Menu

Several women's coaches opt for a de-facto boycott to combat increasing workload


Friday marks the first day of the last evaluation period of 2016, a three-day window in which Division I coaches can watch recruitable prospects. But in a twist, the chairs reserved for D-I coaches might stay empty all weekend, as the Power 5 coaches have organized a protest, and banded together with the intention of boycotting the evaluation period for a host of reasons. (Sports Illustrated)

Related:

Stanford's Tara VanDerveer on retirement: 'Just felt I'm ready'
For Tara VanDerveer, it all came together after a season in which she didn't necessarily know it would be her last but checked plenty of...

How the new College Football Playoff format came to be and what it means for the sport's future
After the Pac-12’s collapse, the swelling of other leagues and increasing pressures of athlete revenue sharing, the sport’s two juggernaut conferences negotiated a one-sided deal,...

Miami Hurricanes football coach Mario Cristobal got paid record amount in 2022
The University of Miami (Fla.) paid football coach Mario Cristobal $22.7 million in 2022, including $7.7 million in base pay and $14.9 million in “other...

College basketball coaching changes tracker 2024
While the 2021, 2022 and 2023 carousel tours were plenty noisy/historic in their own rights (reminder: UNC, Duke, Villanova, Arizona, Louisville, Indiana, Marquette, Maryland, Texas...


© 2005-2024 Tar Heel Times | Contact | Privacy Policy | Site Map | RSS | Did UNC Win?

Tar Heel Times is an unofficial resource for UNC fans and is not affiliated with the University of North Carolina.