Ohio State focusing on Texas A&M AD Ross Bjork to fill same role, replace Gene Smith, per report

Ohio State focusing on Texas A&M AD Ross Bjork to fill same role, replace Gene Smith, per report


Ohio State has focused its athletic director search on Texas A&M’s Ross Bjork, according to ESPN. Bjork, who has experience across the SEC, would replace longtime Buckeyes administrator Gene Smith, who announced his retirement in August 2023 after serving in the position for 18 years. 

Bjork is viewed as one of the elite fundraisers in college athletics and has overseen success at every stop. He was named an assistant athletic director for development at just 29 years old at Missouri, and he became the youngest athletic director in the FBS when he was hired at Western Kentucky in 2010. 

He helped Willie Taggart turn WKU into a consistent winner before landing at Ole Miss at the outset of the Hugh Freeze era. The Rebels emerged as a national contender with Ole Miss even pulling two upsets during the regular season over vaunted SEC West rival Alabama. Bjork was hired by Texas A&M in 2019 to administrate the Jimbo Fisher era. Together, the duo helped put together an Orange Bowl season in 2020 and the No. 1 recruiting class of all time in 2022. 

However, Bjork has also overseen multiple periods of controversy during his 14-year career as an athletic director. He served in the role during the Freeze scandal and Ole Miss NCAA investigation. Freeze was ultimately fired for off-field indiscretions and the Rebels were forced to vacate 33 wins over six seasons. 

At Texas A&M, Bjork rewarded Fisher with a 10-year, $95 million fully guaranteed contract after three seasons of work. Six games into the 2023 season, Bjork and Texas A&M fired Fisher, which more than tripled the biggest buyout in the history of college football at more than $70 million. Texas A&M subsequently hired Mike Elko, Fisher’s former defensive coordinator, to lead the program. 

While Texas A&M ranks among the highest-profile athletic director jobs in the country, Ohio State has a case for No. 1. OSU ranked No. 1 in total operating revenues for the 2021-22 school year at $251 million, clearing No. 2 Texas by $12 million and ranking among one of only five athletic departments to hit even $200 million. 

Ohio State’s Smith has served in his role since 2005, overseeing one of the most successful athletic departments in the nation over his tenure, including a 2014 national championship. Smith has also produced one of the most successful trees of athletic department officials in the country. Washington State’s Pat Chun, UCLA’s Martin Jarmond and Pitt’s Heather Lyke rank among former officials who now lead major athletic departments. Ultimately, though, Ohio State appears to be looking outside that tree. 





Source link

This website aggregates and curates news articles, blog posts, and other content from a variety of external sources. While we aim to link back to the original source, this site does not own or claim ownership of any articles, posts, or other content indexed on this site. The views, opinions, and factual statements expressed in each piece of aggregated content belong solely to its respective author and publisher. We make no representations or warranties regarding the accuracy or completeness of aggregated content. Visitors are advised to verify facts and claims through the original source before reuse or redistribution.