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Oklahoma hires former AT&T CEO to help oversee football

Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:32 pm
Posted by JayAg
Member since Jun 2021
14559 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:32 pm
Looks like Sooner is hiring him to set up and pay players when the $20M payroll is out.

I thought that is the AD’s job. Are we all going to hire random retired CEO’s to oversee the payroll going forward? What’s the benefit?
Posted by Poichess
Member since Jun 2019
1120 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:37 pm to
20k fans at $100 a month = $24 million budget
Posted by All Gas No Brakes
Member since Jul 2021
865 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:37 pm to
He will make the most equitable decisions with the money
Posted by Leopold
Columbia
Member since Sep 2013
1286 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:39 pm to
quote:

Are we all going to hire random retired CEO’s to oversee the payroll going forward? What’s the benefit?


Yes. That is quite literally what is going to happen.
Posted by JayAg
Member since Jun 2021
14559 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:41 pm to
I rather get someone with a sports payroll background tbh if that happens.
Posted by Zgeo
Baja Oklahoma
Member since Jul 2021
2297 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:52 pm to
He does have a sports background. It is summarized in the article. Also if you read the article you will realize all universities will need to address coming changes in some fashion. OU got ahead of the issue with this new position….

LINK
Posted by lsufball19
Franklin, TN
Member since Sep 2008
69050 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:54 pm to
quote:

Are we all going to hire random retired CEO’s to oversee the payroll going forward? What’s the benefit?

Yes, they will function like GMs.
Posted by Jimmy Montrose
Lake Highlands
Member since Aug 2021
1360 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:54 pm to
Stanford just hired this guy as its football GM.

Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
20158 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:55 pm to
Randall Stephenson will essentially serve the role of NFL team president. He’ll oversee the GM, scouting staff, sports medicine, sports science & S&C. It will allow OU’s coaches to focus on football & player development.

——

Dear Sooner Family –

As you are well aware, college athletics has been in the midst of vast transformation in the past several years, most of which has centered around the professionalization of football. In the spirit of our 130-year tradition of excellence in OU Athletics, we will continue to be at the forefront of these changes, remaining innovative, nimble, and ready to leverage the opportunity offered by both our entry into the SEC and the current collegiate athletics landscape. Now, more than ever, we are focused on how we can adapt to the current environment in ways that enable us to win at the highest level in all our programs. As we continue to evaluate and plan, I’d like to take this moment to inform you on where we are currently and how we plan to meet this moment to best position OU’s championship-caliber athletics programs for success.

Under the terms of the preliminary settlement for the House vs. NCAA class action lawsuit, we will be sharing revenue with many OU student-athletes. We are prepared to share the maximum allowable revenues with our athletes. Under the settlement, this means a baseline total of approximately $20.5 million in additional, annual costs for OU Athletics.

Notwithstanding these substantial new financial commitments to our student-athletes, OU Athletics remains steadfast in our commitment to all 21 of our sports and to proudly remain one of the few collegiate athletics programs that is economically self-sustaining, resulting in no student or public dollars contributing to the athletics enterprise. Our expectation, once the settlement is approved, is that we will be offering substantially more aid to our student-athletes because the proposed settlement would eliminate limits for athletics scholarships and instead set roster sizes for each sport. An additional impact of the settlement will be the contributions to funding the backpay financial damages required by the House settlement. I am confident we are ready to meet these challenges.

Our move to the SEC lands us in undoubtedly the most competitive conference in college athletics – a platform we have sought for all our student-athletes and programs to shine, and for our university to tell its story on a broader stage. Membership in the SEC also puts us in a much stronger financial position. Part of our financial planning will redeploy select resources to meet new demands, and we also will continue to invest in models that harness the force of Sooner Athletics to drive greater revenues and keep us on our fixed course of fielding winning programs. We are actively pursuing financial strategies to underwrite the increased expenses, aggressively exploring all new revenue-generation opportunities, and continuing to build on the generosity of our passionate donors, supporters, and fans.

The most successful major college athletics programs will be dynamic and innovative and draw from resources outside of those traditionally accessed in amateur athletics. To that end, we are engaging long-time OU friend and supporter, Randall Stephenson, to help counsel and guide our efforts. Randall, a proud OU alumnus, has proven the ability to navigate major industries through significant disruption, like college athletics faces now. He served as chairman and CEO of AT&T from 2007-2020 and led the Fortune Five company through tectonic changes in multiple sectors. He also led and oversaw many new approaches to sports programming, media rights, and sponsorships. Under his leadership, AT&T and its subsidiaries, working with its media partners, changed how America engaged with many of the world’s premier sports brands, including pioneering programming such as the NFL Sunday Ticket on DirecTV, the NFL Red Zone, NBA on TNT, MLB Playoffs, and NCAA March Madness on Turner networks. With Randall’s direction, AT&T executed sponsorships of some of America’s most iconic events, venues, and athletes, including The College Football Playoff, AT&T Stadium, Jordan Spieth, and Tiger Woods.

In addition to his time at AT&T, Randall brings much knowledge in sports policy and business, having served on the policy board for the PGA Tour from 2012-2023 during a time of considerable change surrounding men’s professional golf, where he focused significantly on the operational challenges of the tour and helped make significant professional, complex executive decisions. He also served as the 37th President of the Boy Scouts of America from 2016-2018.

Randall, who has refused compensation, will serve as Executive Advisor to the President and the Athletics Director, working closely with President Harroz, Coach Venables, the athletics department, and me. He will help guide us into restructuring our budget for this new world of college sports and into developing a football structure with elements similar to professional sports teams. This includes building out a more expansive General Manager function and developing a dynamic model that will allow OU Football to become a national gold-standard around talent acquisition, portal management, and player development. College athletics remains unique, but adaptations that draw upon the professional model are necessary to compete at the highest level. As part of Randall’s work, he also will make recommendations for funding player compensation and offer insights into pioneering governance models and athletics structures that will set up OU Athletics for success far into the future.

If finalized this spring, the House settlement will not solve the complexities of the current open transfer portal system or other open legal questions related to college athletics. For now, these are challenges that still require solving. However, we are constantly mindful of our role as stewards of a significant and distinct piece of the Oklahoman and American culture of college athletics. Change is constant, and we will always rise to meet new challenges so that we sustain our championship excellence. We are steadfast in our dedication to our student-athletes, our commitment to providing them with a life-changing first-class education, our promise to maintain the tradition of exciting and competitive athletics found at OU, and our role in molding young adults into amazing human beings who proudly take us with them in their new ventures.

Thank you, as always, for your support of our programs and student-athletes. We could not do what we do without your continued investment in us. You help us create Sooner Magic every day.

Boomer!

Sooner Sports LINK

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Posted by JayAg
Member since Jun 2021
14559 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:57 pm to
It’s going to be an interesting dilemma bc every school will be different. I don’t think everyone will make the same money. Which I hate, bc I’m one of those guys that think RBs are undervalued as is in the league. They take the most hits for the least money vs other offensive positions.
Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
20158 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:58 pm to
My guess is others are working on a similar model

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Posted by momentoftruth87
Your mom
Member since Oct 2013
84958 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 4:59 pm to
This really seems like name image and likeness…

Most of these players couldn’t raise $100 on their own.
Posted by JayAg
Member since Jun 2021
14559 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:03 pm to
I actually think On3 should get sued for making their, what a recruit is worth crap, basically telling 5 stars in HS the “market” (based on some recruiting site calculation) says they are worth millions.

Then we blame the kids for wanting money when they can look themselves up and see that site says they are worth $3m or such.
Posted by momentoftruth87
Your mom
Member since Oct 2013
84958 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:05 pm to
I don’t disagree. This shite wasn’t worth ncaa football back on game counsels.

Calling it NIL is retarded though when it’s more collective and then divided up to build a roster.
Posted by Clark14
Earth
Member since Dec 2014
24198 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:10 pm to
quote:

Getting Randall Stephenson, who has played a major role in professional sports as the AT&T Chairman, to lead the charge on OU's revenue-sharing plan is a major deal. Not many schools will have the same luxury. And Stephenson is doing it for free!


At least he’s getting paid what he’s worth. Overpaid as far as I’m concerned. Good luck with that one.
Posted by BCreed1
Alabama
Member since Jan 2024
5336 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:22 pm to
Didn't he oversee the fall of ATT? Put them in the whole by 200 Billion right.
Posted by Clark14
Earth
Member since Dec 2014
24198 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:41 pm to
quote:

Didn't he oversee the fall of ATT? Put them in the whole by 200 Billion right.


He made plenty of bad decisions and company purchases. But he was good at laying off employees and paying himself huge bonuses.

He’s a buck tooth nerdy sack of crap and can eat a large bag of wooden dicks.

Other than that I have no opinion of him at this time.
Posted by Beessnax
Member since Nov 2015
10241 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:44 pm to
quote:

It will allow OU’s coaches to focus on football & player development.


Yeah there's a huge need there????????
Posted by OU Guy
Member since Feb 2022
20158 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:46 pm to
Trust me, every big school will have one eventually.
This post was edited on 12/3/24 at 5:47 pm
Posted by JayAg
Member since Jun 2021
14559 posts
Posted on 12/3/24 at 5:48 pm to
He’s saying the statement that coaches would oversee anything payroll is a far fetched situation to begin with. That doesn’t make sense.

Now if the AD office makes a new department and we hire payroll guys, that will probably happen.
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