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D1.ticker Evening Standard - Tuesday, February 25, 2025
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Washington State and Oregon State have an “interesting bit of authority” in the Pac-12’s grant of rights agreement, according to JohnCanzano.com’s eponymous publisher, who reports the “Beavers and Cougars retained a right of approval vote on key conference decisions, including media rights, expansion, and Pac-12 Enterprises. … That ‘final approval’ isn’t meant to position the Beavers and Cougars as two-headed czars of the conference. They’re expected to act reasonably. That joint authority was formalized in the documents to recognize the ‘significant investment’ the two schools made in fighting for survival, per a conference source. After all, OSU and WSU took unprecedented risks, invested in a lawsuit vs. departing legacy members, fought for a $255M settlement, and then started a full-blown conference rebuild.” Canzano also notes that during a conference call among ADs on Monday they “received a reminder about public comments, messaging, and some fresh public talking points.” The reminder came after San Diego State AD John David Wicker mentioned to SDSU constituents that he expected a media deal to be reached by the end of next month, and a source tells Canzano: “He wasn’t specifically called out, but I wondered if the talking points were because of his comments.” More from Canzano, including some details of the GOR, such as performance-based revenue-sharing and equal ownership and distributions of and from Pac-12 Enterprises. (link)
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Rutgers Interim AD Ryan Pisarri sings Football HC Greg Schiano’s praises and explains: “We’ve all got to understand what he’s up against, who we expect him to compete against and beat. It’s our responsibility to support them in his program at this level. There’s no doubt in my mind the direction of that program is going in the right direction. And it’s my responsibility to make sure we reinforce that support because it’ll be beneficial. … From my chair, these last couple months, there’s been an incredible amount of collaboration and communication and understanding of how we help each other. And we’re literally and figuratively on the same team. And figuring out everything humanly possible to support them in a way to help them continue this upward trajectory.” As for how that support relates to a new football practice facility, Pisarri notes that “facilities in general have a different role than they had in the past, but I also believe there’s a baseline at this level and there’s facilities you should have. I think it’s no secret our (practice) bubble is 40 years old or something like that. I think if you looked across the country at this level, probably pretty sure everybody else has an indoor structure. We want to get a sense of what that will actually [require]...and then we can get a sense of where it falls into in terms of doing it, not doing it, because, again, there’s so much new stuff that we have to be focused on right now. ... We’ve got to take a look at what we all need to do together and then take a step back to what makes sense for Rutgers as we enter this new world.” (link)
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Northern Illinois AD Sean Frazier joins the Big Mountain Podcast and says the move to the Mountain West and Horizon League will help “open up different markets. It’s a big deal for recruitment not just for the student-athletes or for the athletic department, but for the university. These are Research-1 institutions that we're going into with the Mountain West. There are going to be some other opportunities with our multi-sport conference, our Olympic conference as well. So, there's some synergies behind this; it’s not just aimed at athletics alone but for the greater good of the university at a time that we're seeing things like the enrollment cliff, enrollment challenges and other types of things where you’ve got to be nimble and you’ve got to be entrepreneurial to make sure that you capitalize and make these moves at the right time.” MACtion played a factor in NIU’s decision to leave the MAC, but it wasn’t a catalyst, as Frazier explains: “MACtion is MACtion. We had a Heisman Trophy candidate during MACtion and during that era one of reasons why I really believe that he got his due is because he was on at a time when nobody else was on, and that really helped his candidacy. … Now, everything has an expiration date, and I think ultimately that decision has to be made past my pay grade but you know that was not a consideration of saying oh we got to leave because of MACtion because that's only the month of November anyway.” On the other hand, Frazier notes that, “Yes, it's a consideration. I've heard my fan base about it.” Full podcast. (link)
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The House Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade has scheduled a hearing on NIL for March 4, according to a notice sent by Congressman Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), who chairs the subcommittee. Sportico’s Daniel Libit notes the hearing, which is titled “Moving the Goalposts: How NIL is Reshaping College Athletics,” will be the first such public session since the GOP gained full control of the House, Senate and White House. Also: “Bilirakis’ notice suggests next Tuesday’s event will be a topical, rather than legislative, hearing, meaning that it is intended to gather input on a matter as opposed to advance a specific bill for markup. Witnesses will be announced later, and a spokesperson for Bilirakis did not respond to a request for comment. … Given the issue’s complex history, the array of conflicting factors at play and the GOP’s narrow House majority, passing any substantive college sports legislation in 2025 seems difficult at best.” (link)
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While some NBA stars – like former Arizona State student-athlete James Harden – are supporting their alma maters’ NIL efforts, others are hesitant to do so. One Power 4 GM suggests it’s due to bitterness over not being able to profit from NIL themselves. Former Arizona star Richard Jefferson, who has previously donated $3.5M to support a new practice facility, explains why he won’t donate to a collective: “Why would you invest your money in something that isn’t regulated? You put money into a pool and you can give a kid a million dollars, and the next year someone can offer him $1.1M at another school, and he can just go. If you want to invest in your school, invest in a practice facility. Invest in something that can actually be there versus just trying to buy players. That, to me, is a waste of time.” Harden and Atlanta Hawks guard Georges Niang point out they understand Jefferson’s position but still want to support their schools. Niang, who has donated $100K to the Iowa State collective in each of the past three years: “I think the tough part is just, like, from an investor’s standpoint, it’s almost like burnt money, right? I’m not able to go support them and see the product, so there’s kind of a downfall of that. But at the same time, I do get to see them on TV—they are top-10—so I would say that that’s a good return on investment.” That said, Niang adds: “I hope these kids are ready to be looked at as professionals. If you don’t get the job done, I don’t have time to waste. You’re a good kid, but if you’re not producing at the rate that I’m compensating you, like, what are we doing? That’s kind of how the world works.” (link)
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On3’s Pete Nakos catches up with several football staffers to gauge the impact of tampering in the transfer portal, and one Big Ten staffer tells him: “If an agent signs our top three players, and we present our deal to them, and they think they’re their client is not getting paid fairly, then they just pick up the phone and call 10 other teams and send them to the highest bidder.” An SEC NIL collective operator adds: “It’s one of the bigger problems, if not probably one of the main problems that people don’t want to talk about because everybody’s doing it. It’s unfortunate. With the way these agents have figured out the model and football having two portal windows. Having the two portal windows just exacerbates the problem even more. And these kids are constantly in play because of the multiple portal windows. It’s really nonstop, it’s year-round. The players have plausible deniability. The coaches have deniability because, ‘Oh, I didn’t talk to the kid.’ But you and I both know there’s always a middleman that facilitates that.” Meanwhile, an agent tells Nakos that “you almost have to tamper. A lot of these guys know where they’re going with a couple of weeks left in the season. People blame it on agents, but it’s the teams, too. To be a top-level school, you have to do it. That’s the only way to get ahead of things with this current model. … The only schools who are going to say that they don’t tamper are the ones who are sucking ass in the portal.” The SEC collective operator also points out there is more communication between schools and collectives than there used to be, which has helped add transparency to the actual amounts of money being offered. “Nine out of 10 kids tell us they have offers from other schools. They generally tell us what the number is. Six out of 10 times we’re able to fact-check that number and protect ourselves because of the information sharing.” (link)
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Coaches Corner presented by D1.relocation…
+ Holy Cross elevates Women’s Basketball Interim HC Candice Green to the permanent post. (link)
+ Southern Miss Women’s Basketball HC Joye Lee-McNelis has announced her retirement after 21 seasons at the helm. McNelis is in her third battle against lung cancer and has undergone chemotherapy, which has played a role in her missing multiple games this year. We offer McNelis our best wishes for a full and speedy recovery. (link)
+ North Carolina and Men’s Basketball HC Hubert Davis have agreed to a contract extension through the 2029-30 season. According to The Athletic’s Brendan Marks, the deal was signed on December 4 after initially being agreed to on July 1. As part of the agreement, Davis’ base salary jumps from $400K annually to $1.25M, along with an increase in supplemental income. Davis will earn $1.7M in supplemental income this season, with that figure increasing by $100K annually through the life of the deal. Should UNC move on from Davis before the end of the 2029-30 season, his buyout would be for his base salary multiplied by the number of years remaining on his extension and would not include any supplemental income. (link)
+ Meanwhile, North Carolina is hiring Tandem Sports + Entertainment Founder/President Jim Tanner as its new Men’s Basketball GM. (link)
+ Fresno State Men’s Basketball HC Vance Walberg is expected to return next season, according to the Fresno Bee’s Robert Kuwada, who reports: “President Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval guaranteed Walberg that there would be no move toward non-retention in the first two years of an unconventional three-year contract, but the Bulldogs’ coach, who is 5-23 this season, can still be fired for cause. The investigation into alleged gambling in the program, however, does not constitute cause for termination, according to the clause in the contract.” A source tells Kuwada that Walberg is not part of the investigation and has “been as helpful as he can be.” (link)
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A Colorado federal judge refused to recuse himself from presiding over a lawsuit seeking to block a transgender woman from playing on a women’s college volleyball team, writing that he has given the plaintiffs “free reign” to make their arguments without requiring the use of specific pronouns. More from Law360. (link)
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A bill to amend Oregon’s NIL law has been filed and Kennyhertz Perry attorney Mit Winter explains it “would prohibit the NCAA/any other organization from requiring college athletes to disclose NIL agreements if the agreements have non-disclosure/confidentiality provisions. This directly contradicts the House settlement terms.” (link)
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NC State Football HC Dave Doeren says all 15 spring practices will be closed, meaning there will not be a spring game for the Wolfpack. (link)
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It’s Personnel…
+ Drake has reappointed President Marty Martin to a three-year term through June 30, 2029. (link)
+ The Minority Opportunities Athletic Association (MOAA) announces new members to its Board of Directors following the 2025 Symposium will include Hampton AD Anthony Henderson, Southern Utah AD Doug Knuth, American Assoc. AD for Student-Athlete Development and Inclusive Excellence Patty Medina, and UTSA Director of Compliance Sailor Sinclair. (link)
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Deals Digest…
+ Kennesaw State is expanding its partnership with Teamworks to include Teamworks GM. (link)
+ The Southern Conference has extended its agreement with the Greenville Drive, establishing Fluor Field as the home of its baseball championship for the 2025, 2026, and 2027 seasons. (link)
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Facility Features…
+ Creighton unveils the McGraw Family Indoor Golf Facility, a nearly 4,000-square-foot performance center that includes three custom-designed golf simulators, advanced software and analytics, putting and chipping greens, lounge areas, a kitchenette, individual lockers and coaches’ offices. The center was supported with a $500K gift from Nicole and Mike McGraw. (link)
+ Oral Roberts shows off its new baseball locker room and clubhouse. Have a look. (link)
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D1.ticker Morning Edition - Tuesday, February 25, 2025
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ESPN’s Pete Thamel broke the news last night that Stanford AD Bernard Muir is “expected to resign from his position.” (link); The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner contextualizes Muir’s resignation: “The move comes at a critical time for Stanford’s major sports, football and men’s basketball, which are struggling for traction during a period of massive change in college sports — change that, in many regards, runs counter to the university’s bedrock academic mission. Stanford has been slow to adjust to name, image and likeness and the transfer portal. While Muir was hardly the primary reason for the failure to adapt rapidly, his successor must work effectively with the administration, head coaches and key donors alike. Otherwise, success in the major sports will be difficult to achieve.” Regarding Muir’s successor, Wilner submits: “Prior Stanford experience, either as an athlete or athletic department employee, should be prioritized.” (link)
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The Big West on Friday will vote to extend an official invitation to Cal Baptist and Utah Valley in 2026, per Action Network’s Brett McMurphy. (link)
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Northern Illinois will pay the Horizon League a $1.4M entry fee over six annual installments, according to The Athletic’s Matt Baker and Chris Vannini, who note that is in addition to the $2M entry fee it will pay the Mountain West. (link)
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More from Big East Commissioner Val Ackerman’s conversation with Puck’s John Ourand, during which she expresses hope that the next iteration of college athletics continues prioritizing the life experience for all student-athletes while also holding onto the “nexus between academics and athletics participation. What do I mean by that? I hope that as the NCAA and college sports evolves there will continue to be a requirement that an athlete who's playing at the collegiate level has to be a full-time student in pursuit of a degree and in good academic standing at their school. If we lose that, if we're just in a world of hired guns where athletes are participating for their teams and wearing a name on the front of their jerseys but they don’t otherwise have a connection to the school through life as is a student, then I think we've lost what college sports at its base level is supposed to be all about.” Ackerman, who notes every school in the Big East will opt into the House settlement, acknowledges that it makes sense for student-athletes in revenue-generating sports to receive a larger share of that revenue but adds: “What I'm worried about is if more money is directed to those sports and it's a finite pot of money, then I am worried about where the money is going to come from to support the non-revenue side of the house. Where's the money going to come from to support men's Olympic sports which don't generate significant money? Where's the money going to come from to support women's sports, which are clearly growing in importance and benefiting from increased investment over the years. Will that investment be halted or arrested because a school decides I really need to make my football team competitive… because that's the most important thing on our campus for brand purposes or front porch or donor engagement or reputation or whatever? So I think there are a lot of unknowns here.” Full podcast. (link)
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SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey covers several topics on the CALS Report podcast, including the league’s concerted efforts to improve its basketball profile. In Sankey’s first year, the conference only qualified three teams for the NCAA Tournament – Kentucky, Texas A&M and Vanderbilt – and Vanderbilt was slated for a play-in game in Dayton. In a subsequent meeting with ADs, Sankey said he expected the basketball teams to perform the way the conference’s softball teams do. “All 13 of them are selected to participate in the NCAA Tournament. Everybody kind of had the awkward laugh like ‘Yeah, yeah.’ I said, ‘You know what, you should laugh because had I said that maybe 10 years ago that every one of our softball teams would regularly be selected to participate in the NCAA Tournament, people would have laughed and said that's really not possible. Yet we’ve done it over and over and over, so why shouldn't we have that same high expectation across all of our sports?” Sankey also shares some leadership lessons he’s learned over the years, including: “You cannot lead people if you're not healthy yourself – and that is healthy in your relationships, healthy in your emotions and healthy from a faith and physical standpoint. [Because of] the intensity of what we do, it's easy to put all of those aside. … So, how do you manage the intensity and the emotions? How do you find the opportunity to take a step back because it's not valid that you can just go hard 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year? So, how do you create breaks and how do you take care of yourself physically in that experience.” (link)
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The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) released a statement to Front Office Sports’ Amanda Christovich on whether House payments would violate student visa laws which reads, in part: “Currently, student-athletes cannot profit from their NIL deals. Any changes to visa restrictions will be communicated through legislative and department channels and SEVP will provide updates through Study in the States, social media and field representatives.” (link)
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Penn State AD Pat Kraft was asked during yesterday’s press conference whether the Nittany Lions will require student-athletes to sign multiyear contracts and replied: “What, are you going to sue a kid for leaving? The rules have changed. It’s a one-year window. [We want] young men and women to be here for a long time. Hoping the new world can slow that down. But to have a buyout…okay, who is going to sign that? We have to recruit against Georgia, Alabama, and Ohio State. If they’re not doing it, it won’t work. We have to come together in sports to make this better for the student-athletes and the sports.” (link); More from Kraft’s presser, during which he said of salaries for football coordinators: “You go get the best. I'm going to go get the best coordinators we can. ... We can afford it. ... Why would I shortchange it? I think we have two of the best coordinators in the country. ... It was a no-brainer with Jim Knowles." On expanding the College Football Playoff, Kraft remarks: "If we have 16, what are we gonna [do], go into February? I'm not opposed to 14 or 16, I just want to know more about what does that whole calendar look like?" (link)
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Texas AD Chris Del Conte tells On Texas Football’s Bobby Burton that the decision not to play a traditional spring game will disappoint some fans, “but the ultimate goal is to win a championship, and the health and wellness of our student-athletes is most important. It’s unusual, playing a 16-game schedule, but every year we want to play that 17th game. I applaud [Football HC] Steve [Sarkisian] for his thinking. I understood it. I understand the disappointment, but you have to look at it in its totality.” The Longhorns have played 30 games the last two seasons, and Del Conte notes that “by November, we started talking about OTAs and what that looks like, because you graduate 30 kids, you go to the portal, you add 25 new freshmen and transfers. It’s about how we maintain the health of an organization.” (link)
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Boise State AD Jeramiah Dickey tells KTVB’s Jay Tust it’s “easy to get to a negative place” due to the recent developments in college athletics, and the “reality is I don’t like necessarily what our industry’s become. I think we’ve lost that negotiation period and things are being forced on us. I would rather embrace the suck and define it ourselves, and I believe that’s a competitive advantage. When everyone else is going left and crying, we're not going to do that. We’re going to put all our chips in the middle because what do we have to lose? I know what we represent and I can't guarantee success, but I'm not afraid of failure. I can live with failure if the effort’s there.” When it comes to sharing revenue, Dickey notes that “we’ve never had what anyone else has, we just need more than we’ve got. I think somewhere between $5M and $10M is a realistic number and then how we split that up between football and men's and women's basketball and our Olympic sport programs I think will be important. And I think that's a competitive advantage for us – 18 sport programs matter to us, 350+ student-athletes.” Full Q&A. (link)
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Texas A&M has selected five finalists to become the next chancellor of its 11-university system, according to the Texas Tribune’s Kate McGee and Jessica Priest. They are Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar, Texas A&M Foundation President Tyson Voelkel, Alabama President Stuart Bell, State Rep. Trent Ashby (R-Lufkin) and U.S. Representative Michael McCaul (R-Austin). (link)
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More on West Virginia law HB 2576, which would, among other things, “restrain the NCAA, a conference or college from investigating or punishing an athlete for NIL-related activity,” according to Sportico’s Michael McCann, who adds: “It also greenlights colleges to pay athletes for use of their NIL and to share revenue with athletes. The legislation resembles statutes and executive orders in states including Georgia, Virginia, Texas and Oklahoma that try to block the NCAA from enforcing rules related to NIL and compensating athletes.” McCann explains this bill and others like it could have at least three ramifications for the House settlement: they could invite conflicts between the state laws and settlement terms, the NCAA could see disputes involving athletes who rely on state laws to challenge the settlement, and the NCAA might adjust its legal strategy for defending the settlement. Instead of relying on lobbying Congress, the NCAA could “sue states to block the enforcement of laws that conflict with NCAA rules on grounds those states are violating the U.S. Constitution. This idea might sound quixotic but it’s one the NCAA has successfully used before. The key case is NCAA v. Miller (1993), which involved the NCAA suing Nevada Gov. Robert Miller after he signed into law a statute that required NCAA investigators to honor due process safeguards. The statute reflected Nevada lawmakers’ belief the NCAA unfairly went about investigating UNLV and its men’s basketball coach, Jerry Tarkanian. … The NCAA won the Miller litigation, as federal courts concurred that Nevada, by attempting to force the NCAA to treat Nevada colleges differently, prevented the NCAA from functioning as a national, membership organization.” More from McCann. (link)
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A feasibility study conducted by Collegiate Consulting supports Chicago State’s decision to begin playing football in 2026. Collegiate Consulting projected Year 1 expenses of $3.2M, which included expenses for football and two women’s sports programs. Of those expenses, $2M were allocated for football. Collegiate Consulting projected Year 5 expenses for the three programs of $5.2M with football awarding 63 scholarships and operating with expenses of ~$925K, not including coaching salaries/benefits, which are projected to be $1.1M. Collegiate Consulting also created an FCS non-scholarship pro-forma, which projected football expenses of $1.8M. (link)
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The Michigan-Michigan State men’s basketball matchup on Friday drew 1.783M viewers to Fox, making it the most-watched men’s hoops game on the network this season. (link)
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Stanford partnered with WMT on a pilot campaign using the connected TV advertising platform MNTN, which brings “familiar targeting and attribution from paid social campaigns to connected TVs with delivery through direct deals with the likes of Peacock, ESPN, CBS, Bravo, FOX, and other premium providers,” per WMT. The campaign produced a similar return on ad spend as concurrent Google campaigns, achieved a 28% conversion rate (purchase) from those verified visits and experienced 15% lift in conversions attributed to MNTN verified visitors. WMT adds that the “attribution and reporting at MNTN is the key unlock for connected TV advertising. The user has a specified period of time to visit a predetermined website following exposure to an ad viewed on a streaming device. … Stanford Athletics campaign had a prospecting objective which established specific targeting for delivering the ads. Future targeting can include retargeting as well as custom audiences sourced from their customer database.” (link)
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(NEWEST!) Director Facilities and Equipment/ATC (Stetson University / DeLand, FL): Director of Facilities and Equipment/ATC including the facility and equipment room. This position is responsible for establishing a philosophy and operational plan for the Athletic Training Center. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 30 days...
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Corrigan Family Assistant Athletics Director for Leadership and Mental Performance (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
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Associate AD for External Affairs (Stetson University / DeLand, FL): More details HERE.
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Associate Director, Athletic Communications (University of California – Berkeley / Berkeley, CA): JOB ID 76108 More details HERE.
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Gopher Athletics Internships 2025-26 (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for External Affairs (Winthrop University / Rock Hill, SC): More details HERE.
Director of Broadcast Video and Technology (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Director of Creative Services and Social Media for Football (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Chapel Hill, NC): More details HERE.
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.
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Athletics Eligibility Coordinator (Utah Tech University (Formerly Dixie State University) / St. George, UT): More details HERE.
Assistant Director – Compliance (Middle Tennessee State University / Murfreesboro, TN): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Happy Valley United (Blueprint Sports / State College, PA): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Arkansas Edge (Blueprint Sports / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Gopher Athletics Internships 2025-26 (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director-Athletics Compliance (Onsite) (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director for Compliance (Lamar University / Beaumont, TX): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director, Compliance (University of Notre Dame / Notre Dame, IN): More details HERE.
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Associate AD for External Affairs (Stetson University / DeLand, FL): More details HERE.
Community and Events Coordinator (Texas A&M University – Corpus Christi / Corpus Christi, TX): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director for Major Gifts (University of New Mexico / Albuquerque, NM): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Development (Long Beach State University / Long Beach, CA): More details HERE
Associate Director, Major Gifts - Athletics (Northwestern University / Evanston, IL): More details HERE.
Development Assistant - Annual Giving (Ole Miss Athletics Foundation / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
Director of Development/Major Gifts (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director - Major Gifts (Wayne State University / Detroit, MI): (DII) More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Development Operations (R0007457) (Wake Forest University / Winston-Salem, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Annual Giving (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Senior Director of Development (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director of Stewardship, Signature Events and Donor Experience (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Happy Valley United (Blueprint Sports / State College, PA): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Arkansas Edge (Blueprint Sports / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Gopher Athletics Internships 2025-26 (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Director, Premium Seating (Boise State University / Boise, ID): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Annual Giving (N-Club) (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Annual Giving (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Advancement Growth - Athletics Advancement (University of Oklahoma Foundation / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Director of Development (Ole Miss Athletics Foundation / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
Development Assistant/Assistant Director of Development (Ole Miss Athletics Foundation / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Premium Seating & Hospitality (University of South Carolina / Columbia, SC): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director Athletics Development (Yale University / New Haven, CT): More details HERE.
Associate Director for Development, Annual Fund (University of Texas – Austin / Austin, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development, Leadership Giving (University of Texas – Austin / Austin, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for External Affairs (Winthrop University / Rock Hill, SC): More details HERE.
Director of Development, Athletic Donor Relations and Stewardship (Texas Christian University / Fort Worth, TX): More details HERE.
Associate AD of Leadership Gifts (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Major Gifts (Tulane University / New Orleans, LA): More details HERE.
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.
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Director of Athletics (Bates College / Lewiston, ME): (DIII) More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (University of Puget Sound / Tacoma, WA): (DIII) More details HERE.
Executive Director (Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
Senior Deputy Athletics Director, Chief Operating Officer (George Mason University / Fairfax, VA): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Happy Valley United (Blueprint Sports / State College, PA): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Arkansas Edge (Blueprint Sports / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Deputy Athletic Director and Chief Operating Officer (University of North Carolina – Wilmington / Wilmington, NC): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics (University of Akron / Akron, OH): More details HERE. The D1.dossier for this position is available HERE.
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Colonial Life Arena Event Manager (University of South Carolina / Columbia, SC): More details HERE.
Director of Football Equipment (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Event & Facility Management (University of Utah / Salt Lake City, UT): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director, Capital Projects & Operations (University of Memphis / Memphis, TN): More details HERE.
Director of Sports Turf, Grounds, and Landscape (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Coordinator for Athletic Facilities & Operations (Albany State University / Albany, GA):(DII) More details HERE.
Athletic Facility Supervisor (Arkansas State University / Jonesboro, AR): More details HERE.
Gopher Athletics Internships 2025-26 (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Director of Athletics Equipment (The George Washington University / Washington, DC): More details HERE.
Assistant Equipment Manager (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director of Facilities and Event Management (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): More details HERE.
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Athletics Graduate Assistants (Fall 2025) (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Sports Career Pathways Graduate Assistant (Fall 2025) (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
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Head Football Athletic Trainer/Associate Head Athletic Trainer (California State University – Sacramento / Sacramento, CA): More details HERE.
Corrigan Family Assistant Athletics Director for Leadership and Mental Performance (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (University of California – Riverside / Riverside, CA): More details HERE.
Athletic Performance – Graduate Assistant (Creighton University / Omaha, NE): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer/Head Football Athletic Trainer (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Athletic Psychologist (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Sports Psychologist (Oakland University / Rochester, MI): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Associate Athletics Director, Athletic Counseling (Eastern Michigan University / Ypsilanti, MI): More details HERE.
Associate Head Football Strength and Conditioning Coach (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Strength and Conditioning Coach - Football (Bowling Green State University / Bowling Green, OH): More details HERE.
Director of Sports Medicine / Head Athletic Trainer (University of Nevada – Las Vegas / Las Vegas, NV): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (University of North Carolina – Wilmington / Wilmington, NC): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer, Soccer (University of Oklahoma / Norman, OK): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer (University of Maryland – Baltimore County / Baltimore, MD): More details HERE.
Director of Football Performance (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
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Associate AD for External Affairs (Stetson University / DeLand, FL): More details HERE.
General Manager - Arizona Sports Enterprises (University of Arizona / Tucson, AZ): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Happy Valley United (Blueprint Sports / State College, PA): More details HERE.
Executive Director - Arkansas Edge (Blueprint Sports / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for External Affairs (Winthrop University / Rock Hill, SC): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Corporate Sponsorships and Sales (Robert Morris University – Pennsylvania / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Corporate Partnerships – Department of Athletics (Duquesne University / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
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Associate AD for External Affairs (Stetson University / DeLand, FL): More details HERE.
Senior Director/Director of Ticket Operations (University of Georgia / Athens, GA): More details HERE.
Ticket Operations Systems Manager (Syracuse University / Syracuse, NY): More details HERE.
Gopher Athletics Internships 2025-26 (University of Minnesota / Minneapolis, MN): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Ticket Operations (University of North Carolina at Charlotte / Charlotte, NC): More details HERE.
Director of Ticket Operations (University of New Mexico / Albuquerque, NM): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for External Affairs (Winthrop University / Rock Hill, SC): More details HERE.
Associate AD of Ticket Revenue (University of Nebraska / Lincoln, NE): More details HERE.
Director, Ticket Sales & Service - Learfield Amplify / Vanderbilt University (Learfield / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
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