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Latest from the Bayou | March Madness injury reports | Hanks, Alpert, Dannen | Lots more…
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Latest from the Bayou…
➤ LSU and AD Scott Woodward “have agreed to part ways effective immediately.” Executive Deputy AD Verge Ausberry will take over as Interim AD. (link)
➤ Woodward writes in a letter to fans: “It is with a heavy heart but also with my typical optimism, that today is my last day serving as your Director of Athletics. … Others can recap or opine on my tenure and on my decisions over the last six years as Director of Athletics, but I will not. Rather, I will focus on the absolute joy that LSU Athletics brings to our state’s residents and to the Baton Rouge community. I will cherish the incredible relationships I have built within the University community and beyond our campus borders. And I will fondly remember the national and SEC championships for the joy that they brought to our student-athletes, coaches, staff, campus community and our incredible fans.” (link)
➤ Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger reports LSU is “expected to comply with the obligations in Woodward’s contract, sources tell Yahoo Sports. According to Woodward’s contract, he is owed roughly $6.4M.” (link)
➤ Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry tells ESPN Baton Rouge’s Matt Moscona: “I really don't want to be involved in this [picking the next coach] as long as the state of Louisiana and taxpayers aren't involved.” However, “I'm going to be looking at that contract and I will be opining on it.” (link)
➤ Finally from Baton Rouge (by way of New Brunswick), Rutgers President William Tate tweeted out a cryptic photo from The Wire depicting characters Omar and Brother Mouzone. Tate, the former LSU president, doesn’t expand, but the dots, if you’ve seen the episode in question, are not hard to connect. (link)
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At the direction of the NCAA Men's and Women's Basketball Committees, the national office will implement player availability reports for the 2026 DI Men's and Women's Basketball Championships. From the NCAA’s release: “Player availability reports during the tournaments can reduce the betting-related pressure, solicitations and harassment student-athletes receive connected to their playing status.” President Charlie Baker adds: "After months of thorough discussion and exploration, I applaud the Division I Men's and Women's Basketball Committees for taking such important action. Implementing player availability reporting is a major step to increasing student-athlete protections by alleviating pressures for the enhancement of their college experience." (link)
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The “Pac-12 2.0” is targeting an eight-team league in 2026, and The Mercury News’ Jon Wilner says new Executive Associate Commissioner for Football Operations Merton Hanks is racing to finalize schedules, officiating, a title-game site and bowl tie-ins. The schedule, Wilner contends, is the hardest puzzle to solve, as a seven-game round robin would require teams to play five non-league games and an eight-game slate means each school will have a home-and-home pairing. The league has modeled roughly 120 schedule iterations and is prioritizing College Football Playoff positioning, with Hanks telling Wilner: “The team that wins the Pac-12 title should be in the running for CFP, and our job is to not mess that up.” Hanks, Wilner adds, has been “scouring the country to find specific teams and entire conferences capable of providing the inventory for Pac-12 teams to play a fifth non-conference game.” Hanks notes: “We have to be flexible. It’s not simple. We can’t just send everyone on the road.” Complicating matters is the SEC and ACC adding ninth conference games, and the “end result is a dwindling pool of potential opponents for Pac-12 teams needing a fifth non-conference game. The conference has discussed scheduling arrangements with other leagues at the sub-Power Four level, but many teams have their schedules set for 2026.” Big picture, Hanks says the league wants to think outside the box: “The great thing about being a challenger conference, a rebuilding conference, is that everyone else has to overcome legacy concerns. That’s not an issue for us.” (link)
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Georgia Tech AD Ryan Alpert says the Yellow Jackets’ undefeated, top-10 start to the football season has turned every game into a “national showcase,” with a sellout night test at NC State next. On TV windows, he credits the ACC–ESPN plan – often slotting Tech at noon by design – and notes the ACC’s viewership sits at No. 2 behind the SEC. Tech’s matchup with Georgia to end the regular season could be one of the premier games of the year, and Alpert notes: “How great would that be for the city, for the community, for the state to go in there with two nationally-branded teams having great success? But it’s not just the Georgia game. I’m trying to look at how do we capitalize on the success for the next couple games this year, but into next season. As we look to what does that schedule look like, how are we marketing ourselves, how are we continuing again to make sure this isn’t just a one-year opportunity? How do we make and build sustained success at Georgia Tech and for the whole athletic department, but specifically the football program?” (link)
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Nebraska AD Troy Dannen says he has been talking with Football HC Matt Rhule about a contract extension since the summer, adding: “And then the market is weird this year, right? There's so many positions that have opened midseason. So I would say the last couple of weeks, because of all of the jobs opening, it started moving faster and then culminated again this morning.” Dannen goes on to outline three rules: “Number one, take care of somebody. Compensate them for what you believe they're worth before you have to. So that's why you're proactive. Number two, when you have what you think is a great coach, you have two obligations. Number one is to compensate them at what is the market for your expectations for where the program should be. And then number two, put them in a position to succeed. The money's there any place, but not every place can you be in a position to succeed. His desire is the same as my desire. Let's compete for and ultimately win a national championship. Again, how do we make sure this place can be that while making sure he is compensated at the market of what the expectations for our competitive success should be?” Regarding the structure of the extension, Dannen explains that if NU goes to four consecutive College Football Playoffs, Rhule will be the highest paid coach in the country. “And you know what? If we go to the CFP four years in a row, he should be the highest paid coach in the country. So I would tell you that is Matt's confidence and willingness to bet on the program and how we're going to provide for him and our confidence in what he can do when we provide for him.” (link); The Athletic’s Mitch Sherman notes Rhule’s new deal will pay him a total of $79.5M in base salary, with a 90% buyout if he is let go without cause. (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Miami (FL) Chief Revenue Officer Jason Layton is reportedly headed to join the executive team at USF, per CollegeAD. (link)
➤ Also from CollegeAD, UCLA is working with Parker Executive Search on its hire of a new Football HC. (link)
➤ Tennessee has named Florida Baseball Interim HC Chuck Jeroloman as top AC and recruiting coordinator. D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers: “Florida is now in a very tough spot. Its interim coach is gone and Kevin O’Sullivan is still on a leave of absence that isn’t expected to end anytime soon. But clearly a power play by [UT baseball].” (link)
➤ Fairfield Baseball HC Bill Currier announces he will retire at the conclusion of the 2026 season. (link)
➤ Manhattan Men’s Basketball HC John Gallagher has received a two-year contract extension through 2029. (link)
➤ Cal State Bakersfield Director of Swimming and Diving Eric Bugby has stepped down, effective immediately. (link)
➤ This morning’s edition of Coaches.wire shows moves on coaching staffs in 27 different sports, with football and basketball having the most changes. (link)
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Western Michigan is withholding transfer guard Justice Williams from basketball competition “pending the result of a recent NCAA investigation of events that precede his enrollment,” the school tells Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde and Michael Rosenberg, who add: “It is unclear whether Williams also is of interest in the federal probe of alleged game fixing, point shaving and performance manipulation in college basketball, or just the NCAA’s separate but concurrent inquiry. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania is believed to be in the latter stages of its investigation.” (link)
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UCLA Women’s Basketball has sold out of season tickets for the first time in program history. (link)
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Alcohol sales at Wisconsin’s Camp Randall Stadium are down 19.2% over the first five home games of this season compared to the same stretch in 2024, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s John Steppe, who notes sales have totaled nearly $1.8M to this point, compared to $2.2M over last season’s initial five home contests. The total number of alcoholic beverages sold is similarly down 18.7% from 182,386 units last year to 148,323 in 2025. Steppe adds: “Wisconsin’s decrease in alcohol sales coincides with a decrease in fan turnout. UW’s official attendance number is down from 76,057 to 70,745 so far in 2025. The actual turnout is even lower, as tickets scanned data obtained for the first four home games showed an average of 51,980 fans per game.” More. (link)
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Disney channels, including ESPN and ABC, were removed from YouTube TV after a failure to agree on a new distribution deal. The channels went dark in roughly 10M homes shortly before midnight, and The Wall Street Journal’s Joe Flint notes: “Disney and YouTube TV had held contentious negotiations leading up to the channels being removed. The deadline to reach a deal was 11:59 p.m. ET on Thursday. There are several issues dividing the two companies, but the primary fight is over the fees Disney is seeking from YouTube TV to carry its channels. … YouTube said in a statement that Disney’s actions are aimed at benefitting its own rival pay-TV distributors Hulu + Live TV and Fubo. Combined, those two services have roughly 6M subscribers.” A Disney spokesperson, meanwhile, argues that “with a $3T market cap, Google is using its market dominance to eliminate competition and undercut the industry-standard terms we’ve successfully negotiated with every other distributor.” (link)
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More Deals…
➤ Cardinal Grange and D1.relocation announce a strategic alliance to enhance the candidate onboarding and retention experience. Cardinal Grange Managing Partner Jim Nichols: “We are truly excited to align with D1.relocation. Their expertise in providing tailored relocation support perfectly complements our mission of guiding institution and corporate leaders through critical transitions. Together, we can deliver a comprehensive and seamless experience that extends beyond the search process to ensure lasting success.” (link)
➤ The MAAC announces the Air Force Reserve as the title partner of the 2026 Men’s and Women’s Basketball Championships. The partnership is part of a national agreement secured by Van Wagner. (link)
➤ Wyoming becomes the latest to ink a multi-year agreement to have Taymar Sales U handle its ticket sales. (link)
➤ Ahead of the 2025-26 men's and women's basketball seasons, DePaul and Revolution Brewing have announced a new, co-branded 16-ounce can of Cold Time Premium Lager. The can will debut at Wintrust Arena for the DePaul basketball season, and will future release throughout the DePaul campuses and nearby retailers. (link)
➤ Clark Construction Group and D.A. Everett Construction Group will conduct the $800M Bank of America Stadium renovations set to start in Charlotte in 2026, SBJ’s Bret McCormick reports, adding: “The Clark-Everett joint venture will be assisted by owners’ rep CAA Icon on the HOK-designed project. The renovation was approved in June 2024 by Charlotte’s city council, which, this week, approved $650M worth of debt to kickstart the primarily city-funded project.” (link)
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The College Sports Commission has finalized rules resulting from the House settlement, including new NCAA bylaws requiring high school and both junior college and transfer prospective student-athletes to comply with the rules around disclosure of third-party NIL deals, including being prepared to disclose all NIL deals worth $600 or more to the CSC upon enrollment at a Division I institution. These rules are enforced by the CSC and participating institutions and student-athletes are required to comply with all settlement-related rules or face penalties, including eligibility consequences for student-athletes. Full rules summary. (link)
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The College Sports Commission’s NIL Go clearinghouse and the College Athlete Payment System (CAPS) are expected to cost at least $15M annually, according to Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger, who adds: “In addition, there was an implementation cost for those two platforms of at least $10M. There is a third number as well: the annual operational cost of the CSC (staffing, travel, etc.), which is expected to be in the seven figures but is a bit more murky and can certainly change over time.” Key additional notes…
➤ As for who’s footing the bill, Dellenger explains the Big Ten, ACC, Big 12, SEC and Pac-12 covered the entire $10M plus implementation cost of the two platforms. But the other two bills are being split between the power leagues, NCAA headquarters and the non-power league DI schools. “For the ongoing $15M costs of NIL Go and CAPS, the 68 power conference schools will assume 50% of those costs, and the more than 300 non-power league Division I schools will pay for the other half. For the ongoing operational cost of the CSC (3), the power leagues and NCAA headquarters will split it 50-50.”
➤ Dellenger also notes that college sports leaders had been considering increasing the cap on the revenue-share pool available to schools by $2.5M, and “most power conference programs have added at least $2.5M in new scholarships, making most true athlete rev-share budgets $18M, not $20.5M. Well, many of those in the SEC, Big Ten, ACC and Big 12 were working to get rid of that $2.5M reduction to expand the rev-share pool for their athletes. At least for next year, this will not happen, according to those briefed on the issue recently.”
➤ Why? “The House settlement is under appeal, which makes it more complicated to change settlement terms, and this $2.5M reduction is a settlement term. There’s something else, too: Not everyone necessarily agrees with eliminating the reduction. … A proposal is currently being vetted that would permit schools to exceed the cap by $2.5M with a sort of ‘luxury tax’ as a penalty for doing so. We’ll see if this gains any traction as the debate continues onward.” (link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger details the long-running history between LSU’s football team and the state’s governor, and given the recent happenings in Baton Rouge one prominent school figure tells Dellenger: “I’m embarrassed as I can be. This is some embarrassing bulls***.” None of this is happening in a vacuum though, as Dellenger writes the feud between Tigers AD Scott Woodward and Governor Jeff Landry “runs even deeper, rooted in political ideologies and the friends in which they keep.” Woodward is described as “an adept politician with allies on either side of the aisle and a long history of a more open and progressive view of the world,” while Landry is “strident in his conservative beliefs, a disruptor built in the image of Donald Trump.” The row started with Woodward’s decision to let go of former Men’s Basketball HC Will Wade and his refusal to rehire him at Landry’s behest. Since then, one leading political figure in the state says Landry has “got it out for him. This governor picks fights and he never forgets a slight.” Dellenger adds that McNeese President Wade Rousse is the favorite to become the next president. Lots more from Dellenger. (link)
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Kansas State AD Gene Taylor chats with Extra Points’ Matt Brown on the NCAA’s push to deregulate gambling on pro sports, expressing concerns around current student-athletes who have friends in professional sports that could have inside information that would be valuable for bettors, especially prop bets. Taylor bluntly on enforceability: “I think the argument that it isn’t possible to enforce these rules is a cop-out.” More from Taylor: “We have many athletes who are suddenly making money, sometimes substantially more money, than they’ve ever had before, which carries its own risks.” Taylor understands the challenges of policy, but “is advocating for a longer process, where athletic directors can discuss these issues in greater length and depth, rather than rush into anything.” (link)
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The City of Pasadena and the Rose Bowl Operating Co. have filed a lawsuit seeking a court order to force UCLA into honoring its lease and keep Bruins Football games in the facility through 2044, per the Los Angeles Times’ Sam Farmer, who notes Pasadena officials “say taxpayers have invested more than $150M in stadium renovations, while recently refinancing another $130M in bonds for additional capital improvements.” The complaint against both UCLA and the UC Regents alleges the university has been “unequivocally expressing its intent to abandon the Rose Bowl Stadium and relocate its home football games to SoFi Stadium in Inglewood,” and calls that “a profound betrayal of trust.” Farmer continues: “The filing alleges that UCLA, after years of public assurances that it is staying, has now ‘chosen to disregard those promises’ and has formally notified the plaintiffs that it is ‘moving on’ and that ‘there’s no way we’re staying long term.’” Although UCLA hasn’t yet filed a formal response, the university disputed the allegations in an exhibit included in the filing, outlining “that the university has not violated the agreement and that ‘preliminary discussions’ that contemplate a move ‘do not constitute a material breach for which RBOC would be entitled to a legal or equitable remedy.’” (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Utah State hires Weber State President Brad Mortensen for the same role. (link)
➤ USF taps NFL Hall of Famer and Vinik Sports Group Executive VP of Corporate and Community Development Derrick Brooks as Chief Operating Officer. (link)
➤ Maine welcomes Miami (OH) Assistant AD for Intercollegiate Camps & Athletic Facilities Management Chase Speaks as Assoc. AD for Operations. (link)
➤ Legends Global taps former Dallas Mavericks COO/LIV Golf President for Franchises/NYCFC CCO Matt Goodman as Senior VP for Business Development. (link)
➤ D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers reports “the full 18-person new NCAA Division I Baseball Oversight Committee roster has been completed. Note: faculty rep, officials coordinator, rules-editor and ABCA exec [Craig] Keilitz are NON-voting members.” The full list. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
➤ Nebraska Football HC Matt Rhule inks a two-year contract extension that could keep him in Lincoln through the 2032 campaign and includes an increase in Rhule’s buyout this season from $5M to $15M, should he exit for another job. Rhule’s compensation remains the same, with an added incentive of a $1M jump in base pay for each year on the deal each time the Huskers qualify for the College Football Playoff. The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel adds: “Took a look at Matt Rhule's Nebraska contract extension, with the focus on his new $15M buyout ‘to leave.’ Not mentioned: The contract is 90% guaranteed. So his current buyout ‘if fired’ has increased from $49M to $71M. We are never breaking this cycle.” (link, link)
➤ Kent State removes the interim tag from Football HC Mark Carney. Carney’s new deal runs through 2029 with a $450K base salary and $550K in annual compensation, per ESPN’s Pete Thamel, who adds Carney can earn a one-year extension for reaching a bowl game. (link)
➤ Florida Gulf Coast Men’s Basketball HC Pat Chambers agrees to a three-year contract extension through the 2029 season. (link)
➤ Troy Women’s Soccer HC Stuart Gore resigns after three seasons at the helm. (link)
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North Texas receives the largest philanthropic gift in UNT Athletics history, a $4.6M commitment from Tom and Kristy Weger to support completion of the UNT Athletic Center expansion and establish the Weger Family Strength and Conditioning Center, a facility designed to enhance the development, performance, and wellbeing of Mean Green student-athletes across all sports. The gift represents the 12th of $1M or more in North Texas Athletics history. (link)
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Sportico’s Daniel Libit continues coverage of Blueprint’s "rough start to this college football season.” The NIL collective operator-turned-consultant was already facing a precarious future in the post-House landscape. In a press release back on February 19th, Blueprint announced its “acquisition of SANIL,” and the company’s website soon listed SANIL CEO Chris Brown and two other SANIL employees as part of its leadership team. Only later did Blueprint clarify that no acquisition had actually occurred. Instead, it explained, the companies had only signed a LOI - one purportedly contingent on SANIL raising investment capital. Libit, who notes that “a source familiar with the planned merger pushed back on the idea that the capital raise was SANIL’s sole burden. They said the LOI explicitly referenced the combined companies jointly soliciting investors and that Sine participated in a number of pitches alongside [former SANIL CEO Chris] Brown.” Pressed on the subject, Sine remarked: “Yes, we participated in joint investor pitches alongside SANIL. Our collaboration reflected a mutual commitment to advancing the space with integrity and innovation.” Jason Belzer, a sports attorney and agent, co-founded SANIL in 2020 alongside Vince Thompson, the owner of Atlanta sports marketing firm MELT. In early 2023, Sonu Singh purchased Thompson’s ownership stake - two years after selling his defense contractor business 1901 Group for a reported $215M. Belzer retained his equity position and Brown, a fellow Virginia Tech alumnus of Singh, joined the company. In May 2024, SANIL announced a corporate restructuring that elevated Brown to CEO. Upon the merger announcement, Belzer left the company. (link)
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NCAA Violations…
➤ Central Michigan and former football staff members Jim McElwain, Nate Mason, Mike McGee and Jake Kostner have reached an agreement with NCAA enforcement staff on sportsmanship violations that occurred within the program when Kostner arranged for former Michigan football staffer Connor Stalions to be on CMU’s sideline during a game with Michigan State to identify and decipher play-calling signals. Kostner, Mason and McGee all failed to cooperate with the enforcement staff by providing false or misleading information during interviews, but Kostner and McGee did eventually cooperate with the investigation and provided critical information. CMU penalties include two years of probation and a $30K fine plus 1% of the football program’s budget. McElwain, Mason and McGee were each hit with a two-year show-cause order and a suspension from 30% of football regular-season contests during the first season of the show-cause period, while Kostner received a four-year show-cause order and a 50% suspension. Full resolution text. (link)
➤ Former Gardner-Webb Baseball AC Anthony Marks has received a two-year show-cause order and a suspension from eight regular-season contests (the equivalent of 15% of the baseball regular season) during the first season of his employment within the show-cause period as a result of sports betting violations. While Marks didn’t bet on Gardner-Webb baseball or any other Runnin’ Bulldogs sports team, he placed a total of 1,649 impermissible bets totaling approximately $10K on professional and collegiate games from March 23 through May 13, 2024. Despite recent changes to the NCAA rule prohibiting betting on pro sports, Marks’ violations involved betting on both professional and collegiate sports competitions at a time when both were prohibited. (link)
➤ A reported NCAA Level III secondary violation for sports betting involving a Georgia football student worker that occurred back in Dec. 2023 would no longer be a violation under a new NCAA rule change allowing athletic department staff members and coaches to bet on pro sports, per the Athens Banner-Herald's Marc Weiszer, who notes the effective date of the new rule, originally scheduled to take effect on Nov. 1, has now been pushed back to Nov. 22 after pushback from the SEC. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Director of Performance Nutrition Education (Colorado State University / Fort Collins, CO): The Director of Performance Nutrition Education provides nutrition education to student-athletes, and assists with clinical nutrition for Colorado State University’s intercollegiate athletics program. More details HERE.
(NEW!) Director of Graphic Design for Athletics (University of Texas – Arlington / Arlington, TX): Director of Graphic Design leads creative content for UTA Athletics, driving brand identity across digital, print, social, and web. Oversees design, supports marketing, and guides student interns. More details HERE.
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Job openings by discipline, posted in the past 15 days...
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Academic Advisor (Texas Christian University / Fort Worth, TX): More details HERE.
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Track & Field Assistant Coach (United States Air Force Academy / Colorado Springs, CO): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director of Strategic Communications (Soccer & M/W Golf) (University of Tennessee / Knoxville, TN): More details HERE.
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Director of Athletics Communications Strategy (Dartmouth College / Hanover, NH): More details HERE.
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Assistant Director, Creative Services (University of Nevada – Reno / Reno, NV): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletics Director for Compliance and Eligibility (University of Hawaii at Manoa / Honolulu, HI): More details HERE.
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Associate Director of Compliance - Athletics (West Virginia University / Morgantown, WV): More details HERE.
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Director of Governance & Regulatory Affairs (Baylor University / Waco, TX): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate Athletic Director, Athletics Philanthropy (Kent State University / Kent, OH): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate Athletic Director, Athletics Philanthropy (Kent State University / Kent, OH): More details HERE.
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Senior Associate Athletic Director, Chief Financial Officer, Athletics (Kennesaw State University / Kennesaw, GA): More details HERE.
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Associate Athletics Director – Facilities & Event Management (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): More details HERE.
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Administrative Assistant II (Murray State University / Murray, KY): More details HERE.
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Assistant Athletics Director, Corporate Sponsorships (Lamar University / Beaumont, TX): More details HERE.
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Director of Ticket Operations (Rice University / Houston, TX): More details HERE.
Associate Director of Ticket Services (East Carolina University / Greenville, NC): More details HERE.
Assistant Director of Ticket Operations (University of Mississippi / Oxford, MS): More details HERE.
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