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Did not have this on my "week after Commencement" bingo card.
There has been much administrative upheaval at GW (which is what happens when you change University presidents with rapid-fire regularity) and this is just the latest example. I, for one, thought Vogel was a great choice for AD given her experience at GW, think she handled the Pandemic with alacrity and has weathered the reallignment/NIL firestorm well. Maybe she was too quick to pull the plug on Mojo and JC, but neither move was inexcusable either.
Still, we enter a Brave New World of money driving sports, and GW must now decide where it goes (and can go) in the new environment. Bean counting will be the metric for the AD going forward, not trophy accumulation; although the latter can spur the former. And, of course, we will need to see what kind of a relationship Vogel's replacement forges with Vogel's hires.
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I remember that this is GW, we can do worse than TV. Hope not, but possible.
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I will miss her. I think she was dealt a tough hand after the Nero-produced cluster fuck. I have no doubt Mojo was forced on her, and I give her high marks for acting with courage to move on JC amd start a new chapter with CC.
I this “new” environment for college athletics, I doubt we will see many more “lifetime AD’s” especially at a school in GWs category. A new AD is not a bad thing for us right now, and it doesn’t need to be a knock on TV to hold that belief.
With CC in the coach’s box for a while longer, it makes it a bit more attractive gig, I think. I’m looking forward to seeing who we attract and hope that they make changes for the better, not just to,do things differently.
Wishing TV all the best in her new role.
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BC wrote:
I remember that this is GW, we can do worse than TV. Hope not, but possible.
I share the same apprehension BC. Tonya was given a terrible terrible mess to clean-up and her very professional conduct and bearing were sorely needed.
Having stayed in-house last time a true search, as opposed to cover for a hard-wired pick would be extremely welcome, especially with NIL and a Wild Wild West transfer portal. Hope the president is paying attention and has her bullshit detector fully deployed.
My fear is a reliable poster 6 months from now explaining someone not qualified to make the hire took control of the situation to select a weak make no waves AD.
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Change can be good, very good. Looking forward, let’s hope for an ambitious new A.D. who has considerable experience with big time college hoops programs. I am also looking forward to an announcement about a new location and plan for the Basketball Practice Facility. President Granberg has indicated her support for big time hoops success and for the practice facility. I have heard her speak about her experience at Clemson, where she saw first-hand the importance and return on investment of successful college athletics.
Last edited by NJColonial (5/21/2024 7:06 pm)
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Onward and upward. Good luck, Tanya.
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The eternal question becomes: do you go for someone who is already an AD at a smaller school or an assistant AD at a bigger one?
Obviously the answer is whoever can raise the most money and make the best hires.
Last edited by GW0509 (5/21/2024 7:41 pm)
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GW0509 wrote:
The eternal question becomes: do you go for someone who is already an AD at a smaller school or an assistant AD at a bigger one?
Obviously the answer is whoever can raise the most money and make the best hires.
Good question. Think it’s time to go with a more established candidate if we can find one. GW is at an inflection point amd we need someone who already has somewhat of a track record and reputation. I’m guessing Caputo’s extensive contacts may well have some influence here. Here’s hoping whoever gets the job also gets carte blanche to clean house from top to bottom. There should be no sacred cows.
Last edited by Alum1 (5/21/2024 10:40 pm)
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HIRING A P5 ASSOCIATE AD
PROS: Higher likelihood of being able to call in schedule favors with P5 schools. Better relationships and higher expectations with vendors like Ticketmaster, adidas, etc. Higher expectations about investing in fan experience. Higher expectations about media engagements. Possible greater "splash." Relationships with higher conference ADs and commissioners as the realignment carousel turns.
CONS: Not prepared for working in an environment with more limited resources in budgets and staffing. Gaps in expertise (ie., if they came up in development, they won't know much about sports medicine). Not prepared for having to ask for so much permission from others. Not prepared for working with limited facilities. Not prepared for less generous donor base.
LOWER CONFERENCE AD MOVING UP
PROS: Familiarity with working within resource-limited environments. Potential experience needing to collaborate with Admissions, Development, President's Office because they haven't swung a big enough stick on their own. Experience having to work harder for donations. Experience with creative strategies to become tournament eligible.
CONS: Maybe lower expectations and a lack of imagination for what's possible? Less of a "splash" in the alumni and DC community. Less experience with high-needs NIL collectives and soliciting big money gifts. Could be ill-prepared for the (somewhat) brighter spotlight. Inability to sync up expectations with CC given CC's ACC experience.
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Great synopsis CreeksandZeeks. I knew my opinion beforehand but after reading your descriptions, my thoughts are reinforced. Hiring a P5 Associate AD is the way to go.
This will not likely be some young guy or gal in their 20's (unless we are looking at some young genius/phenom type.) It would be someone who has gained experience at the highest level who is looking to make their mark. The smaller dollars or limited facilities don't bother me because that would be known and understood from the onset.
The problem with a lower conference AD moving up is that they run the risk of feeling overwhelmed. The A10 is not a small conference. From a coaching standpoint, MoJo and Jamion were examples of coaches who were either unready or who perhaps underestimated what it would take to be successful.
Even though this shrinks the recruiting pool, I would love a new AD with a basketball background. It is THE sport that drives revenue to the athletic department and I believe this will be more likely to be appreciated by such a person. This should not be the top priority as someone more qualified and "ready" to do the job is of the utmost importance. But if two such candidates emerged and only one had the background in basketball, that would be my choice.
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Gwmayhem wrote:
Even though this shrinks the recruiting pool, I would love a new AD with a basketball background. It is THE sport that drives revenue to the athletic department and I believe this will be more likely to be appreciated by such a person.
Seems like a Big East Associate AD might be your A1 pick, then? All schools that are basketball-centric, relatively similar alumni bases, and a higher level.
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My preference would be for an existing AD at a school similarly situated or one seeing GW as a step up the career ladder. Agree on a preference, but not insistence, on a basketball background of some sort. Indifferent to gender. Leery of anyone coming down from P5 unless also steeped in mid-major experience.
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CC will have zero input on who GW ultimately chooses to be the next AD.
That would be like asking the teachers to help choose the next school principal. It's not a popularity contest.
I agree with many here that GW should look at those with P5,6 athletic administration experience. Like asst coaches, there are plenty of young and upcoming candidates looking to run their own show.
I hope we don't go cheap and hire a firm to vet good candidates.
Now that Tanya is gone, I hope Brian Serrano will be shown the door. He is the last of the "Nero" stink and stain remaining.
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The issue is not the pedigree of the next AD. I'll take a D3 AD who knows how to fundraise, be more front and center with donors, alumni and fans, knows how to market GW athletics to the various external constituencies including the media, and who has knowledge on what a successful men's basketball program looks like and the support it requires. There is no world where a P5 associate AD is automatically qualified when they have no idea of some of the unique challenges GW faces. Are we trying to win a press conference or win some games? Find the right fit wherever he or she emanates from.
We've already made mistake #1 by hiring a search firm who will bring the same stable of candidates they shop to every school. We'd be way better served by an internal committee of coaches, current and former athletes, faculty, administration and donors. But that would mean people would have to do their actual jobs like they used to and be accountable for the hire instead of hiding behind a search firm. I promise no one at the search firm knows enough about GW to be as an effective screen as the people I just referenced. Use a firm to run background checks if you like but make the decisions on who you want to interview and who you hire internally. I am so anti-search firm it isn't funny. I don't care if you are friends with someone at the search firm or hired them to find you a coach, that doesn't automatically make you a good candidate for the GW AD.
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More than a firm or not, is an actual thoughtful search. And as noted above, perhaps at least listening to GW's biggest supporters among other constituent groups.
Tanya was one of us, a former GW athlete, and numerous degree holder, which means a lot.
But she seemed to be promoted several levels up--and may not have had the usual background
for an AD candidate at the GW level. Kind of like Mojo who can still be a good coach one day, but wasn't necessarily experienced enough to go from third assistant to GW head coach in the blink of an eye.
I am not entirely sure TV should have resigned or whatever it is, although mostly because she was one of us and nice enough. And college athletics are in a bizarre environment to say the least.
But things weren't going well at all, from our records to the practice facility.
And it is indeed very odd that if we didn't clean house after Nero, we would pick his protege for the job.
Especially given the seriousness nature of the Nero scandal, which could have (and probably should have) cost GW a lot more money than it did.
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Rising, you use a search firm as just 1 tool of many in your toolbox. Looks like we are using Parker, a well established and reputable firm, not one that has some connection to a former coach or administrator. The search firm can do the due diligence and help prepare a list of candidates for a "search committee" the school appoints. Most important thing about a search committee is that they can guage interest from those that currently have jobs but who don't want their respective schools to find out their looking at opportunities available. Discretion is critical for this type of position. Unlike coaches, AD's can't talk their way into an extension every time they get their name involved in a search.
Even with a search firm, success isn't guaranteed. Former AD at USC is a good example (Mike Boehm). If they would have dug a little deeper at Cincy, they may have went in a different direction. GW can only go up with our last 2 AD's.
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Joel, strange that AD's and coaches were successfully hired for years without search firms. All of these search firms are now offering up many of the same candidates for each job. The AD's are afraid not to hire them for a coach search because then they will be shunned when the next AD search comes around. It's a nice little one hand washes the other approach. We've used the same search firms for multiple hires at GW and several haven't worked out.
Also, you can hire firms to do complete background checks of identified candidates. The thought used to be find 3-5 that you like, run a background check on each and if one gets knocked out so be it. Then bring the rest to campus. If there is one person you really like then maybe you bring them only and see if there are any objections.
Finally, the discretion argument is nonsense. Everyone knows how to contact everyone indirectly to gauge interest. It's been going on for years well before search firms existed in this space. As long as people in the search don't leak stuff to the media you are fine.
That all said, please tell me what makes search firms uniquely qualified to determine what GW wants or needs? Again, funny how coaches and AD's were hired for years without them. I've seen nothing that suggests they are any better at finding candidates than the school itself. The cost is often ridiculous. To me it's really a smokescreen for "leaders" to hide behind in case stuff goes bad. I've hired or helped hire many people in a wide variety of capacities. I've made good hires and bad ones. But they were on me. I couldn't blame a headhunter or search firm. Examine closer the USC hire. Carol Folt made the hire of Bohn...for your reading pleasure ... USC used a search firm.
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I think this is a little too inside baseball for me, but Rising raises an important point about "what GW wants or needs."
Basically, I think that the incoming AD has two jobs:
1. Make GW Men's Basketball a legitimate NCAA Tournament contender every 3 years, and
2. Restore GW to the top half of the Atlantic 10 Conference across virtually all sports. I'm tired of GW being the program that other A-10 programs propose throwing overboard the way we used to with Fordham, La Salle, and Bonaventure.
To do that, the AD must demonstrate the following:
1. The ability to identify, evaluate and recruit head coaches when coaches leave for new gigs (or when their predecessors have to be terminated)
2. The ability to raise substantially more money for NIL, Facilities, and Salaries, particularly for assistant coaches
3. A clean compliance record
As far as GW's unique needs, I have no idea if Pres. Granberg is going to let a more conventional AD do their work more conventionally, or if we're going to have to learn the names of folks who ought to have nothing to do with GW Athletics like we have with Maltzman, Diaz, Chernak, etc. in the past. If it's the former, I think the job can be more turnkey. If it's the latter, then bringing in the "conventional best" isn't necessarily the best thing for the school.
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creeksandzeeks wrote:
Basically, I think that the incoming AD has two jobs:
1. Make GW Men's Basketball a legitimate NCAA Tournament contender every 3 years, and
2. Restore GW to the top half of the Atlantic 10 Conference across virtually all sports. I'm tired of GW being the program that other A-10 programs propose throwing overboard the way we used to with Fordham, La Salle, and Bonaventure.
As much as I would love for GW to consistantly field winners in all sports, as with all departments the AD's job is to further the University in its mission. And the mission statement says nothing about winning games and cutting down nets.
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Boy, has that mission statement gone to shit in the last several months.
I am all for hiring an Asst AD from one of the Big Boys, preferably someone who is familiar with CC. And... we should hire on Merit.