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D1.ticker Evening Standard - Thursday, January 23, 2025
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Utah State AD Diana Sabau talks with JohnCanzano.com’s eponymous publisher about joining the Pac-12 and says: “The basketball appetite is ferocious here. Everyone was excited to begin with, then when Gonzaga announced, our fans went crazy and started asking ‘When can we buy tickets?’” The Aggies have sold out their basketball season tickets and last summer launched the Reach and Rise fundraising campaign, which seeks to raise $125M over five years. So far, USU has raised $24.7M, and Sabau says: “We knew we’d be chasing a brave new world, we can’t be flat-footed. … [Logan, Utah] is a small community. We’ve got 55,000 people, but they care about Utah State.” Sabau also tells Canzano the Aggies will not participate in revenue-sharing this coming year as a member of the Mountain West. “We’ll listen and learn…we’ll still have our collective and cover the cost of tuition. … There will be a gradual elevation, and in 2026 we’ll grow even more. We’re evolving that every day but we don’t have anything cemented permanently.” While the Pac-12 is currently shopping its media rights and preparing for further expansion, Sabau declined to discuss specifics but noted that “it’s an exciting time” and hinted that the plan may involve some innovation and “a new approach to broadcast.” (link)
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Boise State AD Jeramiah Dickey sits down with Collegiate Sports Associates President and CEO Drew Turner to reflect on his journey in college athletics, including the origin behind his "What's Next" mentality. Dickey and Turner also discuss the uniqueness of the Boise State AD search, which was conducted in the heart of the pandemic, offer advice for negotiating an AD contract, and talk about evaluating career opportunities. Dickey opens up about nearly dropping out of Texas as an undergrad when he told his mom and his aunt that “I’m going to take a semester off. This was at the end of my junior year, and I know, and this sounds dramatic, Drew, but the way I was living my life wasn't right. I really enjoyed Sixth Street and the finer things of Austin and, in hindsight, if I would have taken that semester off, I would not necessarily not just be an AD, I’m not sure I would be here in this world right now. And I knew where that was going. If I took a semester off, I would never have gone back. And my mom and aunt cared about me more than I cared about myself and they said, ‘Don't do anything, I want to get you connected.’ And tying in I’m not an outlier, my mom taught school with [now-Baylor AD] Mack Rhoades’ wife.” Under the tutelage of Rhoades and, later, now-Arkansas AD Hunter Yurachek, Dickey then began his career in college athletics. Dickey goes on to remark that “I’m so thankful, and more importantly for the failures and the challenges along the way, because it really refined me. To have people like that in your foxhole that they didn't crush me, they brought me along, they said, ‘No, we don't do that, this is why.’” Full interview. (link)
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Virginia Senator Creigh Deeds (D-Charlottesville) has proposed a bill to amend an existing law that caps the amount of tuition subsidies Virginia public schools can direct toward athletics. According to Sportico’s Daniel Libit and Eben Novy-Williams, the legislation would remove a paragraph that requires any new student fee revenue allocated toward athletics to be matched with a proportionate increase in generated revenue from elsewhere. It also expands the list of expenses that are exempt from the cap’s calculations. The bill also asks the state’s joint legislative audit and review commission to study the impact of its current limitations on student fee revenue “in light of evolving trends in intercollegiate athletics institutions and organizational structures and policy,” and to consider how they impact a school’s ability “to maintain competitiveness” in college sports. Libit and Novy-Williams note that “all four of the state’s FBS schools ranked in the top 20 in student fee subsidies” in FY23. “James Madison and Old Dominion were first and second, respectively, at $53.3M and $30.3M, with Virginia at No. 10 ($16.1M) and Virginia Tech at No. 17 ($13.4M). The schools attribute this, at least in part, to a more transparent accounting process and point out they take less direct institutional support than their peers. For instance, JMU reports less than $2M in other money from its main campus while Coastal Carolina reported $6.9M in FY23. (link)
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Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia and the NCAA have asked to pause Pavia’s lawsuit challenging the NCAA’s eligibility rules pending the organization’s appeal to the Sixth Circuit granting him an extra year of eligibility. More on Law360. (link)
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UC Irvine has received a $5M gift from alumnus Steve Borowski and his wife, Linda, to found and name a new baseball player development center. With the gift, UCI is now just $1.3M away from reaching the $20M goal of its Brilliant Future campaign. (link)
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Richmond Women’s Basketball HC Aaron Roussell acknowledges that players spending five or more years in college could become the new norm. “I think it makes sense, although I also feel like, probably like a lot of other coaches, can we just go back to how it was supposed to be, and how it was before? But I think between litigation and everything else, that between all the waivers and all of the other things that people were doing, limiting people to four years got hard. When we start talking about pay-for-play and some of the other things that people are getting now, I realize that it’s hard to limit somebody to the number of years that they can earn a salary, or whatever we’re calling it here now. ... If we’re going to do [five years of eligibility], then tell me right now, tell our kids right now and we can hopefully better plan accordingly.” Spiders Men’s Basketball HC Chris Mooney also weighs in: “Four years probably now seems like an arbitrary number because it’s not tied to academics whatsoever. I would assume it became four years because it typically took most college students four years to graduate. Now, I think it’s not tied to a typical college experience anymore, in every way. So, I think four is arbitrary. Five is probably arbitrary. So, I don’t know why, of course, that wouldn’t move to six or eight. Everything just seems wide open right now.” (link)
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Colorado stopped livestreaming its weekly coaches show with Football HC Deion Sanders and removed two episodes of the show from YouTube last fall after the name of QB recruit Julian “JuJu” Lewis was mentioned in violation of NCAA rules, according to USA Today’s Brent Schrotenboer. CU self-reported the violation and imposed corrective measures, including additional rules education for Sanders and a reduction of four recruiting-person days in the spring 2025 contact period. The school also agreed to “implement new institutional controls on the football weekly coaches show,” according to the school’s report, which adds: “The content will no longer be livestreamed. External relations will therefore be able to review and edit content that could be construed as impermissible publicity of (recruits).” Schrotenboer notes this was among “at least six self-reported infractions in the Colorado football program that were processed in 2024. … Before that, Colorado processed at least 11 other self-reported minor violations in the first year under Sanders since his hiring in December 2022.” (link)
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People & Places presented by D1.relocation…
+ San Diego names former Georgia Deputy AD for Academics and Student Development Magdi El Shahawy as Assoc. AD for Academics. (link)
+ Portland State Women’s Soccer Co-HC Katie Burton will transition to the role of Assoc. AD of Internal Operations, and Co-HC Maureen Whitney will take over full leadership of the program. (link)
+ Wofford taps Loyola Maryland Women’s Soccer AC Kevin Dempsey for its HC role. (link)
+ Houston Women’s Soccer HC Jaime Frias has resigned. (link)
+ North Carolina has released Football HC Bill Belichick’s employment agreement in its entirety. (link)
+ Jacksonville State Football HC Charles Kelly’s five-year contract will pay him $1M annually, according to AL.com’s Thomas Ashworth, who notes Kelly’s annual performance incentives include a $25K bonus for a conference championship game appearance or a $50K bonus for winning a conference championship game. Kelly will receive a $10K bonus for being named the conference’s coach of the year and an additional $25K if he is named national coach of the year. A top 25 finish in the AP or coaches polls will net Kelly another $25K, and he can earn $15K for a bowl berth or $25K for a bowl win. Landing in the College Football Playoff comes with a $100K bonus, and that figure increases by $100K for each win. Kelly’s AC salary pool will be $2.26M for 10 full-time ACs and support staff. If Kelly leaves for another football job, his buyout starts at $2.5M and decreases incrementally to $250K in 2029. Should President Don Killingsworth or AD Greg Seitz no longer serve in their respective roles and Kelly’s contract is bought out, the amount would be reduced by 50%. Should Kelly be terminated without cause, he would be due 85% of the remaining annual compensation through the otherwise expired term. (link)
+ ShotTracker announces the company’s largest expansion of talent to date led by the appointment of SportsDataIO CCO Greg Kirkorsky as CRO and former Executive Fellow to the Kansas City Mayor LaDonna Gooden as COO. (link)
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The first ESPN College GameDay of the women’s basketball season has been canceled due to this week’s winter storm in South Carolina. GameDay was set to feature the LSU-South Carolina matchup, which was postponed to Friday at 5 PM. Info regarding the next women’s hoops GameDay will be announced in the coming weeks. (link)
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FootballScoop’s Zach Barnett lists the 100 most-watched college football games of the season and offers some context to the data, noting that “this season was another win for the ‘the Rose Bowl should be the national championship game’ crowd. The Rose Bowl, a quarterfinal, out-rated both semifinal games, and the most-watched game over the past two seasons remains last season's Michigan-Alabama Rose Bowl, which attracted 27.76M viewers.” Barnett also notes that “while the 12-team bracket did not increase the ratings of individual games, the expanded format and the added meaning it carried to a wider number of games generated increased interest down the line. The number of games to draw 20M, 15M, 10M, 7M and 5M viewers were all up; the number of 10M+ games nearly doubled YoY.” Of the 100 most-watched games, 45 aired on ABC, 21 aired on ESPN, 17 were on Fox, eight were on CBS, 7 aired on NBC and two were carried by TNT. Barnett notes that “SEC programs made a collective 82 appearances among the top 100 games to the Big Ten's 56. A year ago, the number was 66-65 in favor of the SEC, even when using the 2024 alignment.” Furthermore, 15 of the 16 SEC schools made at least two appearances on the list, while just seven of the 18 Big Ten schools appeared once or not at all. However, Barnett points out that Paramount's contract with Nielsen expired during the football season “and the companies' dispute continues as of this writing. I can't explain why some CBS games were counted while others were not, but it's likely that games like Penn State-USC, Notre Dame-USC, Oregon-Michigan, Indiana-Michigan and others would have been on this list if not for the dispute.” More, including the full 100-game list. (link)
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Houston is expanding its partnership with Teamworks to include Teamworks GM. (link)
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Clemson’s baseball team has partnered with Absolutely Ridiculous, which is now the exclusive fielding gloves, sliding mitts and glove loops brand for the program. Additionally, officially licensed Clemson items will soon be available at retail. (link)
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The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center has published the Current Term Enrollment Estimates for the fall 2024 semester, which found that postsecondary enrollment rebounded above pre-COVID levels (+0.4%, +83,000 from 2019). Total postsecondary enrollment is up 4.5% this fall (+817,000), and undergraduate enrollment neared 16M, just 1% below 2019 levels. Graduate enrollment grew to 3.2M (+3.3%, +100,000). Additionally, undergraduate certificate program enrollment grew for the fourth consecutive year, up 9.9%. Such enrollments are now 28.5% above 2019 levels. Enrollment in Bachelor’s and associate degree programs also increased (+2.9% and +6.3%, respectively) but remain below 2019 levels. Enrollment increased across all regions, including in the Northeast, which saw a 4.7% increase, the first gains since prior to the pandemic. The South (+4.7%) and West (+4.6%) saw similar gains, followed by the Midwest (+3.1%). Overall freshmen enrollment increased by 5.5%. (link)
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D1.ticker Morning Edition - Thursday, January 23, 2025
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NCAA SVP of Business Performance Brian Higgins joins D1.ticker’s Matt Roberts from the 2025 NCAA Convention to provide insight into and the NCAA's comprehensive college sports database that's being built. Higgins gives context and projections on where it is today, what types of decisions will be impacted by the data collected and the impact of sharing with member institutions to generate revenue into untapped audiences. The database currently has over 13.5M fans and Higgins explains: “We needed it so we could effectively and efficiently market all 90 of our championships. I think the NCAA traditionally has done a great job selling tickets to March Madness, men's and women's, but with all the data we have coming in from not just them, but the Frozen Four, wrestling, volleyball, all those sports, taking that data [and] matching it up with some other public sources and other things we can do [will help us] get a great picture” of fans’ profiles. As the NCAA continues to add information to the profiles, Higgins says the main data points are what teams fans follow, what sports they like and where they live. “Over time as we grow we’ll add things like: Were you a student-athlete? Have you refereed college sports? Other things like do you have children? What types of events do you go to? What events do you stream and watch and how can we merge that?” The initial goal is to build the database up to 25M. Lots more on Connect. (link)
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Indiana AD Scott Dolson writes in a letter to fans that as the industry continues to change, “we have a plan to continue to elevate IU Football and all our 24 varsity programs within the Big Ten and nationally. You, as part of Hoosier Nation, are a big part of our plan for success. This week, we will officially launch our 2025 IU Football season ticket renewal campaign. We have already witnessed a remarkable jump in interest in season tickets for the fall. … We’ll be officially announcing several other exciting changes soon as well. Due to overwhelming demand for additional premium seating options, a new premium east side area will debut this fall. Look for details on the new East Side Club in the coming days. We will also share details about our plan to follow the lead of 14 other Big Ten universities and initiate a new personal seat donation program for football tickets. Depending on your seat location, this annual donation will range from $0 to $250/ticket.” (link)
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CBS’ Matt Norlander shares some notes from the men’s hoops season so far and discusses how the selection committee will seed SEC teams come March and observes the “16 schools collectively went 185-23 outside league play, the most victories and best non-con winning percentage (.889) in men's D-I history for a conference with at least 10 teams. … Prior NCAA rules dictated teams that played each other twice couldn't meet until the Sweet 16 at the earliest. Last July, the committee altered its rulebook language, amending for that protocol to be relaxed (allowing for second-round affairs) if a league got nine or more teams into the Dance.” The committee, Norlander continues, “has often moved a team laterally from one seed line to another, in a different region, even if doing so would mean more travel. The SEC is going to test this method more than ever before.” Meanwhile, Norlander is told the NCAA Academy likely will not return, with a source explaining: “NCAA budget cuts due to the potential [House] settlement helped that decision.” Norlander: “With the NCAA purportedly set to pay out billions in the coming decade as part of the looming House settlement, the Academy (with costs north of $8 million annually) was an easy chopping-block decision. I'd be stunned if it ever got revived, meaning, yet again, the recruiting calendar will undergo changes.” (link)
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Virginia Tech has inked an unlimited jobs posting bundle with D1.ticker & CollegeSports.jobs. Hokies Asst. AD for HR and Administrative Services Stuart Cochran: “The unlimited job posting bundle is a great value versus piecemeal postings and the D1.ticker is the place to go for collegiate sports news and job openings.” (link)
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Sportico’s Anthony Crupi adds some context to Monday’s College Football Playoff championship game, which “averaged 22.1M viewers, good for a 12% decline compared to the year-ago mark. Deliveries peaked from 8:30 p.m. to 8:45 p.m. ET, when 26.1M fans were tuned in. All told, this year’s game ranks as college football’s fourth least-watched title tilt of the last 10 years. Last year’s championship game, in which Michigan overpowered Washington by a 34-13 margin, averaged 25.1M viewers across the ESPN family of networks. In nailing down their first unanimous national title since 1948, the Wolverines laid claim to the 34th most-watched sporting event of 2024. This year’s game is likely to finish somewhere in the low 50s.” Crupi points out Ohio State’s 2015 CFP victory over Oregon was the most-watched championship of the CFP era with an average of 33.9M viewers. At the time, the pay-TV bundle was taken up by 86% of all U.S. TV homes. Now when “including vMVPD/’skinny bundle’ subs, pay-TV’s overall reach is now at 68.5M homes, with penetration hovering at 54%.” Crupi also notes the NFL is not immune to the degradation of pay-TV: “Through last weekend’s Divisional Round, deliveries for the NFL playoffs are down 8% from the year-ago period, which works out to an average loss of 2.7M viewers per window.” (link)
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Heitner Legal Founder Darren Heitner shares more information regarding the insurance policies for Colorado football standouts Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter: “Colorado secured $20M permanent total disability (PTD) for both Sanders and Hunter heading into the 2024 season. They picked up an additional $1M of PTD coverage on December 18th through Dec 29th heading into the Alamo Bowl, insuring both players at $21M PTD. After the Alamo Bowl game, both players have maintained $20M PTD coverage through the 2025 NFL Draft.” (link); From Sportico’s Daniel Libit and Eben Novy-Williams: “While [Buffs HC Deion] Sanders said that the coverage for Hunter and Shedeur was the “highest number of coverage that has ever been covered in college football…multiple insurance industry sources, who spoke to Sportico on the condition of anonymity, said they are aware of other disability policies for college football players with total limits in excess of $21M.” They also note Sanders’ announcement “was met with affirming stories from dozens of media outlets, establishing Sanders as a pioneer of disability coverage for college athletes. The year prior, CU faced backlash after Sportico reported that Hunter had been playing without income protection when he sustained a potential career-ending injury early in the season. … Sources familiar with the situation attributed the insurance gap to Deion Sanders’ desire to use Paradigm Gilbert instead of an athletic department insurance consultant previously retained by the university. Eventually, the school paid for insurance policies for a handful of players, including Hunter and Shedeur Sanders.” (link)
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People & Places presented by D1.relocation…
+ Student Athlete NIL (SANIL) Founder Jason Belzer has stepped down from his advisory role with the company to pursue other opportunities. Belzer: “I am looking forward to shifting my focus towards solving new emerging issues in the college sports landscape and know that SANIL is in good hands and on a solid path to continue creating value for the industry.” (link)
+ Chicago State Assoc. AD for Communications Jim Christman has left the athletic department. (link)
+ Two more promotions at Princeton: Asst. AD for Multimedia & Broadcasting Cody Chrusciel, as well as Asst. AD for Communications Chas Dorman, have been elevated to the Assoc. AD level. (link, link)
+ Stephen F. Austin has parted ways with Men’s Basketball HC Kyle Keller. (link)
+ ESPN is shuffling its team of content execs, according to SBJ’s Mollie Cahillane, who reports: “The senior team directly reporting to [EVP Mike] McQuade now includes Tim Corrigan (promoted), Amanda Gifford (promoted), Mark Gross, Meg Aronowitz, Scott Favalora, Jack Obringer, Phil Orlins and Linda Schulz, according to an internal memo from ESPN President of Content Burke Magnus.” As it relates to college sports, Gifford is now SVP/Sports Production and will oversee event and studio productions for college football, as well as the UFL, golf, lacrosse, volleyball and gymnastics. Aronowitz will continue to handle ACC, SEC and NCAA women’s and men’s basketball while Schulz will continue with oversight of the NHL and college ice hockey. (link)
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The Women's Beanpot was held at TD Garden for the second year in a row and drew a record-breaking 13,279 fans, making it the largest women's hockey crowd in New England, according to TSN Sports’ Kenzie Lalonde. Northeastern student-athlete Lily Yovetich from the top rope: “I think it’s funny when you add a little bit of money to a sport and you give some girls attention what they can do with it. I think everyone should take a page out of our book and really put some more time and effort into women’s everything.” (link)
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To help forestall long bathroom and concession lines, Ohio State has worked with crowd intelligence provider WaitTime for the last two seasons, per SBJ’s Ethan Joyce, who explains: “WaitTime uses AI and a host of cameras to analyze lines around concessions and bathrooms in real-time. By producing color-coded indicators via a dashboard of the venue's food and bathroom options, fans can avoid long lines and hit the less-busy spots with a quick glance at their phone.” This season, OSU incorporated the fan-facing version of the platform into the official Buckeyes app. Outside a brief message OSU sent out earlier this season, Buckeyes Director of Event Services Evan Derr says fans discovered the feature either via word-of-mouth or with the help of event staff. Still, the dashboard registered thousands of visits, and postgame fan surveys yielded satisfied marks with those who used WaitTime. Joyce notes that “OSU is hopeful that WaitTime capabilities can connect to other parts of their tech operations going forward. A vision of the future, which Derr described as a still-budding idea, is integrating WaitTime into OSU's facility management tool from 24/7 Software. That way, when bathrooms receive 1,000 visitors, it could ping for a housekeeping dispatch. For next season, Derr said the game plan will focus on educating fans about WaitTime. He also hopes to put it in front of fans more frequently, empowering the larger collective’s decision-making around concession and bathroom trips for Ohio Stadium.” (link)
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LG Electronics and ANC are “quietly operating under what the two companies are terming a marketing ‘alliance,’ where the electronic giant’s scoreboards, ribbon boards and other venue hardware systems will be sold and serviced by ANC in what the two parties termed a ‘long-term deal,’” SBJ’s Terry Lefton reports. LG Director of Vertical Market Sales Tom Bingham tells Lefton: “We’ve got a lot of mutual targeted customers, and the combination of our products and ANC’s marketing and sales is a collaboration that will allow us to engage with some sports conglomerates we’ve both been pursuing for quite some time. There are just huge tech requirements now for a connected [venue] experience – everything from live ordering and sports betting to cashless environments and just providing bandwidth for all those watching on site. One of the most exciting things for us is that we’re now incorporating things beyond digital. We can also include HVAC and energy offerings across a venue for different solutions. ... There are lots of competitors, but very few who can put together and run a unified building.” (link)
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Have a look at ESPN’s trailer for the upcoming documentary The Buddy Way, which chronicles the inspirational story of late Dartmouth Football HC Buddy Teevens. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Assistant Athletic Director, Business Operations (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): Are you a game changer with a growth mindset? Join UD Athletics & Recreation’s Internal Ops team to manage finances, including analysis, forecasting, and reporting for the UD Athletic Department. More details HERE.
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(NEW!) Director, Olympic Sports Nutrition (University of Memphis / Memphis, TN): Director will provide individual nutritional counseling, food coordination and menu development and nutrition education for Olympic sports in conjunction with Assistant Director of Olympic Nutrition. More details HERE.
(NEW!) General Manager, Football (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): General Manager will lead the daily operations of our talent acquisition department, overseeing roster management, financial allocations, and recruitment. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 30 days...
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Assistant Director for Academic Excellence, Football Academic Advising (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Academic Counselor (Ohio State University / Columbus, OH): More details HERE.
Learning Specialist (University of South Florida / Tampa, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director for Academics (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Coordinator for Football Academics (University of Missouri / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Athletics Academic Coordinator (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director – Student-Athlete Support Services (SASS) (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
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Chief Human Resources Officer, Department of Athletics, Physical Education and Recreation (Stanford University / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Accountant (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Business Operations (Temple University / Philadelphia, PA): More details HERE.
Business Manager, Athletics (Lamar University / Beaumont, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director/Chief Financial Officer (University of North Georgia / Dahlonega, GA): (DII) More details HERE.
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.
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Associate Head Coach - Women's Golf (San Jose State University / San Jose, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach, Women's Soccer (University of Maryland / College Park, MD): More details HERE.
Director of Volleyball Operations/Assistant Coach (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Head Coach Baseball/Physical Education & Wellness Instructor (Massachusetts Institute of Technology – MIT / Cambridge, MA): (DIII) More details HERE.
Football Operations Specialist (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Softball Coach (Hofstra University / Hempstead, NY): More details HERE.
Head Coach Baseball/Physical Education & Wellness Instructor (Massachusetts Institute of Technology – MIT / Cambridge, MA): (DIII) More details HERE.
Head Men's Hockey Coach (Ferris State University / Big Rapids, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach Football (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Assistant Coach - Volleyball (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Special Teams Analyst (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Sr. Quality Control Analyst - Football (University of Arkansas / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Asst. Coach Women's Soccer (William & Mary / Williamsburg, VA): More details HERE.
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.
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Director of Creative Services & Reporter (Coastal Athletic Association / Richmond, VA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director of Strategic Communications (University of North Florida / Jacksonville, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Athletics (Miner Vision) (University of Texas – El Paso / El Paso, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Broadcast and Creative Services (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE
Assistant Director of Multimedia & Creative Production (Ball State University / Muncie, Indiana, IN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director for Marketing and Community Engagement (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): More details HERE.
Athletics Graphic Designer/Content Creator (University of Dayton / Dayton, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Fan Engagement (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Marketing & Fan Engagement (William & Mary / Williamsburg, VA): More details HERE.
Director of Redbird Productions OR Assistant Athletic Director of Redbird Productions (Illinois State University / Normal, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Athletic Communications (Northeastern University / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
FellowVOL Postgraduate Fellowship (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director / Broadcast Operations (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
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.
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Director, Compliance (Army West Point / West Point, NY): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Director of Athletics, for Compliance, Policy, and Governance (University of New Hampshire / Durham, NH): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Compliance – Athletics (University of Colorado – Boulder / Boulder, CO): More details HERE.
Compliance Director (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Compliance Officer, Athletics (The George Washington University / Washington, DC): More details HERE.
Senior Associate AD/Compliance (Florida Atlantic University / Boca Raton, FL): More details HERE.
Assoc. Director, Athletics Compliance, Monitoring (University of Miami / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
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.
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Director of Development, Intercollegiate Athletics/Assistant Athletic Director (Miami University / Oxford, OH): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director of Development (United States Air Force Academy / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director for Major Gifts (University of New Mexico / Albuquerque, NM): More details HERE.
Director/Assistant Director of Donor Relations and Events (Appalachian State University / Boone, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Development (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Director of Annual Giving (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Ohio Bobcat Club (Ohio University / Athens, OH): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Development Operations (Wake Forest University / Winston-Salem, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Director of Development, Annual Fund (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Development (University of North Carolina – Wilmington / Wilmington, NC): More details HERE.
Director of Development - Sun Devil Athletics (Arizona State University / Tempe, AZ): More details HERE.
Major Gift Officer (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development - Sun Devil Athletics (Arizona State University / Tempe, AZ): More details HERE.
Director of Annual Giving (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Director of Stewardship (University of Southern California / Los Angeles, CA): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Development and Alumni Engagement - Athletics (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
FellowVOL Postgraduate Fellowship (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Development (Valparaiso University / Valparaiso, IN): More details HERE.
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.
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Senior Associate Director of Athletics, for Compliance, Policy, and Governance (University of New Hampshire / Durham, NH): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (Rowan University / Glassboro, NJ): (DIII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate AD/Compliance (Florida Atlantic University / Boca Raton, FL): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (Columbus State University / Columbus, GA): (DII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director/Chief Financial Officer (University of North Georgia / Dahlonega, GA): (DII) 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.
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Assistant Equipment Manager (University of Northern Colorado / Greeley, CO): More details HERE.
Director, Parking (Insignia Event Services / Glendale, AZ): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Event Management (University of Mississippi / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
Director of Equipment Operations (Tarleton State University / Stephenville, TX): More details HERE.
Athletic Equipment Manager (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Facilities and Operations Coordinator (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Equipment Operations (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director of Athletics Facilities & Operations (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Premium Events Coordinator (Illinois State University / Normal, IL): More details HERE.
FellowVOL Postgraduate Fellowship (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Equipment Manager, Olympic Sports (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
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There are no openings at this time.
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Athletic Trainer (University of Kansas / Lawrence, KS): More details HERE.
Director of Sports Medicine for Football (Iowa State University / Ames, IA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer/Chaperone (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer - Women's Soccer (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Director, Sports Nutrition (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
Associate Director, Sports Nutrition (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Head Football Athletic Trainer (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
Football Team Dietitian (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Sports Medicine Certified Athletic Training Intern (University of Denver / Denver, CO): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (St. Mary's University – Texas / San Antonio, TX): (DII) More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer Fellow - Temporary 11-month position (University of Miami / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Football Dietitian (University of Miami / Miami, FL): More details HERE.
Advanced Post-Graduate Athletic Trainer (Stanford University / Stanford, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director & Director, Sports Medicine (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
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.
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There are no openings at this time.
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Assistant Director of Ticket Operations (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Ticket Sales (University of Missouri / Columbia, MO): More details HERE.
Coordinator, Ticket Operations (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Ticket Operations (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE
Account Executive, Ticket Sales (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
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