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Learfield is the gold standard in revenue generation, sponsorship, and NIL services in college athletics. With the landmark approval of the House-settlement, Learfield Impact delivers market-leading NIL services, centered around people, content and technology combined to strengthen NIL opportunities for student-athletes, partner schools, and brands.
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Rutgers is expected to hire LSU Executive Deputy AD/COO Keli Zinn as its next AD, according to NJ Advance Media’s Brian Fonseca and Steve Politi, who report that Zinn met with RU Board of Governors Chair Amy Towers over the weekend. Fonseca and Politi also note that Zinn has a longstanding relationship with new Rutgers president William Tate given their overlap in Baton Rouge. “It appears likely that Zinn’s candidacy means Rutgers is abandoning the ‘pioneering’ new structure that was championed by TurnkeyZRG CEO Len Perna in favor of a more traditional model. Zinn is linked to LSU through June of 2030 with an annual salary of $425K after signing a contract extension in April. The deal – which was signed by Tate months before he left for Piscataway – does not include a buyout clause, however.” (link)
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With Memphis reportedly seeking an invite to the Big 12 with an assurance of more than $200M in sponsorship dollars from AutoZone and Lowe’s, sources tell SBJ’s Ben Portnoy the “Tigers’ administration may have drawn an inadvertent line in the sand: If you want to join the Power 4, it’s going to cost you more than that.” One Big 12 source adds: “Expansion fees will be the new norm in future realignment within the Power 4. This sets the tone for future realignment; in addition to bringing that brand value, performance value, market value, if you want in, you’re going to have to pay the freight, no different than a professional league.” Another source remarks: “You’re going to be hard-pressed for folks to come into leagues now and ask leagues to give up money. College sports were the last vestiges, if you will, where you could get in for free. Normally, if you’re trying to join [a professional league] you’ve got to bring value. This is probably a newer model at the higher level of what you’ll see.” ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips adds: “The desire to get to the Power 4 has never been greater. Schools’ willingness to do what they can to help position themselves is clear, but I just don’t see a ton more movement here in the near term.” (link)
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The Pac-12 plans to play 18 sports beginning in 2026, and JohnCanzano.com’s eponymous publisher reports the league is “ramping up to add affiliate members in several.” Meanwhile, another matter under consideration is the contract status of Commissioner Teresa Gould. The commissioner previously told me that the expiration of her contract lined up with the Pac-12’s end of the conference’s two-year NCAA grace period (July 1, 2026), and Canzano believes keeping her is a “no-brainer.” At least one conference AD agrees, telling Canzano Gould “has been a rock through this.” As such, Canzano explains that “multiple campus sources have told me to expect Gould to receive a contract extension in the coming weeks. It’s unknown when that extension would be formalized and announced by the Pac-12, as there are ‘some other pressing matters’ on the table, said one source.” (link)
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Vanderbilt AD Candice Storey Lee is the subject of a profile by The Next’s Stephanie Kaloi, who examines Lee’s career path and how she’s working with Commodores Women’s Basketball HC Shea Ralph to continue elevating the program. Lee has observed during her career that “it’s really important for people to sort of speak possibilities into you because sometimes they can see things that you can’t see. And so that’s a long way of saying [that] I didn’t know at first that it was possible. … When you think about [Virginia AD] Carla Williams and her role at Virginia, and [Duke AD] Nina King and her role at Duke, I hope student-athletes see us now and know that you know you can do anything, including being an athletic director or being a conference commissioner, or whatever it is you aspire to be.” While she balks at being called a “trailblazer,” Lee says: “I think that when you think about the fact that…people start talking to you about being groundbreaking or being a trailblazer, and I’m like, I mean, if you give me a minute, I will name for you many, many, many women who can lead departments right now, right?” Those women just have not been given the opportunity. So I hope that all of us sort of say, ‘Gosh dang it.’ You know, that was 2020 when I got the job. Like, we are still breaking records in 2020? We’re still being groundbreaking? Or are we just perhaps not always considering people who really have earned the opportunity. I feel like I earned this opportunity. I just know that I’m not the only person who can lead a department that looks like me or is a woman.” More. (link)
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The Cotton Bowl is undergoing $140M in renovations set to be completed in time for this year’s Red River Rivalry between Oklahoma and Texas, including widened concourses, expanded concessions and restrooms, and 14 new escalators to better facilitate movement in and out of the stadium. Longhorns AD Chris Del Conte tells Horns247’s Chip Brown that "this first step of the renovation will have a huge, positive impact. I think there's more renovations on tap to complete the entire bowl. But I think this is the first, initial step that I hope people will see improvements in the concessions, restrooms and escalators up top, helping people get in and out of the Cotton Bowl on the side facing the State Fair. They've still got to do the other [east] side, but I think you'll see massive improvements this year." (link)
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The Athletic’s Brendan Marks, CJ Moore and Lindsay Schnell break down the average estimated roster costs in men’s basketball by league based on a poll of 35 coaches during last week’s Peach Jam. The SEC leads the way at $9.7M, followed by the Big 12 ($8.6M), BIg Ten ($8.5M), ACC ($8.2M), Big East ($8M), “mid-major plus” ($2.3M) and low- to mid-major ($525K). One AC at a mid-major-plus school notes that “this year is the money-dump year because of everything that’s happening. We will never see these numbers again. Now, what does that mean moving forward? We don’t know.” An SEC HC adds: “With the collectives being in question, and all the details that are coming out about the settlement, I don’t know what it’s gonna look like.” An ACC HC, however, disagrees, telling The Athletic: “You can’t put the toothpaste back in the tube. The free market has (borne) what these numbers are, so now you can’t come back and correct the free market, and say, ‘Well, actually, this isn’t the free market. What we determine is the free market is the free market.’ If you were able to do that, we wouldn’t be running to Congress asking for help, because that would be legal. What we’re doing now isn’t legal.” An ACC AC expresses a similar concern: “You’re going to have a kid making $400K and you’re gonna go, ‘Well, next year I only have $200K for you.’ That doesn’t usually sit real well.” (link)
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Tulsa Football HC Tre Lamb says the program must be “intentional about competing in recruiting. We have money in the bank, we have NIL, we have rev-share. There’s no reason we can’t compete with the Oklahoma States of the world and the Kansas States of the world. We don’t need those people coming into our backyard taking our players. Is it going to be hard to beat Oklahoma on a kid or an SEC team? Yes, absolutely. But we want to be able to compete with everybody else.” (link)
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SBJ’s Ben Portnoy also offered a peek behind the curtain at Digital Drive (aka Radio Row) at SEC Football Media Days, noting that “in the cutthroat world of college football media, the SEC’s Digital Drive is a contest in landing high-profile guests, and a crucial advertising week for stations not immune to the challenges of the modern media landscape.” ESPN Baton Rouge host Matt Moscona puts it like this: “This is a four-day avalanche of football content. And the hardest part about being here [on the second floor], as opposed to in the main room, is here, you eat what you kill. You’re not guaranteed anything.” Portnoy points out that over the years, “Radio Row has shifted from a single hallway at the Wynfrey Hotel in Birmingham, with just five or six stations, to an operation topping 40 outlets this year.” According to SEC Director of Communications Chuck Dunlap, the conference has steadily handed out more than 1,200 credentials annually over the last several years. Dunlap also tells Portnoy: “I can’t really picture the event without radio. It’s such a big part of the event – even as much so, maybe more so than even SEC Network.” As for the logistics, Portnoy explains that radio stations wishing to take part pay a $700 up-front table fee. For $1K, they can secure a table plus a 10-by-10 area situated more toward the front of Digital Drive. Moscona estimates his station spent $5K on the setup, hotel rooms and flights for the five staffers it sent and says the goal is to bring in at least 3x that in revenue. More. (link)
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The five beach volleyball student-athletes and one bowling student-athlete who have filed a Title IX lawsuit against Stephen F. Austin on Sunday filed a notice of supplemental authority, citing President Donald Trump’s recent executive order. Sportico’s Daniel Libit reports the plaintiffs “pointed to its language affirming the administration’s policy that ‘opportunities for scholarships and collegiate athletic competition in women’s and non-revenue sports must be preserved and, where possible, expanded.’” Libit adds: “In invoking Trump’s executive order, the plaintiffs’ argument appears to be shaped as much by the political climate as by legal doctrine. SFA is located in Texas, a state that backed Trump by over 1.5 million votes in the 2024 presidential election. The case, which is seeking class action status, has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Michael J. Truncale, a Trump appointee. (Before joining the federal bench, Truncale served as a regent of the Texas State University System. SFA is part of the University of Texas System, which is distinct from TSUS.) Neither an attorney for the plaintiffs nor spokespeople for the university immediately responded to requests for comment.” (link)
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Former Wisconsin women’s cross country student-athletes Victoria Heiligenthal, Alissa Niggemann, Brogan MacDougall, Madison Mooney and Alexa Westley have accused former Badgers HC Mackenzie Wartenberger, who resigned in 2022, of emotional abuse, body shaming and dismissing injury concerns. All five say they were afraid to come forward sooner, and Westley says: “Everyone’s experience was different, but it was really hard when everyone’s stories started coming out because you had women on the team that it was so bad, but some women didn’t know it was going on. So it made a very confusing team culture especially when sh*t hit the fan. … So many women were like, ‘Mack’s great, we love her. Yeah, we know she’s tough, but what’s going on? And you had the rest of us who were like, ‘Life sucks, life’s been terrible, we’re miserable, we’re sad.’” When reached for comment, Wartenberger told the Wisconsin State Journal’s Jim Polzin that “coaching student-athletes was an immense privilege, and I hold deep respect for the challenges they face – especially the unique pressures placed on female student-athletes today. I believe every woman deserves to have her voice heard, even when her experience may differ from my own perspective or intentions, and for that reason I will not be inserting my voice into their stories – this is not my space to occupy.” (link)
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Sportico’s Michael McCann breaks down the decision by a federal judge in Nebraska who denied UNLV offensive lineman Jack Hasz’s motion for a preliminary injunction to play a fifth season DI season. U.S. District Court Judge Joseph F. Bataillon ruled that “while the NCAA’s five-year rule, which limits athletes to four seasons of intercollegiate competition – including JUCO competition – in any one sport within a five-year window, ‘has an incidental effect on Hasz’s ability to earn NIL money by preventing him from playing an additional season’ the rule ‘does not directly regulate commercial activity.’ Instead, the rule simply concerns ‘who can play college sports and for how long.’” Bataillon called this distinction a crucial one because “non-commercial behavior falls outside the scope of the Sherman Act.” Another problem for Hasz, Bataillon wrote, is that he hasn’t shown he’s likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of an injunction: “To the extent [Hasz] alleges he will lose out on NIL deals, any such harm is compensable through an award of monetary damages.” The NCAA was represented by James G. Powers and other attorneys from McGrath North and Dorsey & Whitney. Hasz can appeal Bataillon’s ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. More from McCann. (link)
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Grambling State Softball HC Nakeya L. Hall has announced her resignation after seven seasons. (link)
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This morning’s edition of Coaches.wire indicates the carousel may be slowing down a touch as we near another academic year. Check out the coaching moves across all sports. (link)
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Big East Commissioner Val Ackerman was the inaugural guest on JohnWallStreet’s Business of College Sports podcast & talked about the comparison between Power 4 rev share budgets & those in her league: “They're able to benefit from their football revenue. We don't have that revenue. So frankly, they have an advantage right now because they have a higher level of resources than we have. That said, they have a higher level of expense as well because their football revenues, as best I can tell, have to be used in large part to pay their football expenses and that will include direct payments to their athletes under the revenue sharing model. We will not be paying, our schools will not have, I can't speak for all of them, but my sense is our schools aren't going to be making payments to the athletes for football. So that does allow us to prioritize basketball in this revenue sharing world. And while I can't really share with you spending levels or anything like that, I can say our schools are going to lean into that. Basketball is the most important sport on our campuses. We're not competing with football for that privilege, if you will. And our schools, it's critically important to them to be nationally relevant and competitive in that sport. We've got a great track record of success. Our schools want to keep that going. How they plan to do that is really going to be on them, how they're going to raise money to do that, how they're going to manage expenses to be able to do that, what support they're going to need internally from their alumni bases, et cetera. [...] I can tell you that we have coaches in our league who have been at football oriented schools, and they tell us, they tell me it's a very different environment for them to be at a school where basketball's not the number one sport. [...] It's always a priority here and always drives our conversations. I think for a coach that's part of the calculation when they decide where they want to be. If it's a basketball coach, especially, do I want to be someplace where maybe the resources are more significant, assuming they're directed my way, or do I want to be someplace where maybe the resources aren't quite the same way because there's not football money coming in, but the focus on basketball really is clear. And so I think it's a mix of reasons that our coaches are migrating here.” More. (link)
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Another key note from American Conference Commissioner Tim Pernetti: “We are rolling out player availability for this season and I want to just tip my cap to the coaches. They spent a lot of time on this with [Assoc. Commissioner for Football] Jaime Hixson and [Senior Dir. of Football Ops and Sport Administration] Shane Elder and our football group at the conference. Again, we're not reacting to anything. We certainly saw it unfold last year. I took the job in June last year and I think we're a little behind the eight ball on that, but our coaches did a really great job having a thoughtful process about, okay, well what's everybody else doing? But we'll put that over here, what works for us? So we will start player availability reporting this season. Player availability will be a game day reporting system and I think it's an important modernization for where we are as a conference.” (link)
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Virginia AD Carla Williams on the latest episode of the Inside Virginia Athletics podcast in connection to constant student-athlete talent movement across the industry: “We've talked about this with several of our coaches, because change, you could take two roads with change. You could experience the change and not adjust, or you could accept the change and look for the opportunity to really flourish. And I think if you think about regular students across the country, there are hundreds of one year graduate programs, hundreds of two year graduate programs that doesn't make those graduates any less of an alum to those schools, including UVa. We have a lot of graduate student athletes, which to me is one of those unintended consequences. Those things that you don't know you're going to have happen until it happens. But people that really value education, they've earned their undergraduate degree and have eligibility and chosen to come to a place like UVa to get a UVa graduate degree. That's right. I mean, to me, we applaud that. We think that while you're being a Division I Power 4 athlete, whether they have one year of eligibility or two years of eligibility or five years of eligibility, they have all chosen Virginia for the same reasons. We love Virginia. So they are our student athletes and this is their school, and that's how they see it.” Lots more. (link)
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Washington AD Pat Chun joined the Canzano & Wilner podcast from Big Ten media days, and says college athletics remain slow to adjust to change around it, including the College Football Playoff selection format. Chun: “The longer I’m in this business of college sports, the more I recognize our inability to evolve quickly has really been to our own detriment. The whole world has changed significantly. When you look at the 4-4-2-2-1 model, it takes a lot of the human element out of selecting what the playoff field would look like. I’m in the camp that that’s actually the right thing for the future of the sport.” More Chun: “There’s no perfect solution. College football is inherently flawed in its structure, so when you start from that point and know that a selection committee simply has not worked, you end up with members of the media getting death threats, members of the committee getting death threats. There’s a perceived subjectivity, even with all the data points that are available. At least in the proposed model, it shrinks the work of the committee to just a few.” (link)
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In a sit down chat with WSAV’s Joey Lamar, Georgia Southern AD Chris Davis says the Eagles will be in the seven figures for rev share, but declines to break it down by sport. When asked about discussions of a reworked media rights deal for the Sun Belt, Davis: “We’re looking at everything really. You know what it’s really driving? A curious mind and an area of saying is this the best way to look at it? Are we positioned? Because just you want to create more opportunities to have a different TV rights deal or whatever? You can’t [do that]. We’re contractually obligated right now. We’re in a contract. But that doesn’t mean that the preparation on how you’re doing it and realizing that the Sun Belt has some real uniqueness. If there ever was an opportunity to do like patches on the jerseys because there’s talk about that. For instance, last year we had the logo on the field. We were one of the first schools to do the logo on the field in the whole country. That’s a credit to our Georgia Southern Sports Properties and Terry Harmon and that group. But when that happened — here’s a question — if you did it conference-wide could you generate more revenue? That’s a curious mind attitude.” (link)
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Hawaii AD Matt Elliott pens a letter to fans regarding the Rainbow Warriors’ approach to the House settlement and explains: “We are actively building a model that combines revenue sharing, roster limits, and scholarship allotments that will be consistent with our vision for excellence. This work requires benchmarking our program against our peers, appraising current student-athlete benefits, assessing the availability of resources now and in the future, and understanding the needs of our coaches to recruit and retain elite student-athletes. The model will be consistent with the values of the University while recognizing the contributions that our student-athletes make to the programs and the entire community. Our goal is to be the premier athletics program in the Mountain West and Big West conferences and we invite everyone to play a role in our success. … The reality of college athletics is that the model will continue to evolve. What will not change is that incredible human beings will have the opportunity to earn college degrees at our world-class institution, the University of Hawai'i, while pursuing their athletic dreams. A big part of our mission is to develop our student-athletes to become the next leaders of society. Many have and will continue to do that right here in Hawai'i. This pipeline will brighten the future for all of us and generations to come. Along the way, we will come together as a community, experience the joy of sports, and watch UH teams inspire us all.” (link)
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Kansas Men’s Basketball HC Bill Self has been released from the hospital, two days after having a pair of stents inserted. Self: “I want to thank all the amazing doctors and nurses at LMH Health for the excellent care I received during my stay there. I feel strong and am excited to be home. Our team has had a productive summer and look forward to our batteries being recharged and prepping for this upcoming season.” (link)
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Taking into account three seasons of data for coaching hires via CBS Sports’ Candid Coaches rankings, transfer rankings via EvanMiya and recruiting rankings via 247Sports, Heat Check CBB’s Lukas Harkins dives into how various program-building strategies have fared and observes that “none of the categories analyzed for this article have been more impactful than hiring a big name coach.” Specifically, “of the 34 coaches to receive votes for ‘best hire’ in CBS Sports’ Candid Coaches series over the last three years, 24 improved their program’s KenPom finish from the prior season – nine by 60+ spots. Harkins cites Louisville and West Virginia as examples of finding the “perfect recipe for an immediate bounce-back” and explains that “of the 30 top-10 transfer classes over the last three off seasons, seven were secured by Candid Coaches’ top-rated new hires. Six of those seven improved their new program’s finish from the year before, doing so by an average of 63.5 spots.” For teams who don’t need a roster overhaul, Harkins emphasizes the need to make sure that one big transfer is the last missing (or starring) piece. “All that being said, there are a near-equal number of these situations that haven’t panned out for one reason or another. Of the 30 programs since 2022 that had a top transfer but not a top-10 class, there were more double-digit drops in the rankings than there were double-digit leaps.” While recruiting freshmen has taken a backseat to the portal in many cases, it’s still an important part of building a roster. Harkins advises: “A single top-rated recruit likely won’t propel dramatic improvement by himself. But if they can be a supplemental piece to players already set in star positions, big leaps can come.” More. (link)
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Baylor Bear Foundation Executive Director Chris Lynn joins College.town’s Kristen Eargle in the latest episode of The Career Hustle. Lynn, whose career has included stops at UTEP, Louisiana Tech and Western Kentucky, talks about some of his mentors along the way, challenges he’s overcome, the importance of continued education and lots more. Lynn also emphasizes the importance of being passionate: “Just the amount of hours that we work and everything pours into it, the sacrifices you have to make, you have to be passionate. … Early on, I came up with some short-term and long-term goals I really tried to stay aligned with, but then as time went on I adjusted the goals to whatever was happening. I think that was another thing, just trying to be flexible, always trying to network any way I possibly could, get to know as many people as possible, be visible on social media…just being active. With your career position, people see your name and they recognize your name.” Lynn also explains that a lot of growth happens when “you go into [an initial] meeting and you don’t ask for anything. And then on the back end you come out following up. A lot of those initial meetings, that’s how you build trust with donors. That’s how I’ve been able to do it. I’ve just tried to be as genuine as possible and just tried to go the extra mile to keep communication open with them.” Full Q&A on Collegiate Sports Connect. (link)
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Virginia Tech will investigate claims by North Carolina Central Football HC Trei Oliver that a Hokies assistant coach was on the Eagles sideline for a game last year, “recruiting our running back.” Virginia Tech’s statement: “This is the first time the issue has been brought to our attention, and no concern has previously been shared with us through any formal channel. Virginia Tech takes all NCAA rules seriously and is committed to conducting our program with integrity. We are reviewing the matter internally and will address any findings appropriately.” (link)
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The Toledo Blade’s David Briggs polled 15 MAC football student-athletes about the temptations to transfer, why they stayed and how they’re handling the “chaos” of the new world of college athletics. One response on the temptations: “The biggest number I heard was a million. But I had to think about the long run. You can’t think about the short term. That’s what was in my head. I want to make it to the league and get that long money — the real money. The grass isn’t always greener.” Another response on how opposing coaches will try to communicate: “They reach out in a number of ways. They try not to be egregious with breaking the rules. I had people reach out to my high school coaches and my agent. Or coaches will ‘accidentally’ text me: ‘Oh, I thought you were in the portal.’ They get creative. I’d get phone calls from my home area code thinking it’s somebody I know. And they’re like, ‘Hey, this is a friend of the head coach.’ I try not to be rude, but I shot it down. … It’s definitely challenging. The money I heard was close to seven figures, but what’s best for me is here.” On things they’ve spent NIL money? More and better food was the most common answer, followed by saving and investing. The group also revealed their favorite and lease favorite stadiums in the conference. (link)
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Hero Sports’ Sam Herder checks in with several FCS student-athletes to gather their thoughts on NIL, revenue sharing and the transfer portal, and Illinois State’s Jake Anderson says: “It’s hard to keep track of all of it. But [Illinois State] does a good job holding meetings and stuff to make sure we know everything that’s going on as much as we can…until they change it the next time.” South Dakota State defensive lineman Kobe Clayborne: “I like change, so I love it. Just being a younger guy and wanting to get into football, it’s cool to see and being able to experience it as a player. Because then having that experience as a player will help if I do ever go into coaching. But I think it’s cool. I think that it is the Wild, Wild West. I do think there needs to be some regulations and rules because what’s going on out there sometimes is crazy. And it’s out of players’ control. It’s out of coaches’ control. There are people, third parties, that are entering, and that causes a lot of commotion and corruption, really. And so I think there does need to be regulations. But overall, for the players’ aspects, I think it has benefited us as athletes.” North Dakota State’s Logan Kopp: “I don’t pay a lot of attention to it. I rarely go on social media and don’t have any social media on my phone for over a year now. I think that’s a big part of it is I don’t buy into what someone behind a phone screen is going to say about NDSU, about our players, about our coaches, the FCS, or about the Missouri Valley. I’m worried about the NDSU Bison, the players in the locker room with me, the coaches that coach us, and the fans that are cheering us on. Anybody else we try to drown out the noise.” More. (link)
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Learning Specialist (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
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Digital & Email Marketing Fellow, Department of Athletics (R0008066) (Wake Forest University / Winston-Salem, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Video Production - Pitt Studios (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Content, WBB (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Strategic Communications (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Football Creative Content Producer - Graphic Designer (Boston College / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
Director of Digital Strategy (University of Virginia / Charlottesville, VA): More details HERE.
Creative Content Specialist - Football (University of Kansas / Lawrence, KS): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Director, Athletics Marketing and Brand (Florida Atlantic University / Boca Raton, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Video Production (Drake University / Des Moines, IA): More details HERE.
Video Internship (Wofford College / Spartanburg, SC): More details HERE.
Director of Video Production Engineering (HR Title: Supv, Athletics Video Prod Eng) (Southern Methodist University – SMU / Dallas, TX): More details HERE.
Director Of Fan Experience (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Video Production Engineering (HR Title: Athletics Video Prod Engineer) (Southern Methodist University – SMU / Dallas, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Of Fan Experience (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Of Creative Design (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Bronco Productions (Western Michigan University / Kalamazoo, MI): More details HERE.
Director of Marketing and Fan Engagement (Coastal Carolina University / Conway, SC): More details HERE.
Graphic Designer (Penn State / University Park, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for External Communications (DIGITAL COMM SPEC 3) (University of California – Davis / Davis, CA): More details HERE.
Deputy AD/External Operations/Chief Athletics Revenue Officer (Villanova University / Villanova, PA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Creative Video (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE
Associate Director, Creative Video (University of Delaware / Newark, DE): More details HERE.
Director of Marketing and Fan Engagement (Ohio University / Athens, OH): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Marketing & Fan Experience (Georgia Tech / Atlanta, GA): More details HERE.
Assistant Communications Director (University of California – Santa Barbara / Santa Barbara, CA): More details HERE.
Director, Marketing & Fan Experience (Columbia University / New York, NY): More details HERE.
Associate Director - Athletics Creative Content Producer (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director - Athletics Creative Content Producer (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Varsity Club & Coaches Club Stewardship Coordinator (Seminole Boosters, Inc. / Tallahassee, FL): More details HERE.
Director Of Creative Video (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Social Media Strategy & Content (Illinois State University / Normal, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Graphic Design (United States Air Force Academy / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
Coordinator, Digital Video (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Associate Director for Broadcast and Video Boards (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director for Brand and Marketing Communications (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
Director of Graphic Design (University of Connecticut / Storrs Mansfield, CT): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Compliance (Vanderbilt University / Nashville, TN): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Director - Compliance/NIL Integration (University of Massachusetts – Lowell / Lowell, MA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director, Compliance (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Director of Compliance (San Diego State University / San Diego, CA): More details HERE.
Assistant AD - Compliance and Administration (Tufts University / Medford, MA): (DIII) More details HERE.
Director of Compliance (Lamar University / Beaumont, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Compliance (St. John's University – New York / Jamaica, NY): More details HERE.
Director of Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) Services (Washington State University / Pullman, WA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletics Director, Governance & Regulatory Affairs (Baylor University / Waco, TX): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletic Director for Annual Giving (University of Richmond / Richmond, VA): More details HERE.
Deputy Athletics Director, Chief Revenue Officer (Michigan State University / East Lansing, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Vice President - Athletics Development (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development, Nittany Lion Club (Penn State / University Park, PA): More details HERE.
Asst. Dir. Or Assoc. Dir., Annual Giving & Premium Seating (Bulldog Club) (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Athletics Philanthropy (Kent State University / Kent, OH): More details HERE.
Coordinator, Operations & Special Projects - Athletics Philanthropy (Kent State University / Kent, OH): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Development, Michigan Region (University of Michigan / Ann Arbor, MI): More details HERE.
Director of Development 1 (Washington State University / Pullman, WA): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletics Director, Major Gifts (Florida Gulf Coast University / Fort Myers, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Director, I FUND (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Annual Fund (University of Texas – Rio Grande Valley / Edinburg, TX): More details HERE.
Varsity Club & Coaches Club Stewardship Coordinator (Seminole Boosters, Inc. / Tallahassee, FL): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Major Gifts, Virginia Tech Athletic Fund (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Development (California Baptist University / Riverside, CA): More details HERE.
Asst. Director Or Assoc. Director, Principal Giving (Bulldog Club) (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Director, Donor Engagement & Experience (Bulldog Club) (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Bulldog Club (Fellow) (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
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Deputy Athletics Director, Chief Revenue Officer (Michigan State University / East Lansing, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Vice President - Athletics Development (University of Texas – San Antonio / San Antonio, TX): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Athletic Director, Communications (University of Pittsburgh / Pittsburgh, PA): More details HERE.
Senior Associate Director of Athletics - Finance and Administration (Harvard University / Boston, MA): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director, Athletics Event Operations (Texas Tech University / Lubbock, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Director for Operations (University of North Dakota / Grand Forks, ND): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Grounds & Maintenance (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): More details HERE.
Sports Turf Technician (University of Central Florida / Orlando, FL): More details HERE.
Assistant/Associate Athletic Director of Event Management (University of New Mexico / Albuquerque, NM): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Operations & Projects/Athletics (University of Kentucky / Lexington, KY): More details HERE.
Event Management Coordinator (University of Arkansas / Fayetteville, AR): More details HERE.
Director of Sports Administration and Championships Operations (Mountain West Conference / Las Vegas, NV): More details HERE.
Director of Facilities, Events, and Operations (Drake University / Des Moines, IA): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Athletics Equipment (Texas Christian University / Fort Worth, TX): More details HERE.
Varsity Club & Coaches Club Stewardship Coordinator (Seminole Boosters, Inc. / Tallahassee, FL): More details HERE.
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Director of Member Engagement and Relations (Women Leaders in Sports / Kansas City, MO): More details HERE.
Membership Operations and Engagement – Junior Associate (Women Leaders in Sports / Kansas City, MO): More details HERE.
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Athletic Trainer (Missouri State University / Springfield, MO): More details HERE.
Sports Nutrition Fellow (Virginia Tech / Blacksburg, VA): More details HERE.
Assistant Sports Performance Coach- Olympic Sports (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Eastern Michigan University / Ypsilanti, MI): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Monmouth University / West Long Branch, NJ): More details HERE.
Asst. Director of Athletics/Head Athletic Trainer (Fairleigh Dickinson University / Teaneck, NJ): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (1 of 2) (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (2 of 2) (University of North Texas / Denton, TX): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Mercer University / Macon, GA): More details HERE.
Athletic Performance Coach (Johns Hopkins University / Baltimore, MD): (DIII) More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (43 Week Position) (University of Massachusetts – Amherst / Amherst, MA): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Mental Health and Wellness & Psychoeducation (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Middle Tennessee State University / Murfreesboro, TN): More details HERE.
Athletic Trainer (Utah State University / Logan, UT): More details HERE.
Assistant Director Of Olympic Sports Nutrition (Mississippi State University / Starkville, MS): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer (Old Dominion University / Norfolk, VA): More details HERE.
Head Football Athletic Trainer (University of Massachusetts – Amherst / Amherst, MA): More details HERE.
Associate Athletic Trainer - Division of Intercollegiate Athletics (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): More details HERE.
Assistant Athletic Trainer - Men's Basketball (St. Bonaventure University / St. Bonaventure, NY): More details HERE.
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Deputy Athletics Director, Chief Revenue Officer (Michigan State University / East Lansing, MI): More details HERE.
Deputy AD/External Operations/Chief Athletics Revenue Officer (Villanova University / Villanova, PA): More details HERE.
Manager, Big Ten Corporate Partnerships (Big Ten Conference / Chicago, IL): More details HERE
Manager, Partnership Activation, Big Ten Corporate Partnership (Big Ten Conference / Chicago, IL): More details HERE.
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Deputy Athletics Director, Chief Revenue Officer (Michigan State University / East Lansing, MI): More details HERE.
Director of Ticket Sales and Revenue Generation (University of Wyoming / Laramie, WY): More details HERE.
Ticket Manager/Sales & Operations (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): More details HERE.
Deputy AD/External Operations/Chief Athletics Revenue Officer (Villanova University / Villanova, PA): More details HERE.
Ticket Operations Coordinator (University of South Florida / Tampa, FL): More details HERE.
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