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ESPN’s Pete Thamel: “NCAA Senior VP of External Affairs Tim Buckley tells ESPN that a report in Boston linking NCAA president Charlie Baker to a Senate run in Massachusetts is ‘untrue.’ He adds: ‘In the last several days alone, Charlie has been in North Carolina for the DI women’s soccer championship, Texas for DII football finals, Kentucky for DI women’s volleyball semifinals and will be in Tennessee soon for the NCAA convention – he’s clearly not running for any political office and is solely focused on the future of college sports. That report is untrue.’ Buckley helped run Baker's prior campaigns in Massachusetts.” (link)
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Former Duke AD and current Huron Consulting Senior Advisor Kevin White joins MB Sports’ Matt Banker to discuss the upcoming release of White’s new book, A Good Sport: Lessons and Reflections from a Lifetime In College Athletics. In the first of a two-part conversation, White talks about his start in athletics, what characteristics ADs need to focus on in today’s landscape, whether college football should break away into its own entity, whether the U.S. government should invest in Olympic sports and lots more. White believes “untethering any aspect of college athletics from the academy is the wrong move. … I have a great sense of who I am and where I came from and I think the experience we provide – now it’s 500K student-athletes within the NCAA system relative to 1,100 institutions – it’s an experience they can’t get anywhere else on the campus. It’s a very unique experience, and the further we move intercollegiate athletics away from the academy that experience will then become marginalized. … I look at what’s going on now and I wonder what’s going to happen to graduation rates. They’re going to plummet. I mean, we worked so hard in the ‘70s and the ‘80s and the 90s on academic performance and on making darn sure that we were providing kids with an opportunity for a life-changing experience, and I really worry about where it’s going.” White goes on to contend that the U.S. should’ve long ago looked at investing in its Olympic sports. “We’re the only country in the world where there isn’t any federal or governmental resource provided to Team USA or the country’s Olympic program.” From an athletic department perspective, White asks: “What’s wrong with funneling the resources from football and basketball? I think we need to continue to do that and it’s been part of the fabric of higher education since the beginning of higher education in our country.” Lots more. (link)
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Heitner Legal Founder Darren Heitner notes that Miami (FL) men’s basketball student-athletes have a special 30-day window to transfer based on HC Jim Larranaga’s midseason retirement. “But is it an illusory benefit? What’s the point of transferring if those players can’t participate for the remainder of the season? It could be the next lawsuit against the NCAA unless an exception is made. Stay tuned.” (link)
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Maine signs a seven-year deal with New Balance, which will continue to be the official footwear and apparel provider for the Black Bears. (link)
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Cincinnati is approximately six months away from opening its indoor performance center, which was made possible by the largest single gift in Bearcats history by Larry and Rhonda Sheakley. In addition to a 120-yard turf field by Motz, the facility will have the latest in weights, machines, recovery pools and training tables, plus the players have their own lounge, fueling station, cafeteria and barber shop. Longhorn Lockers will be installed this winter, which will have air circulation, storage compartments, charging stations and recliners. There will also be a display area from Nike featuring the latest UC uniform combinations, another display listing lettermen and another honoring those who have made it to the NFL. The building is primarily a football facility but other teams will have access. Ground was broken in May 2023, a beam ceremony was held this past August and the 96K-square-foot center is scheduled to open at the end of May 2025. Gensler MSA is the architect on record, with Messer Construction on the job, as well. (link)
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Coaches Corner presented by D1.relocation…
+ Saint Mary’s AD Mike Matoso goes with USC AHC Tyler Hildebrand to lead the Women’s Volleyball program in Moraga. link)
+ Gonzaga hires UT Arlington Volleyball HC J.T. Wenger for the same position. (link)
+ Picking up a seventh win of the season in last night’s Liberty Bowl, Arkansas Football HC Sam Pittman earned a $250K pay bump, effective January 1. (link)
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Our deepest condolences to the family and friends of longtime CBS Sports broadcaster Greg Gumbel, who has passed away at the age of 78 after a battle with cancer. (link)
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Florida Citrus Sports CEO Steve Hogan on toeing the line between creating viral sports moments and marketing gimmicks with games like the Pop-Tarts Bowl: “You don't want to cheapen the game in any way. I mean, it is a heck of a football game. We have four ranked teams (in the Pop-Tarts and Cheez-It bowls), we’ve got a Heisman Trophy finalist playing in our Pop-Tarts Bowl, and they're here to put on a show and introduce themselves in the NFL in a different way hopefully and all that. You can have fun [during] timeouts, TV timeouts, there’s different things out around the edges – I know last year our Pop-Tart mascot was out there dancing a little bit, having some fun with the game official. I thought we were starting to get in there and blur the line a little bit, so you have to back a few things off a little bit, but for the most part you want to leave what’s happening inside the box, if you will, with the players and the teams and the coaches and their job that they have to do and kind of respect that. But at the same time have fun out and around that.” (link)
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The Chronicle of Higher Education’s Lee Gardner examines how the Trump administration could impact higher ed’s finances and notes the “most obvious possibilities include fallout from looming tax reform, adjustments to the Pell Grant, and changes big or small to the Education Department, including its possible demolition.” Gardner points out that reform appears inevitable. “Many of the tax cuts enacted by President Trump in 2018 during his first term will expire in 2025, and he will no doubt want them extended.” NACUBO VP for Policy and Research Liz Clark: “That’s going to come with a cost. We fully expect that lawmakers are going to be looking for offsets to help pay for those tax cuts. So it is possible that they may look to some of the existing tax provisions that impact college students and colleges and universities as well.” Meanwhile, Pell grants could either be in danger or be expanded, as Gardner notes: “On the one hand, the president-elect has asked billionaire businessmen Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head a new federal Department of Government Efficiency to slash government spending, and Pell Grants may be on the chopping block. In an editorial in The Wall Street Journal last month, Musk and Ramaswamy wrote that they planned to cut costs in part by targeting the more than $500B in federal expenditures that are not currently ‘authorized’ by legislation but are funded year to year by congressional budget resolutions.” As far as the possible elimination of the Education Department, Appalachian State professor Andrew Koricich points out it cannot be done unilaterally by the executive branch. “You still need congressional approval to eliminate a cabinet agency, and I don’t think we can just assume that, on the very narrow majorities in both chambers, there are just people who are going to sign up to eliminate that department.” Lots more. (link)
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In case you missed yesterday's Evening Standard...
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NCAA President Charlie Baker could be considering a run for the U.S. Senate against incumbent Ed Markey (D-MA), according to Democratic analyst Mary Anne Marsh, who says: “Baker is in Massachusetts all the time, endorsing candidates, doing the Boston Pops, all of it. He certainly looks like someone who's running.” Republican analyst Rob Gray agrees and believes Baker has a chance to win. "I mean, he's the exception. He's run twice for governor and won successfully. He can raise the money and Ed Markey has a lot of problems." A Baker candidacy is still far from a sure thing, though, as he would have to give up a $3M annual salary and could face an uphill battle convincing voters to send another Republican to Washington, his popularity notwithstanding. Gray adds: “Instead of getting beat up by a Congressional committee like Charlie Baker did recently, he could be on the committee asking the questions.” (link)
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The NCAA Football Oversight Committee is expected to consider allowing Army West Point and Navy to each play an extra regular-season game prior to the AAC championship game in early December, CBS’ Dennis Dodd reports, noting that such a change would require the NCAA to modify its rules that limit teams to 12 regular-season games. Black Knights AD Mike Buddie: "When it was a four-team playoff, there was language in the agreement that if Army or Navy was in consideration, they would hold off on the [CFP] announcement until after the Army-Navy game. When they switched to the 12-team playoff, they removed that language, which essentially rendered the Army-Navy game irrelevant for conference standings and irrelevant as a data point for the CFP. So it makes sense for [Navy AD] Chet [Gladchuk] and I to approach it from this angle." Traditionally, the two teams played 11 regular-season contests before the annual matchup, and Buddie adds: "We thought, 'Hey, give us the opportunity if we want to schedule a 12th data point and be on the same footing with, for example, a Boise State this year, to have that option.’” Dodd notes that “such a rule change would also impact the Big Ten if it follows through with its ‘Championship Saturday’ playoff play-in concept detailed by CBS Sports earlier this month. That concept is not on the next oversight committee agenda and would be complicated as it requires the approval of automatic playoff qualifiers. That's an ongoing CFP issue.” (link)
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USC has issued a statement regarding the football team’s stay at the Virgin Hotel in Las Vegas, where workers are currently on strike. The university says that it “repeatedly asked” the Las Vegas Bowl for viable alternatives, but the bowl was unable to change hotels on short notice. The Trojans say they are “very disappointed” that the team has been “placed in the middle of an ongoing labor dispute as a result of a decision made by the Las Vegas Bowl several months ago.” (link)
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Extra Points publisher Matt Brown weighs in on the debate over strength-of-schedule’s role in setting the College Football Playoff field and notes that football differs from other sports in two significant ways: “For one, college football teams don’t play very many games. The regular season is only 12 games. A college baseball team will play around 60 games. A basketball team will play around 30. Almost everybody plays substantially more than 12 games, which means that any SOS analysis will have more data points and provide more accurate measurements.” Furthermore, Brown points out that college football teams play the vast majority of their games within their own conferences, and “without intersectional data, we can’t know if ANY of those teams are actually any good. We just assume they are, because of their budgets, recruiting rankings and brand.” Assigning a data-based number to SOS makes it difficult for media observers to criticize the metric itself, and while being data-driven is wise, Brown argues it “doesn’t matter how clever your R and Python calculations are or how sophisticated your model is if the data you’re using sucks. … In the case of a playoff selection committee, understanding that strength-of-schedule (whether you use FEI or ESPN Power Ranks or ELO Chess or OMGBBQ or whatever) will have certain limitations means that you want to supplement that data with other data. I’d personally recommend efficiency-based data, like SP+, that shows how teams performed on a play-by-play basis, but certainly there are others. The only reason you have a committee is that you believe you need humans to parse and evaluate multiple datasets, right?” Brown goes on to posit that “I do not believe that teams, administrations, and for that matter, media outlets, are good enough at the data verification part of the equation. You can make a real pretty graph and come up with a great plan based on that graph, but if the numbers don’t represent what you think they do…it won't help anybody.” (link)
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CBS’ Brandon Marcello notes that the longer schedule associated with the expanded College Football Playoff means teams must find new ways to stay fresh, and “Sport science can only go so far to prepare a team for the rigorous schedule. Take it from the coaches who faced similar workloads in the past at the FCS and Division III levels. Their advice: if you're only preparing now for the additional workload in December, you're already too late. Cutting back on practice time, padded practices and individual drills is a process that must begin in September to be best prepared for the grind of December.” North Dakota State's 2019-20 team is the only other team in the FBS or FCS to post a 16-0 record since Yale did it in 1894, and Fresno State Football HC/then-Bison HC Matt Entz says he was always “on edge” that year because “I didn't want to screw it up or miss something or assume something was being taken care of." That meant monitoring the workload on players, which resulted in more walkthrough sessions than practices, particularly near the end of the regular season. Entz adds: “At some point it's the mental makeup of your team and they need an opportunity to step away from ball for longer than 24 hours.” Kansas State HC Chris Klieman, Entz’s predecessor at NDSU, notes that the “modalities for recovery are 10 times better now than they were. It was something you needed to be intentional about." More. (link)
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Washington Post contributor Steven Godfrey bemoans the take merchantry from pundits during this year’s College Football Playoff, writing: “ESPN eschews any kind of ombudsman-like public disclosure and seemingly leans into willfully ignoring its own role in creating the news it claims to objectively report on. We’re never told the difference between editorial standards on regular ESPN compared with the SEC or ACC Networks it operates, and often talent migrates among those brands. It’s confusing, either by design or the absence of forethought. … When ESPN creates smart, intelligent coverage of college sports, or even hosts a more measured debate over something like first-round blowouts and SEC teams’ résumés, such as what SportsCenter anchor Scott Van Pelt routinely does, it earns a fraction of the attention of the bombastic takes designed to ‘embrace debate.’” That said, and despite the on-air punditry of those on the network suggesting the SEC should’ve had more teams in the field, Godfrey points out that “ESPN is heavily invested in the success of the larger-formatted College Football Playoff. If you believe they’re in the tank for one business partner, they can’t simultaneously do the same thing for another. … It’s easy to believe ESPN is orchestrating a companywide conspiracy on behalf of the SEC to better its business dealings, because the structure of college football’s business actively promotes the idea. The reality is far less compelling: Shouting the most extreme opinion in the loudest manner possible is a path to success at America’s largest sports media company.” (link)
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Kansas Volleyball HC Ray Bechard is retiring after leading the Jayhawks to 496 wins over 27 seasons. (link)
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The Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl by Gin & Juice has revealed its field. You won’t want to miss the end zone art. Have a look! (link)
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UCLA has signed a one-year partnership with Cudis, makers of an AI-powered smart ring that allows users to control their own health data and earn rewards for physical activity. Cudis will also pursue NIL deals with UCLA student-athletes in sports including football, women’s gymnastics, and men’s and women’s basketball, tennis and golf. Cudis rings are built on the Solana blockchain platform and are powered by AI and Web 3 tech. Similar to popular smart rings from Oura and Samsung, Cudis rings track health metrics such as heart rate, sleep, stress and calories burned. Cudis also offers an AI Coach feature that provides personalized health insights. (link)
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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.
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Associate Athletics Director of Finance and Business Operations (Seattle University / Seattle, WA): More details HERE.
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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.
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Head Coach - Volleyball (Johns Hopkins University / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Director of Operations, Track (William & Mary / Williamsburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Football (Harvard University / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Field Hockey (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Volleyball Coach (Southern Illinois University Edwardsville / Edwardsville, IL): More details HERE.
Head Football Coach (The College of New Jersey / Ewing, NJ): (DIII) More details HERE.
Head Men's Soccer Coach (The College of New Jersey / Ewing, NJ): (DIII) More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Volleyball Coach (Kansas State University / Manhattan, KS): More details HERE.
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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.
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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.
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Associate/Sr. Associate AD, Strategic Communications (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Commissioner, Marketing and External Operations (West Coast Conference / San Bruno, CA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for External Affairs (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
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
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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.
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Assistant Director of Compliance for Athletics (Florida Atlantic University / Boca Raton, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Compliance (Miami University / Oxford, OH): More details HERE.
Director of Compliance (University of California – Riverside / Riverside, CA): More details HERE.
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.
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Assistant Director of Development, Major Gifts & Donor Relations (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
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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.
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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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Associate/Sr. Associate AD, Strategic Communications (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (University of Texas – Tyler / Tyler, TX): (DII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for External Affairs (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
Commissioner (St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference / Belleville, IL): (DIII) More details HERE.
Athletic Director (Augsburg University / Minneapolis, MN): (DIII) More details HERE.
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Deputy Athletic Director, Chief of Staff (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE
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Director of Athletics (Midway University / Midway, KY): (NAIA) More details HERE.
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Associate Athletics Director, Recreation & Physical Education (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Baltimore, MD): More details HERE.
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.
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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.
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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.
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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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Assistant Athletic Trainer (New Mexico State University / Las Cruces, NM): More details HERE
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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Associate Commissioner for Media Partnerships (American Athletic Conference / Irving, TX): More details HERE.
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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Senior Associate Athletic Director for External Affairs (University of Nebraska at Omaha / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
Assistant Ticket Office Manager (University of Montana / Missoula, MT): More details HERE.
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