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D1.ticker Evening Standard - Tuesday, January 28, 2025
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ADs from the new-look Pac-12 gathered at the league HQ in San Ramon, Calif., on Monday for two days of meetings, and JohnCanzano.com’s eponym reports: “The ADs covered several topics on Monday, including the House settlement and strategic planning for 2026. They received an update on the conference’s media rights negotiations and then took a group tour of the Pac-12 Enterprises facility. The general mood? One AD in the room told me: ‘Mostly optimistic — everyone getting a feel for each other.’” Today’s meeting is set to include an update on expansion, and Canzano notes that rounding out the football membership is a high priority. “Multiple ADs have told me they believe nine is the ideal number of football schools. That could mean two expansion additions, not one. UNLV and Nevada together? Tulane and Memphis? … Anything is possible at the right numbers. Having at least nine schools makes football scheduling easier and avoids having to find (and buy) additional non-conference games. But the Pac-12, to this point, has acted methodically and calculated with membership decisions. The league still has time. It’s being strategic. Also, there is a pending lawsuit with the Mountain West that may shade the decision.” As the meetings continue, one AD tells Canzano: “You can sense that this is all starting to feel real for people.” (link)
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The Trump administration has removed NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo from her position. Abruzzo: “There’s no putting the genie back in the bottle. So, if the Agency does not fully effectuate its Congressional mandate in the future as we did during my tenure, I expect that workers with assistance from their advocates will take matters into their own hands in order to get well-deserved dignity and respect in the workplace, as well as a fair share of the significant value they add to their employers’ operations." (link)
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Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd attorney Len Simon, who has taught at Duke and other highly regarded law schools, has filed an amicus brief alleging price fixing in the injunctive relief portion of the House settlement, per CBS’ Dennis Dodd, who notes Simon is also a “50-year veteran of sports law, civil litigation and Title IX cases.” From the brief: “The strength of the damage settlement and weakness of the injunctive settlement suggests that the NCAA, having been forced to pay billions for its misconduct in the past, seeks in exchange permission from the Court to violate the antitrust laws and place an artificial cap on athlete compensation for the next ten years. … Whether the imprimatur of this Court on this price fix creates antitrust immunity, or a legal defense to antitrust claims, or even a strong talking point in defending such conduct, approval of the injunctive settlement is harmful to the rights of college athletes. The Court should not countenance such a term as a tradeoff for damages for a different class.” Simon also argues the “price fix harms competition” at many schools. “For example, if the injunctive relief were approved, a football powerhouse like Alabama might spend $15M on football, $3.5M on men’s basketball, $1M on women’s basketball, and $500K on all their athletes in eleven other varsity sports. Alabama will then be prohibited by the injunction from spending a penny more on compensation to any athlete, whether football, basketball, or exceptional athletes in minor sports, who might similarly be snubbed by dozens of schools choosing who are capped out by other priorities, although they would pay these athletes well but for the cap.” More. (link)
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Meanwhile, the Pac-12 and USC won’t oppose the NCPA’s motion to withdraw its NLRB complaint seeking student-athlete employment. In a court filing last week, Pac-12 lawyers argued: “If anything, the NCPA’s motion confirms that this case never should have been commenced because the purported reasons for withdrawal have nothing to do with the legal merits of the charge the NCPA actually filed.” In its motion to withdraw, the NCPA wrote: “A primary reason the NCPA filed the [unfair labor practice complaint] against respondents was to help create a pathway and catalyst for USC and other universities to directly compensate their athletes who earn less than their fair market value. Together, these state laws and the change in respondents’ position on compensating its college athletes serve as powerful catalysts toward USC (and other universities) paying their football and basketball players fair compensation.” (link)
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ESPN presented viewership data to the College Football Playoff Management Committee before the championship game, and sources tell SBJ’s Mollie Cahillane and Austin Karp that the general sentiment among the group was that there was no commitment to any substantive schedule changes in Year 2 of the expanded CFP. “There was little appetite at this time to bring the first round up to Heisman week (also Army-Navy Week). In fact, for the first-round games on TNT Sports that went up against NFL regular-season games on broadcast TV, sources noted ESPN data in the presentation showed it was the NFL that may have lost a more noticeable share of audience by competing with the CFP (meaning the loss of audience for the two afternoon CFP first-round games was not as bad as expected).” Regarding the decline in linear TV audiences, media consultants advise against sounding the alarm. “One expert referenced increased audience share going to places like YouTube and Netflix, where programming isn't measured with a traditional Nielsen metric (excluding Netflix’s NFL doubleheader).” The expert adds: “All of Disney combined for streaming and linear is like 2.5% [of the TV watching universe in the U.S]. Getting 20-30M people to watch something is a big deal, and the fact that [the CFP is] down is missing the point.” (link)
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Colorado in FY24 reported $142M in revenue and $132M in expenses, increases of $25M and $5M, respectively. CU brought in $31.2M in football ticket sales from the 2023 season, cruising past the previous record of $16.57M set in 2021. The Buffs also reported a combined $16.7M in revenue from merchandise, licensing, sponsorships and game-day parking, concessions, etc. That number was also a record and nearly double the $8.9M from the previous year. CU’s conference distribution fell to $28.3M for the Buffs’ last year in the Pac-12, nearly $5M less than the previous year and about $7.5M less than CU budgeted for the year. The athletic department received ~$27.1M in institutional support, and Buffs Senior Assoc. AD for Business Operations Cory Hilliard says: “I think the biggest takeaway from all of this is that the collaboration in communication we’re having with the university and the finance leadership team under the university CFO is at an all-time high. With [Chancellor] Justin Schwartz’s involvement, it has been really proactive in looking at what’s coming and how the university can help support athletics in this new environment that all of us are entering, especially at the power four level.” (link)
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The federal government’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has halted payments to all funded agencies and programs, including those previously approved but not yet disbursed, pursuant to an order from President Donald Trump. The funding sites shut down at 5 PM today, and James Moore & Co. Partner Katie Davis explains: “We recommend that entities who rely on this funding perform a cash flow analysis for donors, bankers and other funding sources. Banks may bridge the gap with a line of credit, and donors can offer short-term funding and possible long-term aid. This could have a large impact on education. Title IV funds are disbursed to institutions to apply to individual student accounts, and with spring semester drop/add likely wrapping up now, those payments could be put on hold until the review period is complete.” Davis adds that, per some sources, the order may not apply to Title IV funding, but “larger research institutions relying on funding from NIH and NSF could be significantly impacted.” (link)
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Davis also links to a statement from NACUBO that reads, in part: “This latest order from the White House and the [OMB] will cause unnecessary disruption to the lives of tens of thousands of students and families at colleges and universities across the country—not to mention jeopardizing important and potentially lifesaving scientific and healthcare research taking place in labs and facilities. The overall impact to programs involving federal student aid from the Department of Education, and research funding from agencies like the [NIH] and the [NSF], could be both significant and chaotic. … We urge the Trump administration to reconsider and rescind this misguided policy." (link)
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Hawaii Governor Josh Green wants to increase the budget for the new Aloha Stadium through donations, explaining that “we have $400M. Honestly, we’d do better to have somewhere between $600M and $800M at least to build a beautiful stadium that has a roof that can bring extra concerts. They can bring extra Olympic Trials and so on. … I’m meeting privately with some benefactors to see if they would help us fund additional resources. I’ve had some very good conversations. And hopefully, in the next couple of months, I can announce that.” (link)
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USF is the recipient of a $2.2M gift from Cigar City Brewing Founder Joey Redner and his wife, Jennifer. Half the gift will support the Bulls’ on-campus stadium project in Tampa and half is dedicated to training craft-beer entrepreneurs through the brewing arts program on the St. Petersburg campus. (link)
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Boise State has received an anonymous $1M gift to the Athletic Director Excellence Fund and North End Zone Project. (link)
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Penn has opened the T House powered by Quaker Fuel, a new fueling station and community-building space for student-athletes. (link)
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Lafayette Softball HC Karavin Dew has resigned to accept a role outside college coaching. AC Kelliner Croushore has been named Interim HC for the 2025 campaign. (link)
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Deals, Deals, Deals…
+ Toledo is the latest to expand its partnership with Teamworks to include Teamworks GM. (link)
+ Red Card and GrubHub announce a partnership through which Red Card will be a payment method in Grubhub. According to the announcement, Red Card account holders “will have control over which restaurants your student athletes can order from.” Additionally, receipts will be provided for all orders and purchases can be tax-exempt. (link)
+ Temple will host St. Bonaventure GM Adrian Wojnarowski and ESPN anchor/Owl alumnus Kevin Neghandi “for an engaging program to highlight the changes in college sport and call to support two historic institutions.” The event, which is being put on with support from both schools’ collectives, costs $50 per person for the main event only, $250 for the VIP post-event experience and $300 for both. The market value of the latter two tickets is $150. (link)
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D1.ticker Morning Edition - Tuesday, January 28, 2025
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The AFCA has retained the Chet Culver Group and Capitol Counsel lobbying firms, according to Front Office Sports’ Amanda Christovich, who reports that “lobbying disclosures were submitted Jan. 17, and no other disclosures are listed for the AFCA, suggesting this is the first time the group has hired lobbyists in at least two decades. … Federal lobbying disclosures typically don’t go into specifics about the issues organizations are advocating for—but the forms noted that lobbyists would be working in Congress on the AFCA’s behalf for ‘improving the NIL [name, image, and likeness] program.’ The disclosures did not say how much the group was paying these two organizations.” Capitol Counsel counts Nike and the NFL among its clients. (link)
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Texas brought in $331.9M in revenue during FY24 while accumulating $325m in expenses to finish with a surplus of roughly $6.9M. The Austin American-Statesman’s David Eckert and USA Today’s Steve Berkowitz point out that since the NCAA began its current reporting process in 2005, the only school to top that revenue total was Oregon. The Ducks achieved that in 2020, thanks to a donation exceeding $270M for the renovation of Hayward Field. They add that the Longhorns’ $331.9M revenue figure marks an increase of almost $61M YoY with contributions spurring the surge. UT reported $133.9 million contributions for FY24, an increase of nearly $48M YoY. Eckert and Berkowitz note that “in an independent accounting report conducted by Maxwell Locke and Ritter LLP, also obtained by the USA TODAY Network via a records request, that increase is attributed to a ‘large, one-time donation’ that helped fund the Moody Center's construction.” The Longhorns also reported almost $69M in revenue related to royalties, advertisements and sponsorships, up over $14M from last fiscal year, though the variance is attributed to a change in reporting methodology. In terms of expenses, UT paid out $47.4M in coaching salaries, up roughly $7M from the previous reporting period. The Horns also spent about $79.7M on debt service, up from ~$26M in FY23. (link)
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Michigan State reported operating expenses of $180.5M and revenues of $163.7M for FY24, resulting in a budget deficit of $16.7M. The Detroit Free Press’ Chris Solari notes the athletic department issued severance payments of $3,854,791 to former football staffers after firing former Football HC Mel Tucker with cause during the 2023 season and $585,071 to former women's basketball employees following Suzy Merchant’s retirement in March 2023. MSU made just $522,811 in severance payments in FY23 when the Spartans finished with an $11.2M shortfall. Spartans Assoc. AD for Communications Matt Larson: “The net loss in the 2023-24 NCAA financial report is largely attributed to changes in the football and women’s basketball programs, including severance and buyout packages and other costs and impacts associated with one-time coaching staff changes.” Solari adds that MSU also had to pay contract buyouts for new Football HC Jonathan Smith ($3M), six of his former Oregon State ACs ($300K total) and new defensive coordinator Joe Rossi ($330K to Minnesota). The school listed more than $5.5M in other operating expenses for the football program, nearly $4M more than in FY23. This is the fourth time in the last five years the Spartans have finished a fiscal year in the red. (link)
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Vanderbilt is “finally serious about winning,” according to The Tennessean’s Gentry Estes, who notes the change has started with Chancellor Daniel Diermeier. “Administrative investment in athletics would be a given on any other SEC campuses. Hasn’t been on this one, though. For too long, Vanderbilt’s academic leadership turned its nose up to athletics, treating them as trivial to the overall mission of an institution with more, ahem, intellectual priorities.” Estes wrote an open letter to Diermeier upon his arrival in Nashville in 2020 “that reflected the frustration of his school’s fans and former athletes. … Diermeier responded by inviting me onto a call in which he pledged, ‘We are willing to make the investments to get us to a level where we are competitive within the SEC. That’s the expectation we have for ourselves, and we’ve got to follow through on that.’ Wasn’t just talk. Diermeier followed through.” Commodores AD Candice Lee tells Estes: “It's one thing to say that you want to win, but you don't invest. Pretty hard to win if you don’t do that. To say that you want to win at the highest level and to then invest championship-level resources, that's a different thing. I do feel that progression is happening. I think that's why we're starting to see the fruits of some of that labor, and it's not done. … The goal is to create an advantage for Vanderbilt by using the things that are unique to us. That's what we're doing. That's what every school does. So Vanderbilt is now seeing it as a challenge and an opportunity rather than something to dismiss and lament that like, 'We can't do it.’” (link)
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The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner offers several predictions for 2025, starting with a quiet year on the Power 4 realignment front. “This necessary pause comes after ESPN exercises its option (in February) to extend the ACC’s media rights agreement and the rebellious duo, Clemson and Florida State, settle their lawsuits with the conference.” Wilner also predicts the Pac-12 will sign a media rights deal with The CW, ESPN and Warner Bros. Discovery. “The CW’s package leans heavily into football while WBD and ESPN obtain the rights to both football and basketball. WBD needs sports content to offset the loss of the NBA and sees synergy between regular-season games and its March Madness broadcasts. ESPN’s motivation for grabbing a stake? Content to fill the late broadcast windows and to push the ESPN Bet app. (Its long, close relationship with Gonzaga could play a role, as well.) The total value of the five-year agreement works out to $9M or $10M per school per year…and should not be confused with the Pac-12’s total annual distributions, which include football and basketball postseason revenue. As for Pac-12 expansion: The process begins, but does not end, with the conference adding Texas State.” Also from Wilner: “As the most valuable non-power conferences, the Pac-12 and American begin working together in a manner similar to the Big Ten-SEC partnership that developed in 2024. The immediate goals: To provide a united front on NCAA and CFP issues; and to develop new revenue streams through regular season and postseason scheduling alliances. But the relationship leads to serious conversations about the most sensible outcome of all: a bicoastal merger of the conferences.” Check out all 15 predictions. (link)
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The North Carolina Board of Trustees touched briefly on athletics during its meeting on Monday, noting that it would address several topics in greater detail at its July meeting. Those topics include revenue generation, sponsorships, marketing, basketball arena plans, revenue distribution and the renewal of the ACC’s TV contract, “which will have taken place by then.” There will also be discussion concerning the implementation of the House settlement and Title IX’s application. (link)
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In light of South Carolina Football HC Shane Beamer’s raise to $8M a year and Penn State signing DC Jim Knowles to a $3M per year contract, The Athletic’s Chris Vannini observes: “The money for coaches isn’t going down. We thought in 2020 when COVID hit and we asked a bunch of ADs and stuff, ‘Hey, is this going to be the thing that reins in out of control coaching salaries?’ And all the ADs told us, ‘Yeah, we think so. This will be the wake-up call.’ And then we talked to agents and the agents aid, ‘Oh, no it’s not. This is going to show that football is even more important, that they have to have the best football possible because that's the thing that brings in all the money. And guess what happened? The football coaching salaries kept going up and up and up. Is there a point where it stops? I think so? But it hasn't happened yet.” (link)
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People & Places presented by D1.relocation…
+ Drive & Company - the parent company of D1.ticker - has added Brian Bowsher as Senior Director of Integrated Marketing. Bowsher most recently served as Head of Marketing & Platforms at Sport & Story after nearly six years as Assoc. AD/CMO at Washington. (link)
+ North Florida Assoc. AD for Strategic Communications Brock Borgeson has accepted a new role as Assoc. Director of Communications at Oklahoma, per CollegeAD. (link)
+ UTSA Assoc. AD for Business Operations/former Baseball HC Sherman Corbett has retired, CollegeAD reports. (link)
+ Freshly minted Jacksonville Jaguars HC/former Kentucky OC Liam Coen talks about the difference between college and the NFL from a coaching perspective: “Things have changed in the landscape of college football, we all know that. And when you start to have a young family, things change. Your priorities change. And the National Football League does provide a little bit more of an opportunity to be a father and a husband and a friend, and that’s why we’ve kind of done the back-and-forth the last few years. But I’ll be in the NFL hopefully for a while.” (link)
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LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne writes on X that the empty seats at NCAA gymnastics meets are “concerning,” adding: “I care deeply about the growth in women’s sports, especially in the NCAA. If you want fans to enjoy the sport and increase viewership, you have to look at what makes the crowds go crazy! People understand what a perfect 10 is and want people who do things that look great to be rewarded. Too many deductions taken at a judge’s discretion feels the same as watching a basketball game that’s constantly interrupted with penalties or a football game with flags on every play. At some point it feels negative and loses the entertainment factor that draws the crowd in. The number of questions I am currently getting from fans about the scoring is significant enough for me to share this concern. … This is not about LSU, this is about the sport. I’m in my 5th year and I have an audience of casual fans so maybe I’m in a unique position to see what is happening with fans differently than people just looking at attendance numbers. Fans are confused. I also spend time raising money for female athletes and will always advocate for athletes. Making changes that can impact the entertainment value will affect athletes financially as well. Female sports in the NCAA have to focus on building crowd engagement to continue to get revenue support for the athletes.” (link)
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Last week’s LSU-South Carolina women’s hoops matchup averaged 841K viewers on ESPN with a peak of 1.1M. It was the second most-watched women’s game on ESPN networks this season and fourth across all networks. (link)
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Get your full 2025 ACC football schedule here. (link)
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More from MoffettNathanson Co-Founder Michael Nathanson’s interview with Puck’s Jon Ourand, during which Nathanson submitted that $70 is too much for the skinny bundles Comcast and DirecTV recently announced. “The research we’ve done has always shown consumer interest for a sports-and-news-and-broadcast bundle of 40 to 50 channels for $40 to $50 per month. If you go back to the earliest days of those virtual MVPDs, the bundles were really cheap—and they were losing money. Their initial rollout had stopped the erosion of cord-cutting because they were so attractively priced. But over the past three or four years, some of those products died, and the pricing started getting higher. So the consumer never had a choice of a $40-$50 product. … Consumers are still interested in paying for video. But the delivery mechanism is not what people want, and needs to change. Technology companies—like Amazon, Netflix, and YouTube—get it. It’s their natural DNA to get it and deliver consumer experience. The others have to really work hard on product and innovation.” On Netflix’s future in sports: “They see sports as events, and they want to be in the event business. The leagues—for the first time, really—are in a weaker position relative to a partner. The leagues need to be on Netflix because Netflix does bring that heat and that sizzle. … I don’t consider them a true bidder for every single piece of content coming down the pike. They’re going to be very picky. That said, the global nature of UFC, whose rights will soon be available, has to be really appealing for Netflix.” (link)
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(NEWEST!) Assistant Athletic Director, Corporate Sponsorships and Sales (Robert Morris University – Pennsylvania / Pittsburgh, PA): Conceptualize and execute on sales and sponsorship programs that maximize profit margins and revenue targets. Direct the development of a comprehensive external plan for revenue generation. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 30 days...
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Assistant Director for Student Engagement & Programming (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): More details HERE.
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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Coordinator of Administrative and Business Operations (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): More details HERE.
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.
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Offensive Assistant Coach (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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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Associate Athletic Director for Content and Communications (University of Tulsa / Tulsa, OK): More details HERE.
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.
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Associate Athletic Director for Major Gifts/NIL (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
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.
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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.
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Assistant Athletic Director of Facilities and Event Management (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): More details HERE.
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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Associate Athletic Trainer (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Baltimore, MD): More details HERE.
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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Director, Ticket Sales & Service - Learfield Amplify / Vanderbilt University (Learfield / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
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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