likely take their place.” Bowl Season Executive Director Nick Carparelli tells Wolken: “People love bowl games and the bowl system. The problem is not with bowl games, it’s with the infrastructure surrounding college football right now that’s negatively impacting the sport at every level. We need to stop making excuses and stop pointing out reasons why we can't make changes that are good for the sport and take some bold steps to fix it.” Meanwhile, another person close to the process says the value of bowl games is increasingly diluted, “and the bowls don't lose money because they've passed all the risk on to the schools. We need to generate more value (to keep them viable).” More. (link)
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Last night’s NCAA Women’s Volleyball Final Four matches between Louisville & Pittsburgh, plus Nebraska & Penn State, drew 21,726 fans, topping the previous Final Four record, set last season, by nearly 2,000. Nebraska’s involvement certainly helps as its string of record-breaking events continues. Volleyball Day at Memorial Stadium last year brought in 92,003 spectators, the 2023 NCAA Championship match between Texas and Nebraska drew 1.7M on television and the Nebraska vs. Wisconsin tilt which aired on the Big Ten Network in 2023 averaged 612K viewers, making it the most-watched contest of any sport in network history. A bit more from Essentially Sports’ Sagnik Bagchi on the Huskers impact. (link)
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Virginia landed another major gift. This time it’s a $3M matching gift from an anonymous donor for the Football Enhancement Fund. More context: “From December 19, 2024, through August 30, 2025, every donation made to the Football Enhancement Fund will be matched dollar-for-dollar by the anonymous donor, doubling its impact. The matching funds will enhance the overall student-athlete experience by prioritizing nutrition, while also enhancing travel and recruiting.” (link)
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Headlining attorney Tom Mars chimes in on the Diego Pavia court decision: “Although the federal court injunction in favor of Diego Pavia is limited to his specific case, it only took 24 hours for me to hear from a former JUCO football player (now a senior) whose head coach gave him my number. I’m sure other sports lawyers are getting similar calls. [...] The ‘roadmap’ for other former JUCO players: Player’s lawyer (paid by school as allowed in eligibility cases per NCAA rule) use Pavia pleadings as template with adjustments showing irreparable harm, citing Pavia ruling. After 3-4 consecutive losses, the NCAA surrenders.” (link)
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Former Alabama Football HC Nick Saban on the Pat McAfee Show yesterday: “Like the first year (2021), we had name, image and likeness four, five years ago, we had $3 million. And everybody was happy. The next year it was $7 (million). The next year it’s $10 (million). And then this year it’s $13 (million). Now we’re looking at $20 (million). Where does it end?” (link)
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Meanwhile, The College Sports Company, which has helped NIL collectives & student-athletes build media networks at the likes of Tennessee, Penn State, Louisville, BYU & South Carolina has raised another $5M from investors for growth opportunities. CEO & Founder Porter Grieve: “We think that right now, schools need to be thinking like entertainment companies. If you want to compete with the big dogs in college sports, you need to be attracting every possible fan you can.” Co-Founder Adam Breneman: “Content and media is going to drive the commercialization of college sports for the foreseeable future. It’s gonna be all about … what schools can become media companies to drive real revenue.” Investors included Crosslink Capital, NBA star & former UCLA standout Kevin Love, as well as Tom Brady-founded media company Shadow Lion. More from Sportico’s Jacob Feldman. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ California Baptist AD Micah Parker goes with Lancers alumnus/Georgia AC Trevor Johnson as the next Women’s Volleyball HC in Riverside. (link)
+ Elon AD Jennifer Strawley taps Johns Hopkins (DIII) HC Matt Troy to lead the Phoenix volleyball program. (link)
+ Louisiana AD Bryan Maggard has made a change in leadership with Men’s Basketball as 15-year HC Bob Marlin has been let go. (link)
+ This morning’s edition of Coaches.wire shows a ton of movement in football, but 23 other sports have changes to report from the past 48 hours, as well. (link)
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In FY24, Northern Iowa contributed $6.3M from the main campus’ general fund to the Panthers athletics department, the most in program history. UNI Director of University Relations Pete Moris: “The landscape of college athletics has shifted significantly in recent years. UNI leadership recognizes that its athletic department must continue to evolve to remain competitive while being fiscally responsible. … In today’s college athletics landscape, it is not practical for any athletic program outside of the Power Four conferences to be self-sufficient. UNI will continue to provide a level of general fund support to athletics within Iowa Board of Regents’ guidelines.” (link)
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Hampton has settled its academic certification process infractions case with the NCAA via a Negotiated Resolution Agreement. The violations occurred during COVID when ”some student-athletes competed while academically ineligible due to unintentional errors in the academic certification process.” Pirates AD Anthony Henderson: “Hampton University has instituted a robust certification model to ensure compliance moving forward. I am also pleased that our student-athletes and programs will continue to compete at the highest level, as no postseason bans, scholarship losses, or recruiting restrictions were imposed.” (link)
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Evan Miyakawa divided all preseason top 75 men’s basketball teams based on those with returners playing at least 50% of the team’s minutes this season and those who were below. “The difference in performance is stark: 39% of the teams who are primarily reliant on returning players are exceeding expectations this year, while only 14% of the teams with predominantly newcomers are doing a lot better than expected. By contrast, over 50% of the newcomer-reliant teams are failing expectations, compared to just 14% for teams with a majority of their minutes coming from returning players.” Of the high-major newcomer-reliant teams Miyakawa looked at, only four (Kentucky, West Virginia, Illinois, and Arizona State) are exceeding expectations based on preseason roster talent, while nine (Louisville, USC, Cal, Vanderbilt, Arkansas, TCU, Washington, Kansas State, and Oklahoma State) are performing worse than expected. Meanwhile, “very few returner-heavy teams are struggling, as just Purdue, Notre Dame, and North Carolina are performing worse than expected. Meanwhile, seven teams (Marquette, Wisconsin, Michigan State, Auburn, Florida, Penn State, and Pittsburgh) are thriving relative to their preseason roster talent.” (link)
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The NCAA Men’s College Cup between Marshall and Vermont drew 174K viewers on ESPN2, up 122% YOY. It was the second most-watched men’s title game since 2010 and was the most-watched game of the tournament on ESPN+. (link)
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Nike reported Q2 earnings after the market close Thursday of $12.35B, down 8% YOY. Earnings per share were $0.78, representing a 24% dip, but both figures beat Wall Street’s diminished expectations of $12.1B for sales and $0.63 for EPS, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. CEO Elliott Hill: “We lost our obsession with sport. Moving forward, we will lead with sport and put the athlete at the center of every decision.” (link)
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In case you missed yesterday's Evening Standard...
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NCAA President Charlie Baker joins the Pat McAfee Show and says he believes there “will be a market that goes alongside the rev-share, and that’s going to be important” once the House settlement is implemented. The question currently being discussed, he adds, is “how do you figure out what information is available to who when? But the most important thing here is there’s a general acceptance and understanding across DI…that there’s going to be a mechanism you have to submit your contract into and get it approved.” As for how long those contracts’ terms will be, Baker says it’ll be up to the schools and the student-athletes, but “then when it gets approved, there’s no more debate about what it is or what it says or what it does. And I think part of what the biggest problem we have now is so much of this is happening through multiple parties. When people talk about third parties, you have a lot of situations that I've been made aware of where there are multiple people who are involved. There are family members, there are friends, there are agents – sometimes real agents, sometimes people who–“watched Entourage” McAfee says. Baker says of U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken: “This judge has been involved in these cases for a decade. This is her issue. To some extent, having her as the final arbiter here is, from the point of view of a lot of people, a really good thing.” Asked whether it’s possible Wilken decides in April that she doesn’t agree with some of the finer points of the settlement, Baker says it’s "theoretically possible, but I kind of hope she wouldn’t have given us the approval if she wasn’t planning to [see it through].” On the Diego Pavia decision: “My big worry about it is there’s a rhythm to college sports and the rules associated with this four years of eligibility…has been with us forever and it’s been how we make it possible to sort of line up academic performance with athletic performance and opportunity and to make sure the next generation of kids have a place to go. If you writ large this decision across the JUCOs – and then maybe somebody says well if JUCOs get two years of eligibility plus four, why shouldn’t anybody who goes to college get six? – [where do high school athletes figure in]? Lots more. (link)
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Northern Illinois has released a statement acknowledging it “has received a formal invitation for the football program to join the Mountain West Conference in 2026. We’re proud of the interest in NIU’s strong brand and proven commitment to the success of our student-athletes as we chart the best path forward for NIU. At this time, we are actively engaged in evaluating our options to best position NIU and our student-athletes across all sports for future success. We anticipate providing an update to our community in early January.” A representative from the school added that Huskies AD Sean Frazier would not be available to make further comments. (link)
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Omaha AD Adrian Dowell has agreed to a contract extension through November 2028. UNO Chancellor Joanne Li: “Adrian Dowell’s leadership and commitment to the lifelong success of our student-athletes and enhancing fan experiences have been instrumental in strengthening Omaha Athletics. This extension reflects our confidence in his vision and his dedication to ensuring UNO remains a cornerstone of pride and excellence for the Omaha community.” (link)
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Legal Matters…
+ Heitner Legal Founder Darren Heitner posits that Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia’s preliminary injunction carries significance far beyond one former JUCO player’s eligibility: “The judge effectively said that the case law relied upon by the NCAA from years past, when the NCAA would regularly win cases, is no longer relevant” in a post-NIL world. “This opens up the door to so many new challenges. For instance, the ‘no-agent’ and ‘no draft’ rules. 1. The ‘no-agent’ rule currently prevents athletes from signing professional representation agreements (i.e. NFLPA Standard Representation Agreements) with agents. Now that athletes can earn NIL money, they should be able to weigh whether to stay in school or go pro, and an agent can help determine a player's pro-market value. The NCAA should lose a case that challenges this rule. 2. The ‘no draft’ rule, which is discussed in the Pavia opinion, prevents a player from entering the NFL Draft and thereafter participating in college football if the player is undrafted. The NCAA has argued that this protects the educational values of college athletes, which may have been convincing in a ‘pre-NIL world.’ But the federal judge in Pavia's case noted that recent rule changes, such as allowing college athletes unlimited transfers aren't intended to ‘benefit an athlete's academic career.’ So, on what grounds should the NCAA be able to resist a challenge to allow an athlete who isn't drafted return to play college sports?” (link)
+ Heitner also notes that many are wondering whether this ruling applies to all JUCO athletes. “I read the Pavia preliminary injunction as only precluding the NCAA from enforcing its rules with Pavia. That could change with NCAA providing clarity and/or additional litigation. Tread with caution. Athletes not named Diego Pavia are considering the possibility of bringing similar actions. I may be filing one in a Florida federal court unless the NCAA quickly decides to put a pause on enforcing its Bylaw that counts JUCO seasons toward the five-year rule. Stay tuned.” (link)
+ Sportico’s Michael McCann is asked for his thoughts on “the likelihood of a non-JUCO athlete taking the next step and fighting the four-year eligibility limit, leading to theoretical unlimited eligibility” and responds: “I think we'll see this happen. The more college sports resembles pro sports, the harder it will be to restrain how long college athletes can play. So long as their school puts them in a full time degree program, there's now a good legal argument they should remain NCAA eligible.” (link)
+ Ohio lawmakers have approved changes that will allow universities to pay student-athletes for NIL through revenue-sharing. The bill also states that student-athletes would not be employees of the university, but they can hire agents or attorneys to represent them in NIL deals with the university. Student-athletes would be prohibited from using the university's facilities or logos for brand deals without the school's approval. The NIL deals would be confidential and not subject to public records laws. Athletes younger than the age 18 would be prohibited from entering into NIL contracts. The bill awaits Governor Mike DeWine’s signature, which is expected, considering it effectively codifies into law his own executive order. (link)
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CNBC has partnered with AthleticDirectorU to rank the 75 most valuable college athletic programs and found Ohio State to be the most valuable at an estimated $1.32B. “The Buckeyes had $280M in revenue in 2023, the most of any school. Other factors that helped propel the Buckeyes to the top of the rankings are an alumni base of over 600K, a fan base of more than 11M, boosters that donated nearly $60M last year, and a football team that routinely has attendance of over 100K at its games.” OSU is followed by Texas ($1.28B), Texas A&M ($1.26B), Michigan ($1.06B), Alabama ($978M), Notre Dame ($969M), Georgia ($950M), Nebraska ($943M), Tennessee ($940M) and Oklahoma ($928M) in the top 10. CNBC’s Michael Ozanian explains the list is “reflective of the current enterprise value of each program, starting with a base revenue multiple of four for all institutions, and then adjusting the multiple for variables, including conference affiliation, estimated NIL spend, school subsidies, number of alumni and other factors that can catalyze future revenue growth and profitability. CNBC and [ADU publisher Jason] Belzer also incorporated the expertise of several people knowledgeable about athletic program valuations to determine the rankings, who requested anonymity in order to discuss details of the programs.” Broken down by conference, the analysis finds the SEC is worth $13.3B, an average of $832M per school; followed by the Big Ten at $13.2B, an average of $734M per school; the ACC at $9.6B, or $562M per school; and the Big 12, at $6.7B, or $420M per school. (link)
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Pittsburgh emeritus trustee John Pelusi is suing the board and Chairman John Verbanac, alleging the board withheld financial and management-related information from him and retaliated against him when he pushed for the information. According to the complaint, Pelusi says he has raised concerns related to the termination of former AD Heather Lyke, Pitt’s NIL policies for student-athletes, “disadvantages” stemming from Pitt’s lack of a home football stadium, and several real estate transactions involving Pitt, among other topics. When he pressed further, Pelusi claims Verbanac revoked his right to attend all board meetings, revoked his access to documents in an online board portal, and said he would “pursue other avenues available” if Pelusi continued to seek answers to his questions. A Pitt spokesperson says the university will “aggressively defend against this action, adding: “We vehemently disagree with the baseless allegations contained within the complaint filed by non-voting emeritus trustee John Pelusi, and we will aggressively defend against this action.” (link)
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With the House settlement looming, Appalachian State AD Doug Gillin says the athletic department is “committed to funding scholarships at least at our current levels with the hope of growing our scholarship funding. Yosef Club membership and contributions have reached record levels for several consecutive years, and we will need to continue to raise those levels to support scholarship funding. We view revenue sharing and NIL opportunities as scholarship enhancements. We continue to work with the University and legal counsel on the best ways to offer scholarship enhancements to our student-athletes within our budget. … App State Athletics currently has an operating budget of $48M. Throughout the last 10 years, we have pursued innovative revenue streams from opportunities such as licensed products and apparel, corporate partnerships, philanthropic giving and special events like summer concerts in Kidd Brewer Stadium. We will continue to aggressively pursue new revenue streams. You will see additional corporate partnerships and naming rights in our facilities, including on-field logos. We will evaluate new ticket and parking models and pursue other creative opportunities to maximize our ability to support our student-athletes.” Gillin also explains that “we have no plans to eliminate positions. We will continue to prioritize prudent spending in our operations as we have each of the past 10 years that we have balanced our athletics budget. We are not planning to eliminate any existing student-athlete scholarships and hope to fund additional scholarships with additional revenue.” (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ ULM Football HC Bryant Vincent will remain with the Warhawks, per Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger, who notes: “Vincent had been pursued for other open jobs, including Jacksonville State. UL-Monroe agreed to increase support for the coach and program.” (link)
+ Lamar inks Football HC Pete Rossomando to a four-year extension. (link)
+ USF has extended the contracts of Men’s Golf HC Steve Bradley and Director of Cross Country/Track & Field Erik Jenkins through their respective 2028-29 seasons. (link)
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JohnCanzano.com’s eponymous publisher reports there were “looming issues in play behind the scenes at Washington State” as it relates Football HC Jake Dickert’s decision to leave. “Ones that Dickert has been reluctant to publicly talk about. But they help frame his decision to leave WSU for what appears to be a marginal job, at best, in the ACC.” Those issues include: “Dickert took a voluntary 10% pay cut after the 2023 football season. So did his assistants. The salary reduction didn’t sit well with the coaching staff over the summer and into this season, where the team started 8-1. Particularly because the cost savings weren’t earmarked to help fund the football program, as in the case of Mike Norvell’s $4.5M cut at Florida State.” One source tells Canzano: “That money savings just went to the bottom line for WSU.” Canzano is also told the WSU Board of Regents is controlling the university’s overall budget, and “for a long while, Dickert told his athletic director and other campus leaders that Wisconsin was the only job he’d ever leave Pullman for. Something changed. I reached out to Dickert. He hasn’t responded. But it looks to me like Washington State’s regents are OK with having a low-resource football program, and Dickert sniffed that out. … The regents at WSU need to do some soul-searching. The Cougars were a low-revenue program in the old Pac-12, do they want to be one in the new-world Pac-12? Time to decide.” (link)
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Kansas State Men’s Basketball HC Jerome Tang believes his team is being unfairly criticized because they’re earning NIL money, and the Wichita Eagle’s Kellis Robinett reports “money has been such a distraction for this team that Tang played the ESPN documentary ‘Broke’ on the drive to Kansas City this week. The first few times he watched the film, he mostly noticed how many professional athletes wasted their pro salaries. This time, though, he paid closer attention to how the athletes in the movie struggled to perform while dealing with the pressure of getting paid.” Tang: “What stuck out was the pressure that they face when they have money because they feel like they’ve got to try and deliver something now because they’re being paid. These young guys, they’re feeling that pressure. For so-called fans to add on top of that, that’s a crime and that’s just terrible. Those aren’t real K-State fans. They’re definitely not our people and with us and what we are about. … I watch NBA games, and they never say that about NBA players who make way more money than that.” (link)
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St. John’s Men’s Basketball HC Rick Pitino writes on X that “I certainly have great respect for the coaches and teams we play but after witnessing multiple problems with the postgame handshake line, we will take a page out of the NBA playbook and refrain.” (link)
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(NEWEST!) Director of Athletics (University of Texas – Tyler / Tyler, TX): Reporting to the President and serving as a member of the President’s Cabinet, the Director of Athletics is a visionary and strategic leader for all athletic programs at the University. (DII) More details HERE.
(NEW!) Senior Associate Athletic Director for External Affairs (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): Provides leadership of a strategic and comprehensive external operations program. Responsibilities include developing and overseeing external revenue generation and operational business units. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Associate Commissioner for Media Partnerships (American Athletic Conference / Irving, TX): Serves as primary liaison with the Conference's TV/multimedia partners and manages the daily execution and maximization of the American's media partnerships and linear/digital broadcast agreements. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Associate Athletics Director, Recreation & Physical Education (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Baltimore, MD): In conjunction with the Director of Athletics, Recreation & PE, the Associate AD, Recreation & PE will direct, plan and organize UMBC’s Recreation & PE programs and support functions. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Senior Major Gifts Officer (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): The Senior Major Gift Officer will cultivate relationships with fans, friends, and alumni with a portfolio of 125 – 150 current and prospective donors, leading to major/principal gifts to support. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Head Football Coach (The College of New Jersey / Ewing, NJ): The Head Coach is responsible for the direction, instruction, and supervision of the Football program as well as the oversight and development of assistant coaches and other team personnel. (DIII) More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 30 days...
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Football Academic Support Intern (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Academic Advisor Athletics (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Coordinator/Senior Coordinator (Football Lead), Athletic Academic Services (R0145346) (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Director of Basketball Academic Success (James Madison University / Harrisonburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Student Services (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Academic Counselor (Kansas State University / Manhattan, KS): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director, Student Life (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director, Academics (University of San Diego / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Director, Student Athlete Development (R0144335) (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
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Business Operations Coordinator (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Business Operations (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant AD, Foundation Finance (Auburn University / Auburn, AL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Business Operations (Georgia Southern University / Statesboro, GA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director-Resource Management (Purdue University / West Lafayette, IN): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Administration (Ball State University / Muncie, IN): More details HERE.
Part-Time Business Office Assistant (University of Denver / Denver, CO): More details HERE.
Senior Associate AD, Sports Administration (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
Athletics Fiscal Specialist - 133366 (University of California – San Diego / La Jolla, CA): More details HERE.
Financial Analyst II (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Strategy and Analytics (Penn State / University Park, PA): More details HERE.
Executive Associate Athletic Director - Chief Financial Officer (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Women's Volleyball Coach (Kansas State University / Manhattan, KS): More details HERE.
Head's Women Soccer Coach (Southeast Missouri State University / Cape Girardeau, MO): More details HERE.
Head Women's Volleyball Coach (Saint Mary's College of California / Moraga, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach / Goalkeeper Coach, Men's Soccer (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Soccer (Bowdoin College / Brunswick, ME): (DIII) More details HERE.
Head Women’s Soccer Coach (Virginia Commonwealth University / Richmond, VA): More details HERE.
Head Volleyball Coach (Central Michigan University / Mount Pleasant, MI): More details HERE. The Coaches.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Head Volleyball Coach (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE. The Coaches.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Volleyball (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
Head Volleyball Coach (Oral Roberts University / Tulsa, OK): Please email any interest to kaity@bowlsbysportsadvisors.com More details HERE. The Coaches.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Assistant Volleyball Coach (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Women's Basketball Video Coordinator (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Women's Soccer Assistant Coach/Goalkeeper Coach (Duke University / Durham, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Tennis Coach (Johns Hopkins University / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Chief Executive Officer (Women's Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) / Anywhere, US): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director Marketing & Fan Engagement (Florida International University / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Senior Broadcast Engineer - Full Time/Exempt (Insignia Event Services / Glendale, AZ): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director of Marketing and Branding (East Tennessee State University / Johnson City, TN): More details HERE.
Athletics Communications Assistant (10 months) (Johns Hopkins University / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Creative Services (Post-Production) (Boise State University / Boise, ID): More details HERE.
Video Broadcast Graduate Assistant (2 Positions) (Mercer University / Macon, GA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Broadcasting (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director for External Relations (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Marketing, Fan Engagement, and Revenue Strategy (University of San Diego / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Digital Strategy (Football) (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
Director, Athletics Communications and Creative Services (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
Director of Digital Marketing (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Digital Strategy (University of Washington / Seattle, WA): More details HERE.
Director/Assistant Director of Marketing and Fan Engagement (East Texas A&M / Commerce, TX): More details HERE
Assistant Director of Marketing (United States Air Force Academy / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Assistant A.D., Video / #Content (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Video (Duke University / Durham, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Marketing & Fan Engagement (William & Mary / Williamsburg, VA): More details HERE.
Broadcast & Video Production Coordinator (Southeast Missouri State University / Cape Girardeau, MO): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Marketing (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
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Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) Coordinator (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Compliance Coordinator - Athletics (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for NCAA Compliance (Monmouth University / West Long Branch, NJ): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Compliance (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director-Resource Management (Purdue University / West Lafayette, IN): More details HERE.
Associate General Counsel (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Compliance (Kennesaw State University / Kennesaw, GA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Director of Athletic Compliance (Football) (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
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Chief Revenue Officer (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) Coordinator (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Development and Alumni Engagement - Athletics (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Director of Development 1 or 2 (Washington State University / Pullman, WA): More details HERE.
Assistant AD, Foundation Finance (Auburn University / Auburn, AL): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Development (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Coordinator - Athletic Development (Middle Tennessee State University / Murfreesboro, TN): More details HERE.
Senior Director/ Director of Development - Major Gifts (University of Georgia / Athens, GA): More details HERE.
Director of Heritage Association (University of Southern California / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Director of Development Communications (University of Southern California / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE
Assistant AD for Annual Fund & Premium Seating (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development Operations (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Development (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Donor Relations & Stewardship (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Donor Communications & Events (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Director of Revenue Growth (Illinois State University / Normal, IL): More details HERE.
Director of Development - Annual Fund (Tarleton State University / Stephenville, TX): More details HERE.
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Commissioner (St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference / Belleville, IL): (DIII) More details HERE.
Athletic Director (Augsburg University / Minneapolis, MN): (DIII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Development (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Administration (Ball State University / Muncie, IN): More details HERE.
Deputy Athletic Director, Chief of Staff (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE
Senior Associate Athletic Director, Student Life (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (Midway University / Midway, KY): (NAIA) More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Equipment Operations/Olympic Sports (University of South Florida / Tampa, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Facilities & Operations (University of Notre Dame / Notre Dame, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Event Management and Operations (SUNY University at Albany / Albany, NY): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Event Management & Camps (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Director - Landscape, Turf, and Grounds (University of Missouri / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Event Management (University of Missouri / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Athletic Events & Rentals (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Administration (Ball State University / Muncie, IN): More details HERE.
Facility and Student Programming Coordinator (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Part-Time Assistant Equipment Manager (University of Denver / Denver, CO): More details HERE.
Director, Maintenance (Stanford University / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Equipment Manager for Olympic Sports (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Williams Arena/Maturi Pavilion (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Client Services Manager, UNO Athletics & Events (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
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Coordinator of Athletics Administration (Drake University / Des Moines, IA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate AD, Sports Administration (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
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Director of Mental Health (Wichita State University / Wichita, KS): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer (Long Beach State University / Long Beach, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (University of Alaska – Anchorage / Anchorage, AK): More details HERE.
Assistant Sports Performance Coach - Olympic Sports (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer - Women's Soccer & Women's Water Polo (Iona University / New Rochelle, NY): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Middle Tennessee State University / Murfreesboro, TN): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer I (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Brown University / Providence, RI): More details HERE.
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Account Manager - Athletic Corporate Partnerships (Clemson University / Clemson, SC): More details HERE.
Director of Sales - Holy Cross Athletics (Peak Sports MGMT / Worcester, MA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Ticket Office Manager (University of Montana / Missoula, MT): More details HERE.
Director of Ticket Sales (University of New Mexico / Albuquerque, NM): More details HERE.
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