Multiple media outlets list Mark Coyle as a candidate to replace Mitch Barnhart who is retiring as Kentucky AD

Appreciate the post but this sentiment seems quite outdated when the vast majority of the revenue coming into the department comes from TV/media contracts and gameday revenues.

Donations is more than nothing for sure, but they also often have strict requirements about how they're spent. And now donors have avenues to put that money directly in the pockets of players without feeling like a dirty bagman.

I feel firmly entrenched that it makes no sense for some rich guy to say something like "I wasn't sure if I was going to donation nine figures to the U .... but the Athletic Director talked me into it!" I wonder if that phrase has ever been uttered?
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Ai, I do believe is fairly up to date. You and I disagree...that's cool. I just feel Coyle is far more an administrator than a leader. Depends what you expect an AD to do...he meets your definition of what an AD is supposed to do. We just disagree what the job is.
 
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Well I would feel not great about it’s. I think he has done well.
I think he's done ok overall, but my snarky comment pointed more toward the feeling that he's a recluse who's rarely available to the public. Fans almost never see or hear from the guy, which as the de facto CEO of a major university's athletics department, isn't optimal (at least to me).
 

I think he's done ok overall, but my snarky comment pointed more toward the feeling that he's a recluse who's rarely available to the public. Fans almost never see or hear from the guy, which as the de facto CEO of a major university's athletics department, isn't optimal (at least to me).
for perspective.

I was a donor to the University (academic and athletic) for years, and a season ticket holder as a student for five years and after school, while still in MN, and later while living outside of MN, requiring not insignificant travel to and from games, of which I missed only a couple during the first two years of Brewster (yeah, I'm in the stadium poster for the inaguaral game at TCF vs. Airforce) and then again throughout the Kill era. In addition, I'm a lifetime alumni Assoc. member.

When my youngest son was ten, I bought two tickets to take him to see Kansas play basketball at home (my Dad's Alma Mater) through their official resell portal.

I received more communication from the Kansas Athletic director in the past 12 months (3 updates on programs, initiatives, and fundraising goals) than I did from Mark Coyle. My son is a freshman in college this year.
 
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I think he's done ok overall, but my snarky comment pointed more toward the feeling that he's a recluse who's rarely available to the public. Fans almost never see or hear from the guy, which as the de facto CEO of a major university's athletics department, isn't optimal (at least to me).
I think there are different types and they can all do well. A loud AD isn’t a requirement IMO.

The big name loud rah rah guys at other schools seem to be trending to be very unprofessional IMO….
 

I think there are different types and they can all do well. A loud AD isn’t a requirement IMO.

The big name loud rah rah guys at other schools seem to be trending to be very unprofessional IMO….
I don't think a fundraiser necessarily has to be unprofessional or loud. Just because those are out there doesn't mean they are all that way. You'd think for $1 million a year you could find someone that could do it all. Esten seems professional and also good at fundraising, as an example.
 
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Both Women and men's are good now. But neither is drawing any crowds. This years womens attendance is no better than any of the last 5 years. Womens basketball is losing money at a record pace.
They need to have a better non conference schedule then cupcakes. Although running up the score on the cupcakes sure helps the NET ranking sadly.
 

Appreciate the post but this sentiment seems quite outdated when the vast majority of the revenue coming into the department comes from TV/media contracts and gameday revenues.

Donations is more than nothing for sure, but they also often have strict requirements about how they're spent. And now donors have avenues to put that money directly in the pockets of players without feeling like a dirty bagman.

I feel firmly entrenched that it makes no sense for some rich guy to say something like "I wasn't sure if I was going to donation nine figures to the U .... but the Athletic Director talked me into it!" I wonder if that phrase has ever been uttered?
Solid communication skills matter to a degree in all sales situations, large and small. Seldom have I seen an individual at the stature of Coyle that struggles to speak as much as he does; and who disappears from notice for months at a time.
 

It is far more important for people to donate to NIL now than to the University in terms of sports. Wasn't the case 10 years ago. So I expect donations to the University to be down. And Coyle can't get too involved in that.
 




I don't think a fundraiser necessarily has to be unprofessional or loud. Just because those are out there doesn't mean they are all that way. You'd think for $1 million a year you could find someone that could do it all. Esten seems professional and also good at fundraising, as an example.
Mega Tongue was supposedly a proven fund raiser… he didn’t seem to do it here.


I think proven big fundraisers are like quarterback whispers, everyone talks about them but if you look historically they do it one time in a specific situation, maybe two, and never again.

It might not be an actual skill anyone can deploy at will.
 

Mega Tongue was supposedly a proven fund raiser… he didn’t seem to do it here.


I think proven big fundraisers are like quarterback whispers, everyone talks about them but if you look historically they do it one time in a specific situation, maybe two, and never again.

It might not be an actual skill anyone can deploy at will.
He's been a headhunter in NC for the past seven years. Doesn't list any of his AD positions on LinkedIn.
 

Mega Tongue was supposedly a proven fund raiser… he didn’t seem to do it here.


I think proven big fundraisers are like quarterback whispers, everyone talks about them but if you look historically they do it one time in a specific situation, maybe two, and never again.

It might not be an actual skill anyone can deploy at will.
I don't think this is true at all. Fundraising absolutely is a skill and if you are saying not many people have that skill I'd agree with that. But it exists, 100%. There's a small group of people who are good at it.

It's networking, Harvey Mackay absolutely has the skill, Lou Nanne has it, Sid Hartman had it, Pinky McNamara...these guys brought more awareness to the University of Minnesota 10,000X
in just one event than Mark Coyle has ever done.. And they did it relentlessly, repeatedly with many events. But, that was 40-50 years ago. And, nobody has taken their place.

It's very similar to promoting. Bill Graham (Concerts), Billy Graham (Christian) PT Barnum (Circus), Vince McMahon (wrestling), Berry Gordy (music)...I'm old...I am 100% sure there are present day people doing similar things to both of these groups of people around the country...I'm just unaware who they are.

These guys are good at organizing and promoting. To my knowledge the University of Minnesota has no visionary leader like this. But, we could hire one. Somebody with charisma, with original ideas, somebody able to inspire others, an evangelist for sports programs...a trail blazer. (SHIT, I just described PJ...he's got the wrong job!)

That is the heart of fundraising...reminding people who you are, where you are and asking for their help but making it fun...making people feel they are part of something bigger. Something important. You build momentum...you know that thing PJ says isn't real :)
 

Awar
I don't think this is true at all. Fundraising absolutely is a skill and if you are saying not many people have that skill I'd agree with that. But it exists, 100%. There's a small group of people who are good at it.

It's networking, Harvey Mackay absolutely has the skill, Lou Nanne has it, Sid Hartman had it, Pinky McNamara...these guys brought more awareness to the University of Minnesota 10,000X
in just one event than Mark Coyle has ever done.. And they did it relentlessly, repeatedly with many events. But, that was 40-50 years ago. And, nobody has taken their place.

It's very similar to promoting. Bill Graham (Concerts), Billy Graham (Christian) PT Barnum (Circus), Vince McMahon (wrestling), Berry Gordy (music)...I'm old...I am 100% sure there are present day people doing similar things to both of these groups of people around the country...I'm just unaware who they are.

These guys are good at organizing and promoting. To my knowledge the University of Minnesota has no visionary leader like this. But, we could hire one. Somebody with charisma, with original ideas, somebody able to inspire others, an evangelist for sports programs...a trail blazer. (SHIT, I just described PJ...he's got the wrong job!)

That is the heart of fundraising...reminding people who you are, where you are and asking for their help but making it fun...making people feel they are part of something bigger. Something important. You build momentum...you know that thing PJ says isn't real :)

Awareness is not fund raising …

If Lou had the magic why were people complaining about it even Lou was around?

Posts in this thread sound like folks are talking about some immeasurable thing that they can’t quantify….
 



Awar


Awareness is not fund raising …

If Lou had the magic why were people complaining about it even Lou was around?

Posts in this thread sound like folks are talking about some immeasurable thing that they can’t quantify….
There literally are professional fundraisers. It's a skill and a career for some. It has been quantified and people are employed to do it.
 

There literally are professional fundraisers. It's a skill and a career for some. It has been quantified and people are employed to do it.
You can be a professional anything and not have some magical skill.

But let’s say that’s a thing… couldn’t they just hire some and the money comes rolling in? Do they have to be the AD? The context is the AD job here right?
 

Awar


Awareness is not fund raising …

If Lou had the magic why were people complaining about it even Lou was around?

Posts in this thread sound like folks are talking about some immeasurable thing that they can’t quantify….
"I think proven big fundraisers are like quarterback whispers, everyone talks about them but if you look historically they do it one time in a specific situation, maybe two, and never again.

It might not be an actual skill anyone can deploy at will." Those are your words....you seem to be those folks.
Awareness is a huge part of fundraising....if I don't know there is need...I'm pretty unlikely to give my money to you when many others are reaching out that I am aware of. Awareness is not the end all be all...if I'm giving a lot of money, I gotta feel good about who the organization is and what they are doing with my money. I probably need a prior connection or you need to be "real" good painting a picture of your vision. But, if I'm unaware of the need I don't even know you need my help.
I do believe the seed money for Athletes Village was Lou Nanne's leadership.
 

You can be a professional anything and not have some magical skill.

But let’s say that’s a thing… couldn’t they just hire some and the money comes rolling in? Do they have to be the AD? The context is the AD job here right?
Sure, Coyle could hire someone to do it. Probably better than not doing it. Might be more meaningful if it was coming from the AD though.
 

"I think proven big fundraisers are like quarterback whispers, everyone talks about them but if you look historically they do it one time in a specific situation, maybe two, and never again.

It might not be an actual skill anyone can deploy at will." Those are your words....you seem to be those folks.
Awareness is a huge part of fundraising....if I don't know there is need...I'm pretty unlikely to give my money to you when many others are reaching out that I am aware of. Awareness is not the end all be all...if I'm giving a lot of money, I gotta feel good about who the organization is and what they are doing with my money. I probably need a prior connection or you need to be "real" good painting a picture of your vision. But, if I'm unaware of the need I don't even know you need my help.
I do believe the seed money for Athletes Village was Lou Nanne's leadership.
How much did Lou bring in for the village vs anyone else?

It’s all this magical stuff where “he’s good because money came in… must been him, why don’t they raise money?”

Are they not now? Do they not like money?

None of this seems like something an AD himself has to do or is any of it tangible.

Sid Hartman kinda mythology.
 

You can be a professional anything and not have some magical skill.

But let’s say that’s a thing… couldn’t they just hire some and the money comes rolling in? Do they have to be the AD? The context is the AD job here right?
They could and they might have but those people are not very good at what they are doing if they have. BUT, if I'm giving "big" money to something I wanna talk to the boss...I don't want some underling courting me. You are the leader, I wanna know your vision and what YOU are going to do with my money. It's different than buying a snow blower...I'll buy that from knowledgable sales person....I ain't giving the salesman a million dollars.....at the least he's an appointment setter to speak with MR Coyle..but I also doubt that is happening.
 

How much did Lou bring in for the village vs anyone else?

It’s all this magical stuff where “he’s good because money came in… must been him, why don’t they raise money?”

Are they not now? Do they not like money?

None of this seems like something an AD himself has to do or is any of it tangible.

Sid Hartman kinda mythology.
Your mind is made up. You do you on this one. I like many of your takes...on this one we are in different places and far apart.
 

AI Overview
Yes,
Lou Nanne served as the chair for the University of Minnesota's $190 million to $200 million fundraising campaign to build the Athletes Village. As a prominent booster and former Gopher, he led the "Nothing Short of Greatness" campaign to fund new basketball/football facilities and student-athlete academic centers.
Twin Cities Business +3
Key details regarding Nanne's role:
  • Fundraising Leadership: Nanne was appointed to lead the campaign in December 2013, focusing on securing private donations for the project.
  • Campaign Scope: The initiative aimed to raise $190 million for various athletic facility upgrades, including the Athletes Village.
  • Strategy: Nanne emphasized corporate donations and naming rights, such as for the 3M Arena at Mariucci, to meet the goals.
  • Outcome: The project, which included new training and dining spaces, was set to open in early 2018.
    Star Tribune +7
From Twin Cities Business Magazine:
Lou Nanne is the consummate insider in the sports, business and media worlds, which is why he’s chairing the University of Minnesota’s $200 million fundraising campaign to upgrade its athletic facilities. (About $130 million has been raised to date.) A former Gopher and North Stars hockey player, Nanne raised money for the Athletes Village that’s set to open in early 2018. Naming rights are part of the fundraising strategy, with the hockey arena becoming 3M Arena at Mariucci. Nanne is also senior managing director of institutional sales at RBC Global Asset Management and a blunt hockey analyst on radio and TV.
 

How much did Lou bring in for the village vs anyone else?

It’s all this magical stuff where “he’s good because money came in… must been him, why don’t they raise money?”

Are they not now? Do they not like money?

None of this seems like something an AD himself has to do or is any of it tangible.

Sid Hartman kinda mythology.
IMG_6698.jpeg
 

How much did Lou bring in for the village vs anyone else?

It’s all this magical stuff where “he’s good because money came in… must been him, why don’t they raise money?”

Are they not now? Do they not like money?

None of this seems like something an AD himself has to do or is any of it tangible.

Sid Hartman kinda mythology.
I'm the executive director for a non-profit. Unsurprisingly, it's much smaller than the University of Minnesota's athletic department. My day-to-day responsibilities both directly and indirectly impact our fundraising capabilities, as I'm sure Coyle's do as well. I have staff tasked with managing donor relationships and I'm pulled into those conversations if/when I can add value, but the people I've hired make a big difference in our ability to ask for donations.

Others have pointed out that Coyle is not as visible or as communicative as other ADs, and I agree that's a problem and a limiting factor for fundraising. I make a concerted effort to be accessible to our stakeholders, and our donors/potential donors in particular. Transparent communications and accessibility go a long way in donor relationships, specifically in attracting first-time donors. The athletic department would be improved if the AD and the Board of Regents were more engaged with developing donor relationships.

Which leads me to my final point here about people/"magical stuff." The long-term success of any development department will have a direct correlation between the number of meaningful relationships created between the institution and the donor. Someone like Lou Nanne can bring donors to the institution because of his name recognition and the significant relationships he's built throughout his life, but the top executive has to have a plan in place for how to turn that into the institution's relationship for the long-term. Converting a project-based donor (Athlete's Village) into an ongoing donor (the lifeblood of any non-profit) with multi-faceted relationships throughout the institution ensures the organization can withstand turnover from development officers and even the athletic director. That can create the appearance that the people are fungible when they've actually created a very resilient organization.
 

The Interim AD that Coyle replaced is doing a great job at Iowa.
 

Has anyone considered that our donor base sucks and will always suck regardless of whether our AD is the second coming of Christ or Darth Vader?
 

Has anyone considered that our donor base sucks and will always suck regardless of whether our AD is the second coming of Christ or Darth Vader?
Worth finding out by hiring someone with some fundraising skills.
 

Worth finding out by hiring someone with some fundraising skills.
As has been commented on here already, we've had supposedly good or great fundraisers who have come here and haven't gotten anything done. I think the problem isn't the people being hired, it's either the university leadership or we don't have any big time donors who love the football program.

If I had a shit ton of money I wouldn't care who ran the AD, I love Gopher football so much I'd dump a few million directly into the program with specific instructions on how the money could be used. I can't be the only person who feels that way, so where are these people with actual money? Coyle or Teague or Maturi or Nanne should mean nothing to them. Maybe they don't exist?

If we're trying to get money from people who are so tight that you need a person whose primary skill is social manipulation to draw a penny from them, we have much bigger issues than who runs the AD.
 

If I had a shit ton of money I wouldn't care who ran the AD, I love Gopher football so much I'd dump a few million directly into the program with specific instructions on how the money could be used. I can't be the only person who feels that way, so where are these people with actual money? Coyle or Teague or Maturi or Nanne should mean nothing to them. Maybe they don't exist?

If we're trying to get money from people who are so tight that you need a person whose primary skill is social manipulation to draw a penny from them, we have much bigger issues than who runs the AD.
I'm going to guess if Scottsdale Gopher had that same attitude, his non-profit wouldn't generate much money.
 

I'm going to guess if Scottsdale Gopher had that same attitude, his non-profit wouldn't generate much money.
Comparing a small non-profit to an institutional athletics department which possesses what is essentially a minor league pro football team is like comparing apples to oranges. One prints money (both internally and through external revenue sharing sources), the other's survival is completely dependent on establishing and maintaining relationships. One provides a service (assumedly), the other is entertainment. They're in entirely different environs. Their needs and expectations are totally different. It's also probably why people aren't rushing to donate money.

The reality is, whether Coyle actually sucks or he's successfully achieving the goals the U regency set for him (not one of us know a thing and this entire thread is chock full of speculation), he's listed as a candidate at a big time school with a big time hoops program. Unless that's just bait thrown out by his agent to generate an extension, because everything is a conspiracy theory nowadays🤷

I don't have a problem with Coyle. I also hate the presumption that some rich guy needs his balls tickled to donate money to the football program and people are upset that our ball tickler isn't proficient enough at ball tickling.
 





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