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D1.ticker Evening Standard - Monday, January 27, 2025
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NCAA VP of Academic and Membership Affairs Dave Schnase joined Connect's Bryan Fischer at the NCAA Convention to discuss the latest on NIL Assist, regulations, roster caps and what the NCAA is doing to prepare for the implementation of potential changes. Since coming online, NIL Assist has recorded roughly 112K transactions worth $200M. “It’s giving us a good baseline for data. More importantly, though, it’s got this educational module. So, we have 60 modules within that particular element being viewed by a lot of people. The one that's most popular is Invesco QQQ's How Not to Suck at Money. It’s really a great video. We have another one from the Patent and Trademark Office that's being watched a lot. So for us, it's about getting the word out, helping people understand what NIL is all about, even as a place to start.” Regarding the NIL clearinghouse with Deloitte, Schnase says it’ll take some time to perfect. “At some point people are going to make judgments about a deal that’s maybe not in compliance with the fair market value, and that’s when they need to make sure they have the right enforcement mechanisms in place.” Full Q&A on Connect. (link)
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Ohio State brought in $254.9M in revenue during FY24 while accumulating $292.7M in expenses. According to Eleven Warriors’ Dan Hope, revenue dropped by nearly $25M from FY23, “which is partially attributable to Ohio State playing only six home football games during the 2023 season after playing eight home games in 2022. The 2024 fiscal year does not include revenues for Ohio State’s 2024 football season, in which the Buckeyes hosted eight regular-season home games as well as a first-round College Football Playoff game.” Expenses included $9.2M in severance payments and benefits to past coaching and administrative personnel. The school in a statement says that “past earnings, reserve funds and anticipated future earnings are projected to cover the $37.7M shortfall that was expected in FY24.” The Buckeyes’ football ($111.6M in revenue vs. $78.6M in expenses) and men’s basketball ($24.7M in revenue vs. $22.9M in expenses) were the only sports to generate a profit. Buckeyes AD Ross Bjork: “In this new era of rapid transformation in intercollegiate athletics, our commitment to our student-athletes is unwavering. … While last year’s budget impact is not ideal and there were unique circumstances at play, we have a robust expense and revenue plan that has been implemented and have made great progress in this ever-changing landscape of college athletics. We will make sure we operate with a balanced budget moving forward.” (link)
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Purdue finished FY24 with a $3.6M budget surplus with $134.9M in revenue (8.5% YoY increase) and $131.3M in expenses (9.6% YoY increase). Football and men’s basketball operated at a surplus of $34.7M while the other 14 sports operated at a deficit of $8.1M. Football season ticket revenue increased from $10.22M in FY23 to $13.66M, and media rights revenue increased by $3M YoY to $50.9M. Revenue from contributions increased from $23.28M in FY23 to $29.03M. (link)
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Fundraising Files…
+ Maryland has received a $10M gift commitment from an anonymous donor to “support the priorities of the men's basketball program and its greatest needs through a newly established program-support endowment. The proceeds from the endowment will fund men's basketball operational needs in perpetuity.” (link)
+ Mississippi State is the recipient of a $2M gift from longtime supporters Bo and Nicki McKinnis to support the State Excellence Fund. (link)
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Legal & Legal Adjacent…
+ The Cal State system and the Mountain West are asking a Colorado federal judge to free them from a lawsuit challenging the conference’s policy on transgender student-athlete participation. They argue that precedent, including from the U.S. Supreme Court, recognizes that discrimination based on transgender status is impermissible sex discrimination. More from Law360. (link)
+ Florida has closed its investigation into Men’s Basketball HC Todd Golden after finding "no evidence" that he violated Title IX. UF AVP for Communications/University Spokesman Steve Orlando: "The University of Florida takes these matters seriously and works deliberately to ensure that due process is upheld for everyone. After a thorough investigation that included dozens of interviews over the past months, the University of Florida has found no evidence that Todd Golden violated IX. The Title IX office has closed its investigation." Golden subsequently wrote on X: "The last several months have been a challenge for my family and me while this process dragged on. We asked for the public to allow the process to work through to its conclusion and not rush to judgment based on allegations. The UAA and so many at the university have been tremendously supportive – my family and I are extremely grateful." (link)
+ A Virginia bill that would have required Virginia and Virginia Tech to play the other public FBS programs at least once every eight years has died in subcommittee, according to the Daily News-Record’s Shane Mettlen. (link)
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People & Places…
+ Lafayette faculty have called for a no-confidence vote for President Nicole Hurd scheduled to take place tomorrow. (link)
+ Houston has named New Mexico Asst. VP/Deputy AD David Williams as Senior Deputy AD. (link)
+ Delaware taps New Mexico Assoc. AD for Major Gifts Casey Macdonald for its Senior Assoc. AD for Development role. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ Chicago State names Jackson State AC Kevin Larry as its next Women’s Soccer HC. (link)
+ Cal State Northridge will rename Matador Field as Robert J. Hiegert Field in honor of the former CSUN Baseball HC who remains the all-time winningest coach in program history. (link)
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The National Football Foundation (NFF) & College Hall of Fame announce the annual winter meeting of DI conference coordinators for football officials is taking place January 28-29 at the NFF HQ in Irving, Texas. The meeting is being led by College Football Officiating (CFO) National Coordinator Steve Shaw. During the meeting, CFO members will exchange ideas, analyze video, discuss play situations and ensure the consistent application of the rules between the conferences around the country. (link); One issue that will be discussed is the use of a centralized, neutral replay system for the postseason, according to CBS’ Dennis Dodd, who explains the “centralized replay would put two persons not affiliated with a conference in charge of reviewing plays for all CFP games. Bowl games and perhaps even nonconference matchups in Week Zero could be added to that list. … It will also be discussed whether hiring one neutral person to oversee the entire replay process throughout the playoff. The concept has long been used by the NFL. However, FBS conferences typically stay in their own silos with on-field officials and the use of replay officials paid by the leagues.” Dodd also reports that the discussion “may even go as far as suggesting a neutral figure to oversee the replay. Veteran Fox Sports NFL rules analyst Dean Blandino…has been mentioned. However, the issue is so complicated that his affiliation with Fox, which has the Big Ten media rights, could be an issue.” Other topics to be discussed include coaches’ challenges similar to the NFL, faking injuries, targeting and more. (link)
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North Carolina expands its Teamworks partnership to incorporate the Teamworks GM program. (link); North Carolina will also install a natural grass playing surface inside Kenan Stadium. The decision was made in consultation with Tar Heels Football HC Bill Belichick and includes the installation of 67K square feet of GameOnGrass Tahoma sod as well as 36K square feet of synthetic turf around the field's perimeter. (link)
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James Moore & Co. Partner Katie Davis notes that another NIL collective was denied 501(c)(3) status. “The IRS rejected the collective's claim that only student-athletes could quickly achieve its goals, when its website emphasized NIL deals over charity. IRS also noted athletes aren't a charitable class. … PLEASE NOTE! This does not automatically mean that athletic departments/universities will lose their tax-exempt status when athletes start being paid rev share. Different facts & circumstances, and the slice of the pie that is "private benefit" is much smaller.” (link); Full letter. (link)
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Front Office Sports Editor in Chief Daniel Roberts weighs in on the current state of NIL affairs: “The entire NIL system might only be a stopgap until schools share revenue directly with players, depending on the results of the House v. NCAA settlement. … But for now, this system – although to call it a ‘system’ is too generous; it’s a slapdash carnival – is the new normal. And because this is the new normal, the biggest distinguishing factor between college sports and the pros is now this: You, a regular person, can directly contribute to your school’s recruitment of new stars. You can’t personally give $1M to your favorite NBA team for them to go out and get Jimmy Butler. But you can give $1M to your alma mater’s NIL collective so they can get a new quarterback. Or running back. Or point guard. Sure, not you, a non-multimillionaire. Only the ultra-rich, you might say. And indeed, it’s the ultra-high-net-worth alumni who are fueling this system: oil barons at SMU, Nike founder Phil Knight at Oregon, Oracle billionaire Larry Ellison (on behalf of his alumna wife) at Michigan, VitaminWater founder Mike Repole at St. John’s.” Roberts cautions that such donations are always a gamble, though, and explains how “one FOS source donated a few thousand dollars to the Vanderbilt NIL collective two years ago…and was told it was going directly to a specific player, who, according to the source, got about $20,000 in NIL money from the collective. Six weeks later, that player transferred to Georgia for more than $200,000. The source says, “I called them up and asked, ‘What about my money, do we get it back?’ The guy who raised the money said, ‘Good question, I don’t even know for sure, but I don’t think so.’” (link)
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D1.ticker Morning Edition - Monday, January 27, 2025
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Northern Illinois AD Sean Frazier and General Counsel Bryan Perry sit down with AthleticDirectorU’s Jason Belzer at the 2025 NCAA Convention to break down the strategic thinking, data-driven evaluation and process behind the university’s decision to move from the MAC to the Mountain West in football, with Frazier explaining: “There’s no such thing as standing still. He adds that the move was ultimately the result of the decision by USC and UCLA in 2022 to leave the Pac-12 Conference for the Big Ten. That watershed moment propelled Frazier and his team to hunker down and develop a strategic plan addressing all options related to the creation of superconferences and the concept of coast-to-coast competition within the broader context of the House settlement, College Football Playoff expansion, transfer portal and NIL. Frazier and Perry go on to talk about the fit of the Mountain West, the sustainability of competing in separate conferences for football and Olympic sports and the longtail vision for NIU within the hierarchy of intercollegiate athletics. Perry explains there was a time when the “lawyers could look at just the four corners of the deal and say, ‘This is it. This is the legal risk, this is what you have to be worried about’ and put in some provisions to make sure you're protected and walk away. But those days are over. If you're not adding value and understand all of the cultural aspects, all of the non-economic things, all the non-legal things and how that's going to impact the transaction…that is going to be key.” Full convo on ADU. (link)
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With revenue-sharing potentially approaching, Oklahoma State AD Chad Weiberg observes that such fundamental change has rarely occurred in college sports. “When World War II was ending, troops were coming back to the United States, I think that was a transformational time in college sports, college football in particular. And there were certain programs I think that took advantage of those opportunities. There’s other programs that didn’t, and they’ve spent the last several decades trying to play catch-up. What I think is critically important for us to understand right now is we can either attack this with everything I know that Oklahoma State can attack it with and get started off like we want to get started off in this new era, or we can spend the next several decades trying to catch up to the fact that we didn’t take advantage of this moment in time.” Weiberg also calls on fans of all OSU sports to “participate in helping us grow our revenues for each of those sports. We're fortunate here at Oklahoma State that we don't have 30 or 35 sports. We have 18. I know some places are talking about tiering sports and deciding what they're going to support and be competitive in. We're going to try and be competitive in the sports we have here. … Athletics has never been a straight business. It's an enterprise with business principles. If athletics were straight business, thinking of the corporate world, most of us would have one or two sports. That's just not what we're here for.” Weiberg on the high stakes of this moment in time: “You just have to ask the folks in Corvallis, Oregon, or Pullman, Washington, about the stakes that are involved in what's going on right now. I don't think we need to lose sight of that. I don't think anyone can. Anybody that thinks that this is how it's going to end up and for the next 100 years, this is how the conferences are going to look like or alignment, is lying or fooling themselves.” Lots more. (link)
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U.S. District Court Judge Claudia Wilken last week received objections to the House settlement from Stanford football student-athlete David Kasemervisz and Temple gymnast Emma Reathaford. Both, according to Sportico’s Michael McCann, offered “detailed rebukes, and both wish to raise their arguments when Wilken holds a fairness hearing on April 7…to assess if the settlement is ‘fair, reasonable and adequate’ to class members.” Kasemervisz, a preferred walk-on, objects to the settlement’s limiting recovery to full grant-in-aid players as part of the “settlement football and men’s basketball class.” He argues that his experience playing football, including time spent on practices, training, attending meetings and satisfying athletic and academic standards, resembled the experiences of his teammates. He played in games that were broadcast on TV and his NIL was used. He also notes that some of his teammates who were on scholarship likely played less than him, yet they are class members. Kasemervisz proposes the class definition be expanded to include Power 5 athletes who “actively participated” and thus contributed to the broadcast revenue. Reathaford’s objection involves roster limits, and she contends that “thousands” of DI student-athletes will “be irreparably harmed because their schools will be forced to cut them from their current teams.” As objections continue, McCann shares the reminder that a settlement doesn’t have to be perfect in order to gain approval. “The relevant benchmark for Wilken is to determine whether the settlement is reasonable and adequately addresses the underlying issues that made the athletes sue in the first place.” (link)
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The Clarion Ledger’s Sam Sklar provides more details on Mississippi State’s 10-year facilities master plan. For Davis Wade Stadium, the Bulldogs intend to replace the entire west side lower bowl and reconstruct the south end zone. On the west side, new suites would be added while the press box is moved to the east side. A new concourse is planned on the east side along with upgrades to suites. The south end zone would include the MSU locker room, new suite-style seating, a recruiting space and even loft apartments with a parking garage. Dudy Noble Field upgrades include new suites, a widened concourse, an additional loft building in left field and a party deck in center field. A restaurant that is open all year is also planned for right field. Meanwhile, proposals for Humphrey Coliseum include an evaluation of the student section location, which is currently in the northeast corner. MSU also would like to update the sound and video systems. Other enhancements include replacing the artificial turf at the Palmeiro Center, an indoor practice facility for football and baseball, adding a new videoboard and shade structure over seats for MSU softball at Nusz Park, and adding 500-1,000 seats at the MSU Soccer Field and Clubhouse with a viewing deck. (link)
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UCLA Men’s Basketball HC Mick Cronin after Friday’s win over Washington in Seattle remarked that “we’re going to get home at 2 in the morning, 3 in the morning. We should have just had this game at midnight. When you sell your soul to television, that’s just the way it is, and that’s college sports – we’ve sold our soul to television, so we’ll get home in the middle of the night, get some rest and prepare as best we can to play a team (USC) that played on Wednesday, took Thursday off and was focused on us while we’re up here. So, there’s a lot of inequities in this thing. I’m sure at some point later in the year it will go our way — I haven’t found that yet, but I’m hoping.” Cronin went on to point out the Bruins have “seen the Statue of Liberty twice in the last three weeks while we were landing. We also saw the Capitol building. And then we gotta go back [to Indianapolis] for the Big Ten tournament!” However, he acknowledged that “the Pac-12, it’s horrible for your national exposure when all your teams are playing at the same time, so if you want big TV contracts, you want national exposure, you’ve got to spread your games out and this is part of it.” In response to a question about whether the Big Ten teams flying west face comparable wear and tear, Cronin said: “Have you ever looked at the NBA stats on the gamblers and all those people do on west versus east? Talk to [USC HC] Eric Musselman, ask him that question, who coached in the NBA. Good luck, west going east. Ask me UCLA’s record east of the Mississippi in the last 20 years. When I got the job, I looked it up for scheduling purposes. It’s under .500, OK? We have to go back [east] four times. Oh, the Big Ten teams get to come to Los Angeles, where it’s 70 degrees, one time a year. They don’t even have to switch hotels.” (link)
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Package deals in which an agent places multiple clients in coaching or front office roles with the same NFL team has drawn the attention of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, according to ESPN’s Kalyn Kahler, who reports: “Multiple NFL club executives told ESPN there's a growing pressure for up-and-coming coaches and scouts to align with a power agency, such as Athletes First or CAA, to benefit from their media influence and connections to other coaches and scouts. And league data reveals that minority candidates, in particular, are less represented in a landscape where the most influential coaching agents predominantly represent white clients.” Since 2018, the Chicago Bears have hired and fired two head coaches and three assistants represented by Athletes First’s Trace Armstrong, who also represents Bears GM Ryan Poles. Coaching agent Jason Fletcher says he attended a meeting with Goodell and six other agents, including Armstrong and Jimmy Sexton in which Goodell asked several questions, including how many of their clients were people of color, although the league already had a pretty good idea of the answer. Fletcher: "The business is completely contaminated. It is a relationship-driven business, and you are going to have individuals that are experienced and deserve opportunities not receive them." There is also concern about agents’ influences in putting staffs together, and one former GM says he asked candidates why they wanted certain ACs. Sometimes, the only reason was a shared agent. One agent tells Kahler: "[Arranging your coach's staff is] a way to absolutely bury your coach. This [Chicago situation] is proof positive of it. ... Believe me, we're not in the building every day. We don't know, really, how good or bad our guys really are. They all talk a good game, but we don't know." Lots more. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
+ During Ohio State’s national championship celebration on Sunday, Buckeyes AD Ross Bjork announced that “President Carter and I are working with [Football HC Ryan] Day to make sure we have long-term stability, that he is the Buckeye coach for years to come. We are proud of his leadership, and we want to keep this momentum going strong.” Carter added: “We’re working on it. We don’t have any announcements yet, but we have intent. I know Ryan wants to stay here, so we’re working the details.” (link)
+ Penn State has hired Ohio State DC Jim Knowles for the same role with a three-year, $9.3M deal. The deal, according to NBC’s Nicole Auerbach, makes Knowles the highest-paid AC in the country. Front Office Sports’ Colin Salao adds that the deal’s AAV would put Knowles in the top 60 of HC salaries last season. (link)
+ This morning’s edition of Coaches.wire is heavy on football, baseball, soccer and volleyball changes, but details all coaching staff changes across all sports from the past few days. (link)
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Vanderbilt will officially be assessed a $500K penalty for its third violation of the league’s policy on fans entering the competition area following Saturday’s men’s hoops upset over Kentucky. (link)
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The South Carolina women’s basketball team has suspended its arena DJ for one game after she played a song by LSU standout Flau’jae Johnson’s father, who was murdered in 2003 six months before Johnson was born. Johnson wrote on X that “I’ll take my L on the chin, but this just nasty behavior. Nun funny bout that.” The DJ apologized on Saturday, writing in part that it was “never my intent to disrespect anyone or offend anyone when my job is to have fun and make sure other people have a good time.” A statement from South Carolina reads: “We are addressing Friday night’s inappropriate in-game song selection and subsequent Instagram post. Her actions were understandably upsetting to Flau’Jae Johnson and her family and disrespectful to the LSU program and fans. Conference rivalries and passionate fan bases should only serve to enhance sports, not be used to target individual players personally.” (link)
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EvanMiya publisher Evan Miyakawa contends this year’s men’s basketball freshman class “is the most impactful group we’ve seen in almost a decade. At EvanMiya.com, every player in CBB gets a rating based on their value in the sport. If you look at the top 200 players nationally, there are more freshmen (23) in that elite tier than we’ve seen in any year since the 2016-17 season.” On the flip side, last year’s freshmen class “had the lowest number of players in the top 200 of any year in my database, dating back to the 2012-13 season. Jumping from that uninspiring class to this year’s immense crop of talent is quite impressive, especially when you consider that there are still fifth-year players in the sport.” Miyakawa also notes that more than half of the best players in the sport were seniors last season, “likely the highest mark ever. This year, the number of seniors in the top 200 has dropped below 50%, but they are still the most dominant class in the sport by far. I expect the percentage of seniors in the top 200 to drop even more next year, assuming that the rules revert to players having only four years of eligibility for next season.” (link)
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MoffettNathanson Co-Founder/Analyst Michael Nathanson joins Puck’s John Ourand to discuss the most pressing sports media topics of 2025, including Fox Sports’ streaming plans (or lack thereof). Nathanson says he’s not sure if Fox “has the stomach for building a Fox Sports over-the-top product. … We thought the best idea was to create a skinny bundle with Fox, CBS Sports, Disney, TNT, like the Venu approach but with news and a little bit more sports to me was the best way to go about it. That’s what we thought, but now that Venu is dead now these sports bundles are emerging it's not clear what Fox does here.” Regarding whether Fox should just license its content to other streamers rather than build its own platform, Nathanson explains it would have to be on a per-subscriber basis. “You should say ‘look we're currently getting $6-7 a month from Charter or Comcast. We will license you the bundle of our content for $6 or $7 per your subscriber.’ … What I think you don’t want to have happen is for these streaming partners to then undercut your wholesale deals with networks. You want to basically create a package that is incremental and not deflationary and so far we've not seen it would do that. But Fox is really smart. You would say, yeah $7 bucks a month, the Fox feed gets embedded in your Hulu with Fox, but you can’t license it on a per-show basis.” Ourand says of ESPN’s Flagship strategy that it included passing on NASCAR, the Big Ten and Pac-12. “I think Jimmy Pitaro’s strategy is we want to be exclusive with the College Football Playoff and we want to be a place for college football, so it's going to pay whatever it needs to get that. And they want to remain with the NFL so it's going to pay whatever they want to get that. … The days of, ‘Okay, we'll invest in a pickleball league and put it on [ESPN News] or something like that, it’s gone.” Full podcast. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Associate Athletic Director for Major Gifts/NIL (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): The Associate Athletic Director for Major Gifts/Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) is responsible for soliciting major gifts and leadership and oversight of NIL operations. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Assistant Athletic Director of Facilities and Event Management (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): Lead support for Athletic facilities & event operations, overseeing maintenance, grounds crew management, & logistics to ensure efficient operations & strong stakeholder partnerships. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Director, Ticket Sales & Service - Learfield Amplify / Vanderbilt University (Learfield / Nashville, TN): Learfield Amplify is seeking a dynamic manager to lead our team consisting of 5+ employees and overall sales strategy. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Coordinator of Administrative and Business Operations (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): This position provides executive level administrative assistance to the AD and Deputy AD while also supporting the Chief Financial Officer with essential business office functions. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Associate Athletic Trainer (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Baltimore, MD): The Associate Athletic Trainer is a health care professional responsible for working under the direction of the University’s Team physicians, as prescribed by state licensure statutes. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Offensive Assistant Coach (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): The Offensive Assistant Coach will be responsible for assisting in all facets of the planning & organization of a highly competitive D1 football program competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Associate Athletic Director for Content and Communications (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): Responsible for oversight of the Content and Communications offices in the athletic department under the rules and regulations of the NCAA, American Athletic Conference and The University of Tulsa. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Assistant Director for Student Engagement & Programming (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): The Assistant Director is responsible for supporting the planning, coordination, & execution of recruiting & operational functions for the Pathway to Sports Academy program. 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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Assistant Athletic Director, Business Operations (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
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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Assistant Football Coach (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
General Manager, Football (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
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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Men’s Basketball Videographer (Rutgers University / Piscataway, NJ): More details HERE.
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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Senior Associate Director of Athletics for Compliance and Governance (Austin Peay State University / Clarksville, TN): More details HERE.
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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Assistant Director, Development (University of Wyoming / Laramie, Wyoming, WY): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director - Administration and External Engagement (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
Director of Development, Athletics (University of Colorado – Boulder / Boulder, CO): More details HERE.
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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Director of Athletics (Goucher College / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Senior Associate Director of Athletics for Compliance and Governance (Austin Peay State University / Clarksville, TN): More details HERE.
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 Director of Facilities, Events, and Operations (Drake University / Des Moines, IA): More details HERE.
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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Director of Football Performance (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Director, Olympic Sports Nutrition (University of Memphis / Memphis, TN): More details HERE.
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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Assistant Athletic Director, Corporate Partnerships – Department of Athletics (Duquesne University / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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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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