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KRQE News has obtained New Mexico State President Valerio Ferme’s termination letter to former AD Mario Moccia which read, in part: “This letter will serve as notice of termination of your employment as the NMSU Director of Athletics for cause, effective February 2, 2025. You will be provided with paid administrative leave for one month, beginning today and ending February 2, 2025.” In the letter, Ferme also instructed Moccia that he would have to contact HR to retrieve his personal items from his office within one week. Moccia also had 24 hours to turn over all NMSU materials, including recruiting records, keys to NMSU vehicles, credit cards, devices, and any other NMSU property. Ferme said NMSU would give him up to two weeks to return any courtesy vehicle he may have received. (link)
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More from Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger on how schools are preparing for the House settlement implementation, as one collective official talks about spending beyond the revenue-share cap: “If you’re not spending close to $20M all-in on your football roster, you’re not going to be in the top 20 of schools. That’s where we are trending. The trick is, what’s that regulatory body going to look like to justify the $7M for your football roster?” Opendorse Co-Founder Blake Lawrence tells Dellenger that “the big question will be the clearinghouse and the role in determining fair market value. Is it on a per-activity basis or per-contract basis? If a collective is going to pay an athlete $100K over the course of a year, it may raise a red flag, but what if they break it down: 20 appearances at $5,000 a pop?” With the settlement slated for a July 1 effective date, The Collective Association President Russ White expects there to be some “big paydays” before then as “schools are getting as much money off the books as they can.” SANIL Co-Founder Jason Belzer says the market is inflated by 40% right now and he anticipates the number of quarterbacks making at least $1M (currently around 10, he says) to at least double, if not triple. He projects the average power conference starting quarterback annual salary to be $700K — a 100% jump YoY. “It’s the definition of what happens when you give somebody a blank check. It’s like how lottery winners go bankrupt. ‘Here’s a $20M budget that we’re going to pay! Go spend it!’” (link)
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With bowl ratings particularly strong this season, Bowl Season Executive Director Nick Carparelli tells SBJ’s Ben Portnoy: “It continues to amaze me how some people want to diminish the excitement and the impact of bowl season when year-in and year-out it delivers, in a way, far greater than almost any other sporting event you can create in a three-week time period.” Charlotte Sports Foundation Executive Director Danny Morrison adds: “A lot of questions have been answered in this particular bowl season. It was the first year of the [expanded] CFP, and there were some questions about, ‘Well, I wonder the impact that it might have on the non-CFP games.’ For the metrics to say that the non-CFP games were compelling…and then the TV ratings were even better than they've ever been, that answered a lot of questions.” While opt-outs remain a concern going forward, Carparelli notes several collectives are now including language that makes certain payments contingent on players competing in bowl games and tells Portnoy: “This year, more than [anything else], has proven what we've been saying: College football needs bowl games. The College Football Playoff is awesome. … And regardless of how big the CFP may ever get, there's never going to be enough opportunities in the playoff alone to reward deserving teams for a successful season, especially when the definition of success is very, very different for some schools than they are for others.” (link)
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ESPN President of Content Burke Magnus adds some numbers: “Here is my annual post to the ‘there are too many bowl games crowd.’ The 33 non-CFP bowls on ESPN nets this year averaged 2.7M viewers +14% YoY & the largest audience since 2019-20 & P18-49 (+21%). 14 of the 33 bowls hit at least a 5-year high and five hit a 10-year high.” (link)
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Colorado State has renewed its unlimited jobs posting bundle with D1.ticker & CollegeSports.jobs. The Rams also added access to Collegiate Sports Connect’s Talent Finder to supplement its talent identification & hiring processes for open roles in Fort Collins. (link)
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College hockey’s independent schools have discussed holding a postseason tournament, according to College Hockey Insider’s Mike McMahon, who notes that a “rough outline for one that would coincide with the conference tournaments has been developed. Sources said Lindenwood would likely host the tournament because it has the facilities to host multiple teams and is centrally located between the Eastern schools (Long Island and Stonehill) and the Alaskan schools.” The programs aren’t necessarily trying to organize the tournament for a bid in the NCAA Tournament, which McMahon notes would not be forthcoming anyway since there are only five teams. Rather, the coaches “want something to play for at the end of the season. This would allow the independent programs to compete for a tournament championship after the regular season. One hangup is the NCAA allowing the teams to exempt those games from their 34-game maximum. For now, everything is in wait-and-see mode. Some coaches hope the tournament will happen as early as next season.” McMahon adds: “I hope we see this happen. From a coaching standpoint, it has to be challenging to keep players motivated for the entire year when there isn’t a playoff to play for at the end of the season. At least this would allow those teams to compete for a trophy, like the schools in leagues. If all this needs is the NCAA to exempt the games, I hope they approve it and the plans move forward. It’s all about the student-athlete experience, right?” (link)
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Wisconsin Women’s Hockey HC Mark Johnson raves about the team’s experience at Wrigley Field over the weekend: “You know, the only thing I missed out on was going out for warmups and participating, because, I mean, how often would you get a chance to skate at Wrigley? Like, never. Those are just moments that are special.” The Badgers fell in a shootout loss to Ohio State, but UW captain Casey O’Brien said after the game: “I don’t think the score is gonna be the big takeaway from this. I think just like, pregame, getting to walk around, see everything. … It was such a cool opportunity for our team. Regardless of how the game was going to go, we were going to come out with a smile. We’re really honored to be provided this opportunity that was so special, and I think everyone's probably going to remember this for the rest of their lives.” Men’s hockey student-athlete Ryland Mosley adds: “The (national) anthem, I had chills the whole time. And just looking around and seeing all those people, they were loud, and it was just a great atmosphere.” The Big Ten reported an attendance of 24,788 on Saturday after 25,709 for two men’s games Friday, when Notre Dame tied Penn State and won an eight-round shootout and Ohio State edged Michigan. (link)
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Coaches.wire continues to track every coaching staff move across the country. This morning’s edition featured a long list of football changes, as well as notable transitions in Women’s Volleyball & over a dozen other sports. (link)
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Sun Devil Source’s Chris Karpman reports that when a large portion of NIL money Arizona State men’s basketball student-athletes Joson Sanon and Jayden Quaintance had expected to receive from a docuseries deal did not materialize several months ago, “other methods of servicing the agreements were undertaken to ensure the players would still be paid in full.” Quaintance’s father, Haminn, confirmed as much responding to a Barstool Arizona post suggesting that ASU's NIL interests were unable to pay: “Fake news. [Sun Devils HC Bobby] Hurley and [Rossini] kept their word and went above and beyond." When asked whether the docuseries never making it to production has had a negative impact on recruiting, Hurley responded: "Not at all. I think you saw that with the responses (from Sanon and Quaintance's father). We honor our commitments here.” Hurley also noted that “a lot of times in business negotiations things break down and you don't get a deal done. It happens all the time in the business world. So, we didn't get the deal that we hoped we could get with that. We're going to explore and be creative and try and find ways to maximize our NIL program and we'll still continue to talk to people if we find a situation that makes sense. Otherwise, I have an E:60 myself, so I don’t need the extra publicity. I’m good.” (link, link)
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Momentous Sports Partners has officially launched as a full-service NIL agency with a list of 27 clients headlined by high-profile men’s basketball student-athletes including Kansas’ Hunter Dickinson, North Carolina’s R.J. Davis, Baylor’s Jeremy Roach and Auburn’s Johni Broome. Co-Founder Joey Pennavaria says the agency will focus on players who plan to play multiple years in college. “We want to be somewhat complementary, but also not even necessarily recruiting the same guys as the top NBA agencies. Those guys are gonna go after the Cooper Flaggs, the guys that are for-sure one-and-dones. Those were the guys we wanted to recruit. But there’s so many more athletes now in college basketball that need representation because they’re professionals as well and can make really good money – life-changing money. They’re not NBA deals or NBA-sized deals, but there’s so many of these guys that need this help. That’s the white space that we saw.” (link)
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The total number of FBS players to enter the transfer portal surpassed 2,200 on Monday, according to ESPN’s Max Olson, who notes that “when you take out the players who've withdrawn from the portal, you're left with 2,095 scholarship transfers as of Monday night. Getting to 2,095 transfers in this portal cycle by Jan. 6 represents an almost 30% increase in transfers year-over-year.” So far, more than 1,100 transfers have committed to or signed with their next school, including 260 Group of 5-to-Power 4 transfers, a nearly 40% increase YoY. Olson also submits that this year’s cycle is the first to truly resemble free agency in pro sports. “The shift to revenue-sharing in 2025 and Power 4 athletic departments preparing to invest $10-15M in their football rosters for next season has pumped more money into the marketplace than ever before. The cost of retaining players and recruiting transfers has significantly increased this offseason as more players depend on agents to maximize their value. … Much like in pro sports, coaching staffs are having to make tough decisions on who they can and cannot afford to bring back. The recruitments have changed, too. Players aren't taking five official visits and holding commitment ceremonies. If they're satisfied with the opportunity and the dollar figure, they're getting a deal done quickly. If a team can get a top target in for a visit, they're going to offer whatever it takes to get the player to cancel the rest of their trips and sign.” Also from Olson: “The death of the one-time transfer rule has helped lead to more than 660 FBS scholarship players re-entering the portal during this cycle to move on to their third, fourth or even fifth school of their career. That's more than 30% of all scholarship players in the portal.” More. (link)
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In case you missed yesterday's Evening Standard...
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Northern Illinois and the Mountain West announce the Huskies will officially join the league as a football-only member beginning in 2026. Huskies AD Sean Frazier: "What a great opportunity for NIU Athletics as we expand our horizons, adapt to this new national model of college athletics and prepare to start a new chapter in the history of NIU Football. … The impact of this move to the Mountain West is going to be felt throughout our entire department and university. Our fans are going to enjoy the heightened competition, the media coverage and the additional opportunities the relationship with this conference and these great institutions provides." NIU President Lisa Freeman says moving football to the Mountain West could help players' studying, as flying can be easier than busing around the Midwest. The elimination of weeknight MACtion games would help, too. According to The Athletic’s Matt Baker, Frazier says he could envision the Mountain West adding another football-only member and “also suggests there could be more change in the Pac-12 and ‘joining of brands.’” Baker also reports the NIU Board of Trustees unanimously voted to approve the $2M membership fee to join the league. (link, link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger pens a lengthy examination of how schools will handle the upheaval caused by the House settlement and notes that many will look toward Ohio State, which has the biggest athletic budget in the country at $275M. OSU President Ted Carter and AD Ross Bjork tell Dellenger the Buckeyes will offer 91 new scholarships (58 to women for Title IX purposes) at an additional cost of $4.5M (roughly $2M in Alston payments will be eliminated). The school plans to “stratify” its sports, presumably tiering them based on their revenue generation as a way to determine for each the allocation of resources, including the portion of athlete-revenue distribution. The football team will add roughly five scholarships to go up to 90. Additionally, Bjork says OSU plans to distribute the $20.5M rev-share pool in two ways: “Proportionally” based on male-female split and a “market-based approach” determined through valid market factors such as a sport’s television viewership, social media impressions, etc. While Bjork declined to share specific percentages for each team, Dellenger notes that if schools share 90% of the full $20.5M rev-share pool with football, then those rosters would receive $13-16M and men’s basketball rosters $2-4M, according to estimates. That’s less than some schools are reportedly spending on rosters now, and Dellenger notes the use of commercial NIL to make up the gap could prove tricky. “The power conferences have created a ‘transition team’ of athletic directors from the [Power 4] to explore issues and create a framework related to the cap, clearinghouse and new enforcement arm. Members of the seven-person Deloitte clearinghouse team have met with college administrators over the last several weeks in an effort to educate them on the process — one that remains murky.” Bjork asks: “What does fair market value mean in Columbus, Ohio, compared to, maybe, a small college town? There has to be some kind of differential there. We want to be aggressive, use our corporate partners and donors who own companies. … How do we turn that into agreements with athletes?” (link)
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Meanwhile, former Texas A&M football preferred walk-on student-athlete Kwame Etwi has filed an informal objection to the House settlement over its calculation of BNIL damages. Specifically, Etwi writes to U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken that medically retired players, and players who never played a single snap, will be awarded “tens of thousands of dollars simply because they received a scholarship. Meanwhile, athletes like me, who actively contributed on the field throughout our entire collegiate athletic careers and bore the financial burden of tuition, receive nothing. This exclusion dismisses the value of on-field contributions and creates an inequity that fails to recognize the sacrifices and commitments of active roster walk-on athletes who met the same demands, adhered to the same rigorous schedules, and upheld the same standards as scholarship athletes.” Full objection. (link)
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Texas President Jay Hartzell has accepted the same post at SMU, effective June 1. SMU Board of Trustees Chair David Miller said Hartzell did not initially apply for the job, but university officials aggressively recruited him. Miller expects Hartzell to focus on “supercharging” the school’s research engine, boosting athletics to national prominence and continuing to graduate future leaders. Hartzell explains that “whatever you feel about certain things that happen in the Legislature in the state, being in Texas has huge advantages. I do also think that the chances at a great private institution are special. It can be a little more nimble. It can move a little differently.” Horns247’s Chip Brown notes that even with Hartzell’s departure, the Longhorns maintain the alignment of Board of Regents Chair Kevin Eltife and AD Chris Del Conte. One source tells him: “Hartzell has been a rock solid president at Texas and certainly got the importance of athletics, but you've got a visionary board of regents chairman in Kevin Eltife, who was at the forefront on Texas' move to the SEC and even on the hiring of Steve Sarkisian. As long as you have Eltife and Chris Del Conte working together, you've got the alignment you need to keep Texas athletics moving forward." (link, link)
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Maryland will share the maximum amount of revenue with student-athletes if/when the House settlement is approved, and Terps AD Damon Evans explains: “Maryland Athletics has developed a comprehensive new strategy and structure not just to navigate this new collegiate landscape, but to thrive in it. While we will be evaluating targeted reductions in operating expenses, we know that we cannot grow our program by cuts. Our focus must continue to be on revenue growth. The forthcoming transition to the per seat model for football and men's basketball, including the upcoming reseat process, will provide a solid foundation for future growth. Last month, we opened The Maryland Club, a terrific new premium club overlooking the court in XFINITY Center, that provides a best-in-class member experience as well as new revenues for our department. We are also actively revitalizing our ticket sales and annual fund plans, investing in major gift fundraising, and exploring additional premium amenities.” Evans asks fans to help by renewing and/or upgrading their season tickets and Terrapin Club memberships, recruiting new fans and members and supporting upcoming fundraising campaigns. He also notes the Terps will be “increasing our ticket fee by $2.50 to help underwrite our academic support and leadership development programming.” (link)
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Freshly minted Le Moyne AD Phil Brown remarked today in his introductory press conference that “growth and change is great for any institution. When you see things being built, you naturally want to go and find out what that is. And that’s what we’re doing here. We’re building towards a great Division I atmosphere, we’re building toward a great Division I program. So, it’s kind of like a moth to a flame, you kind of want to get to it and you want to be around it. It's going to be exciting.” (link)
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U.S. District Court Judge Thomas O. Rice yesterday dismissed former Washington State Football HC Nick Rolovich’s request for partial summary judgment in his wrongful termination suit against the school. Rice granted WSU’s request for summary judgment. Rolovich claimed that WSU had violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and Washington’s Law Against Discrimination and improperly withheld wages after dismissing him for refusing to take the COVID vaccine. In his ruling, Rice wrote: “Plaintiff frequently expressed secular concerns about the COVID-19 vaccine to friends, family members and co-workers. In the thousands of pages of discovery, Plaintiff does not invoke a religious objection to the vaccine. This alone is a basis for denying Plaintiff’s claimed religious objection.” (link)
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People & Places presented by D1.relocation…
+ New Hampshire Senior Assoc. AD for Compliance, Policy and Governance Shawn Green is headed to the CUNYAC (DIII) as Deputy Commissioner. (link)
+ Duke promotes Women’s Soccer AHC Kieran Hall to HC. (link)
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Deals, Deals, Deals…
+ The NABC and NCAA have reached a one-year extension to hold the NABC Convention alongside the Men’s Final Four, meaning the 2025 NABC Convention will operate adjacent to the Final Four in San Antonio, and NABC members will again have access to game tickets and hotel accommodations. (link)
+ Tarleton State has partnered with Paciolan. (link)
+ Texas is the latest to partner with Athlete Network. (link)
+ Getty Images and Shutterstock have agreed to a merger, according to Axios’ Michael Flaherty, who notes the deal would value the newly combined company at $3.7B. The agreement is subject to regulatory approval and shareholder approval for both companies. Getty CEO Craig Peters will serve in the same role for the combined business. (link)
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The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel is the latest to observe that viewership numbers suggest the appetite for bowl games is getting bigger, not smaller, with the expansion of the College Football Playoff. “The Dec. 31 Michigan–Alabama ReliaQuest Bowl (6.5M) drew ESPN’s biggest non-New Year’s Six bowl audience in nine years. Texas Tech–Arkansas on Dec. 27 was the most-watched Liberty Bowl (4.2M) in nine years. Nebraska–Boston College on Dec. 28 was the most-watched Pinstripe Bowl (4.2M) since 2013. All despite NFL opt-outs, transfer portal departures and in some cases, interim coaches.” That said, in-person attendance continues to wane, as Mandel points out that the “Gator Bowl, which attracted crowds of 50,000-plus for decades, had 31,290 in the stands for last week’s Ole Miss-Duke matchup. The same Liberty Bowl matchup that did so well on television drew the game’s smallest crowd (37,764) since 1994 (2020 excluded). And the Holiday Bowl, which downsized this season to San Diego State’s Snapdragon Stadium, drew the smallest crowd (23,920) in the bowl’s 46-year history for a Syracuse-Washington State matchup.” Moving forward, Mandel points out that “all parties recognize that most non-CFP bowls are primarily television programs now” and may change the business model when contracts expire following next season, particularly as conference affiliations have shifted. Bowl Season Executive Director Nick Carparelli: “I’d like to see more flexibility in the selection process. If you go back in time, the strict conference-bowl tie-ins were not a thing. Everyone was a free agent every year. I almost feel like the system is ready to be turned back around.” (link)
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Student-athletes began receiving estimations of their anticipated House settlement payouts last week, and out of the 34 responses SwimSwam’s Anya Pelshaw received, 18 reported that their estimated total payout was “more” than they expected. Six athletes reported the payout to be “less” than expected while eight reported it to be “around the same” as expected. Pelshaw adds: “Although a small dataset, none of the 13 mid-major athletes reported Alston payments. Another commonality found in the data is that it seems in order to receive an estimate for ‘lost NIL,’ the athlete also had to earn NIL money as a student-athlete. SwimSwam received estimates from two swimmers late last week after the numbers were posted. These numbers had mixed reviews. … A five-year swimmer who was a multi-time individual NCAA Champion reported an estimated $3,700 for ‘athletic services,’ $600 for ‘lost NIL payment,’ and $3,100 for the Alston payment.” Meanwhile, an “SEC athlete that was a 2x NCAA qualifier, reported $408.15 for ‘athletic services’ and $1,956.10 for the Alston payment. This athlete has $0 estimated for lost NIL but also reported they did not earn any NIL money as a student-athlete. … A Pac-12 athlete and 4x individual NCAA Champion received estimates of $286.92 for athlete services and $3427.09 in Alston payments. This athlete said they were ‘not eligible’ for lost NIL payments.” (link)
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(NEWEST!) Assistant Director / Broadcast Operations (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): This position will manage engineering operations for multiple broadcast control room facilities and athletic venue fiber and cable infrastructure used for ACC Network and HokieVision productions. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 30 days...
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Senior Associate Athletics Director – Student-Athlete Support Services (SASS) (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): 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.
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Deputy Director of Athletics/Chief Financial Officer (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director of Finance and Business Operations (Seattle University / Seattle, WA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Business Operations (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Senior Business Analyst, Accounting - Athletics (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director - Business Operations (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): More details HERE
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.
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Head Volleyball Coach (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): More details HERE The Coaches.dossier for this position is available HERE.
Director of Football Program Operations & Administration (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
General Manager/Assistant Coach - Volleyball (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
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.
Head's Women Soccer Coach (Southeast Missouri State University / Cape Girardeau, MO): More details HERE.
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Director - Marketing & Fan Experience (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
Live Events Producer (University of Texas – Austin / Austin, TX): More details HERE.
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.
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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.
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Chief Development Officer (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development, Major Gifts & Donor Relations (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Major Gifts (Texas A&M University – Corpus Christi / Corpus Christi, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Development (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
Director of Development (Baylor University / Waco, TX): More details HERE.
Donor Relations, Stewardship & Event Coordinator (University of Northern Iowa / Cedar Falls, IA): More details HERE.
Senior Major Gifts Officer (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
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.
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Director of Athletics (Army West Point / West Point, NY): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director – Student-Athlete Support Services (SASS) (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
Deputy Director of Athletics/Chief Financial Officer (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
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.
Senior Associate Athletic Director for Development (Rice University / Houston, TX): 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.
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.
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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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Athletic Training Fellow (University of Michigan / Ann Arbor, MI): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Johns Hopkins University / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Sports Performance (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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.
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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.
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Assistant Director, Ticket Operations (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE
Account Executive, Ticket Sales (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
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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