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Inside the world of sporting directors

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Inside the world of sporting directors

Players are the focus of any football transfer storyline.

Managers, agents and club owners add to the intrigue, of course, but it’s a relatively new role which has been garnering increased attention with every transfer window — the sporting director.

Fundamentally, the remit of the sporting director is to be be a link between the coaching staff and the club’s hierarchy, providing continuity, sustainability and a stable strategy in the club’s football operations.

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“The sporting director is the safeguard of the culture of the club,” says Damien Comolli, Juventus’ general manager and previously sporting or football director at Fenerbahce, Liverpool, Saint-Etienne and Tottenham. “We need to make sure that short term, medium term and long term are looked at with the same level of interest.”

While sporting directors were scarce in the Premier League at the start of the 21st century, they have become the norm at top-level clubs, with many known among fans by name.

Last October, Txiki Begiristain announced that he is leaving Manchester City this summer after 12 years at the club, with Hugo Viana replacing him. On the other side of the city, controversy ran high when Dan Ashworth left his role as Manchester United sporting director after just five months in the role.


Hugo Viana is Manchester City’s new sporting director (Gualter Fatia/Getty Images)

Former Atletico Madrid sporting director Andrea Berta was confirmed as Arsenal’s new sporting director in March, replacing Edu after the Brazilian’s shock resignation in November to join ​​Evangelos Marinakis’ multi-club group.

Meanwhile, Richard Hughes arrived as Liverpool’s sporting director last summer with a daunting in-tray that included crucial contract negotiations for star trio Virgil van Dijk, Mohamed Salah and Trent Alexander-Arnold.

The lens on the sporting director has never been sharper, yet what they do is still often misunderstood.

To gain a better understanding, The Athletic interviewed several sporting directors and collaborated with analytics company Traits Insights who collected data — including sporting background and experience — on over 300 sporting directors (or equivalents) across 15 major European competitions.

Crucially, what makes a successful one?


How a sporting director fits into a club’s structure

For all the attention it has garnered, there is still ambiguity about the role itself between different clubs. The title of ‘director of football’, ‘sporting director’, ‘general manager’, ‘chief football officer’ and ‘technical director’ are ultimately synonyms for the same job, though what clubs expect from that job does vary.

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While the role of a head coach or manager is clearly defined, a sporting director does not have a one-size-fits-all approach. Depending on the level of the club or league, the infrastructure built around the role can vary hugely. For some clubs, there will be a single director who sits at the centre of the system; for others, there will be shared responsibilities spanning multiple roles.

“In Germany, you might have a sporting director, a ‘kaderplaner’ (head of recruitment), a technical director, and then an executive only responsible for sport,” says Jonas Boldt, former sporting director at Hamburg and Bayer Leverkusen.

“When you also think about the coach too, this can have issues at times, because it is difficult to know who has the power or responsibility, and where to share those roles out clearly.”

The fact that football is developing so rapidly, not just the Premier League, has added to the uncertainty over exactly what the sporting director is responsible for. As Comolli says, “The structure of clubs is changing.”


Comolli at the Club World Cup with Juventus (Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images)

“These roles have existed for much longer in Germany, Italy and Spain than it has in England,” he continues, “but I would not distinguish from country to country — I would say the industry is changing as a whole.

“In the last five years, I’ve seen the role evolve. For example, Manchester City were very successful with Txiki (Begiristain), and then they brought Simon Timson in as a performance director (in 2020), who gets involved in a lot of areas.

“Ten years ago, I would have told you that they are taking work from each other, but actually they complement each other really well — the job of one becomes two, and the industry is now going in that direction.”

Brentford is a good example of two roles dovetailing together in the Premier League.

Director of football, Phil Giles, is responsible for squad management, squad planning and contract renewals at the club while technical director, Lee Dykes is in charge of Brentford’s recruitment department.

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The two work in tandem towards a shared goal of ensuring the best possible talent ends up on the pitch — or as Giles puts it, “Mine and Lee’s job is to do the nuts and bolts of the transfer.”

When looking through the number of sporting director (or equivalent) roles across Europe’s major leagues, the contrast in structure starts to become clearer.

As Comolli said, sporting director roles have long been established in Italy, Germany and Spain, as well as in the Netherlands, with a minimum of one position filled within each club across each of those respective leagues. Ligue 1 had the lowest share of sporting directors within the league, with 15 of 18 clubs having a position filled.

With the Premier League catching up in recent years, 19 of the 20 clubs had at least one sporting director (or equivalent) in place last season — up from 13 out of 20 in 2016-17. Of the 20 clubs, eight (40 per cent) split the structure across two roles, akin to Giles and Dykes.


The pathway to being a sporting director

Previous experience among sporting directors can vary significantly.

Returning to Giles and Dykes as an example, the former gained a PhD in statistics before working his way up to head of quantitative research at Smartodds, which is owned by Brentford majority owner Matthew Benham.

Meanwhile, Dykes joined Brentford as head of recruitment after being sporting director at Bury FC — with a background in coaching having previously been assistant manager at Carlisle United.

Analysis by Traits outlined four ‘archetypes’ that best describe the most common pathways sporting directors follow prior to landing the role. They are:

  • The Manager, who is responsible for the club’s overarching strategy across departments, such as first-team staff, recruitment, loans, academy, medical, and sports science.
  • The Recruiter, who leads scouting and transfer strategy, identifying players that fit within the club’s game model. This often includes individuals with a data and analytics background.
  • The (ex-)Player, who transfers their industry knowledge and experience on the pitch to matters off the pitch. In the Premier League, Richard Hughes (Liverpool), Mark Noble (West Ham United), and (the now departed) Dougie Freedman (Crystal Palace) are examples of sporting directors who were players.
  • The Executive, who leads on the club’s football business, for example, co-ordinating player deals, contract negotiations, and staff turnover.

Crucially, these archetypes are not mutually exclusive. Rather than pigeon-holing specific sporting directors to specific categories, it is better to think of the diverse pathways as a Venn diagram with plenty of crossover in the skills that are acquired from the respective backgrounds.

“I would add one other pathway, which is the academy pathway,” says Comolli. “Dan Ashworth comes from an academy background, for example. Sassuolo have won promotion back to Serie A this season, and their sporting director, Francesco Palmieri, was the club’s academy manager for nine years before he got this role. Incidentally, he was also a former player himself.”

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It is a sentiment shared by others across the industry, with a club’s academy acting as an ideal breeding ground for a role within the senior set-up.

“I think working as an academy manager can be a useful step to prepare (to be a sporting director),” says Johannes Spors, sporting director at Southampton and formerly of multi-club 777 Partners, Genoa, and Vitesse Arnhem.

“You basically make the same decisions, just with less financial impact. At times, academy directors manage more staff members than I do, but the decisions simply become more impactful the higher you get.”

It is common for appointed sporting directors to arrive into their roles having had experience elsewhere within football clubs. For example, Norwich City’s sporting director Ben Knapper was the loan and pathway manager at Arsenal before making the move to the Championship side.

However, Traits’ analysis showed that 17 per cent came from non-technical roles or roles outside of football altogether. A notable example would be Tottenham Hotspur’s recently departed chief football officer Scott Munn, who held roles in commercial operations of the National Rugby League and Australian Football League before later working as a CEO at Melbourne City and later ​​City Football Group.

His role at Spurs as chief football officer saw him focus more on football strategy, with the role created after an external review of the club’s footballing activities.

The core management skills and business acumen required to fulfil the role are often separate from the football industry itself. There can often be a cyclical criticism between “people who know the game” and “those who know how to run a successful business” when discussing those within the boardroom, but the evidence shows that having a background within football is not always a precursor to working within the industry.

As a further example, Aston Villa’s director of football operations, Damian Vidagany, worked as a journalist in his early career before taking a role as Valencia’s chief media officer and later becoming chief executive of DV7, a media agency founded by former Spain international David Villa.

Working alongside Monchi, the renowned sporting director who is now Villa’s president of football operations, Vidagany is regarded as one of Unai Emery’s most trusted colleagues as the club aims to re-establish itself among Europe’s elite.

“My role allows Monchi to be focused on the sporting and scouting side of football, creating and developing a strong network of scouts,” Vidagany said in 2023. “We work as Batman and Robin because the structure of Villa needs to grow very fast.”


(Neville Williams/Aston Villa FC via Getty Images)

In his current role at Southampton, Spors is keen to highlight that a large part of being a good sporting director is about appointing the right people and developing the club’s structure.

“I think it’s getting more and more important that you are simply a good leader for the organisation,” says Spors. “This is the most important thing. There is such a diversity of clubs and how they see their identity, but diversity is always the best — it is important to have people from every background.

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“For example, data is obviously becoming more important in this space — especially with the rise of American ownership. When I arrived at Southampton, the first thing I did was to hire my assistant (Elliott Stapley), who was the former head of data and analytics at 777, and the second thing I did was to change the whole recruitment structure to make sure the data and analytics team were reporting to me.”


Judging a sporting director’s success

Much like the role itself, measuring success depends on the context of the club. Silverware might be the ultimate physical representation of success, but victories can be just as important off the pitch as on it.

“This is a very technical job, so I need to innovate each department to make sure that we have a communication structure and a leadership structure with accountability in every department,” says Spors. “The better we get there, the more we can increase the chance of on-pitch success.”

For Boldt, who was sporting director at Hamburg from 2019 to 2024, the club’s finances impacted much of his tenure. The 2021-22 financial year was the first time the club posted a positive annual profit in 12 years.

“My job was to make the club more stable, to recreate the identity, to develop young players and to help the coaches to do their job,” Boldt said. “I’m not there anymore, but it’s the same team, and this project together was four years in the making — and we can now see the output from their efforts.”


Jonas Boldt was sporting director at Hamburg (Cathrin Mueller/Getty Images)

Now, the structure of the club is in a far stronger position after securing a return to the Bundesliga this season following six seasons out of the top flight. Last year saw the club record a financial profit for the third year in a row, with its Volksparkstadion stadium debts paid off two years ahead of schedule.

While Boldt was not the one holding the purse strings, Hamburg’s financial landscape meant he had to be skilful in ensuring the club operated within its means when buying and selling players.

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“To have success, you have to be one step ahead. Sometimes, you need to let young players go to another club and give them space to develop (elsewhere) — but in football, nobody sees this as success because you’re often linked to how many titles you won,” he says.

“For a sporting director or executive, we are responsible for the strategy and the vision of the club. I understand that you need results, but Hamburg is more stable than ever before, with less debt than ever before. If we had been promoted immediately (back to the Bundesliga), it would have likely been a disaster because the club was unstable, but now the base is so much stronger than the years before. That is success for me.”

Stability should be synonymous with the role. It might sound obvious, but a sporting director needs to be in the position for the long term to implement such stability, which has not always been the case among some Premier League sides.

Ashworth left Newcastle United before his short-lived stint at Manchester United, with his replacement Paul Mitchell announced that he was also parting company with Newcastle last month after less than a year in the role — leaving the club with the task of appointing their third sporting director in rapid succession.

Liverpool’s appointment of Hughes brought stability to the club last summer after a disruptive 18 months that saw Jorg Schmadtke hired on a short-term contract following the departure of previous sporting director Julian Ward — who had only replaced Michael Edwards a year before. Had a long-term sporting director been in place, the public contract sagas involving Van Dijk, Salah and Alexander-Arnold might have been handled differently.

The common thread is that nothing is ever guaranteed on the pitch, but the good sporting directors will find a way to control the controllable and give the club long-term improvement, regardless of short-term ups and downs.

“All I can do is try and increase the chance of success,” says Spors. “As a sporting director, we can do much more than just sign players or a coach. We can build the culture. We can make sure every department is on the best level and is pushing to the next level.”

“Getting three points on a Saturday is just the result of all the work that sits behind it.”

(Top image illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; istock)

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Eva Travis commits to Wisconsin Badgers volleyball via transfer portal

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Dec. 22, 2025, 2:50 p.m. CT



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Gipple Named Acting Head Coach; Richards Set to Lead Adrian Track and Field After 2026 Season

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ADRIAN, Mich. – Adrian College Athletic Director Craig Rainey ’89 announced a leadership change for the track and field program following the resignation of head coach Kaylie Laskody due to personal reasons. Beginning in the new year, Matthew Gipple will serve as Acting Head Coach for the spring 2026 season. Following the conclusion of the academic year, Kirk Richards will assume the role of head coach for the Adrian College track and field teams.

“We are excited to welcome Coach Gipple and Coach Richards to Adrian College,” said Rainey. “Coach Gipple has demonstrated success as an assistant coach at Siena Heights, and we are confident in his ability to lead the program as Acting Head Coach. We look forward to welcoming Coach Richards to Adrian College at the conclusion of the 2026 season and wish him the best of luck in his final season at Siena Heights.”

Gipple has served as an assistant coach for the Siena Heights University cross country and track and field programs since 2024. During his time with the Saints, he has coached two conference champions, five national qualifiers, and one All-American. His athletes also include five All-Conference selections and one program record holder.

As a student-athlete at Siena Heights, Gipple competed in track and field and compiled an accomplished career. He earned four All-American honors, captured two conference championships, received 12 All-Conference selections, and qualified for seven national championships.

Richards brings extensive coaching experience to Adrian College, having spent 15 seasons at Siena Heights University coaching cross country and track and field. During his tenure, Richards coached 129 All-Americans, 94 individual conference champions, and 16 national champions. At the team level, he led the Saints to WHAC Outdoor Track and Field Women’s Championships in both 2016 and 2017.

Prior to his collegiate coaching career, Richards spent 18 years coaching at the high school level. He guided his teams to 14 regional championships and 42 conference titles while mentoring multiple state champions in events including pole vault, hurdles, distance, long jump, and sprint relays. Richards has also demonstrated strong local recruiting success at Siena Heights, with 25 of the program’s 28 athletes hailing from Michigan and two from northwest Ohio.

Gipple will begin his coaching duties at Adrian College immediately, while Richards will transition to Adrian College following the 2026 season.

 

 



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Twenty-Five Secure CSC Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Honors

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Official CSC Release

MADISON, Wis.

–Twenty-five Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) individuals have been named to the 2025 NCAA Division III Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Team, selected by the College Sports Communicators.

 

Individuals from the WIAC receiving the honor included: University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire’s Mya Cinnamo, Kaitlyn Erickson, Bailey Leeke and Abby Stanwood; UW-La Crosse’s Taylor Larson, Grace Nommensen and Kayla Sexton; UW-Oshkosh’s Izzy Coon, Jaclyn Dutkiewicz, Grace Juergens and Samantha Perlberg; UW-Platteville’s Kierney McDonald; UW-River Falls’ Lauren Noth and Audrey Petersen; UW-Stevens Point’s Tessa Erlandson, Olivia Paukner, Lauren Shaw and Carly Thomka; UW-Stout’s Maja Anderson, Emma Barton, Brynn Hessel and Brooke McCune; and UW-Whitewater’s Emma Bludgen, Abbie Dix and Amanda Hillmann.

To be eligible for the Academic All-District® and Academic All-America® award, a student-athlete must carry a minimum 3.50 cumulative GPA on a 4.0 scale, must compete in 90 percent of the institution’s sets OR must start in at least 66 percent of the institution’s total matches, and must be at least a sophomore academically and athletically.

 

# # # # #



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FSC Athletics Update – December 22

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FARMINGDALE, N.Y. | The Skyline Conference released its winter weekly reports on Monday and two women’s basketball players from Farmingdale State College claimed Player and Rookie of the Week honors.

Women’s Basketball (6-4, 4-3 Skyline) | Skyline Report

Farmingdale State increased their winning streak to four consecutive games with a convincing 90-56 victory over non-conference opponent John Jay last week.

Senior guard Shyann Parker (Floral Park, N.Y.) was named the Skyline Conference Player of the Week after finishing just two assists shy of a triple-double at John Jay. She compiled 13 points, a career-high 16 rebounds, eight assists and two steals in the win.

Freshman forward Alana Henry (Amityville, N.Y.) picked up Rookie of the Week honors as she scored 12 points on 5-of-8 shooting to go along with five rebounds, two steals, and a blocked shot.

The women’s basketball team returns in the new year for a noontime start on January 3 (Sat.) at Hunter College.

Men’s Basketball (8-2, 1-0 Skyline) | Skyline Report

The Rams had the week off and are back in action January 3 (Sat.), when they play host to St. Joseph’s-Brooklyn in a 2 p.m. tip-off. Prior to the contest, the team will welcome youth basketball players as part of its annual CYO Day.

Indoor Track and Field

Farmingdale State returns to action on January 9, when it travels to the Ocean Breeze complex in Staten Island, N.Y., for the St. Thomas Aquinas Spartan Invitational at noon.



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Wisconsin volleyball’s Una Vajagic enters transfer portal

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The University of Wisconsin volleyball team received another blow to its roster in the transfer portal cycle Monday, just mere hours after picking up a transfer addition from UC Santa Barbara.

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Wisconsin volleyball lands California outside hitter from transfer portal

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No. 1 seed Kentucky volleyball swept by No. 3 seed Texas A&M in national championship – Kentucky Kernel

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No. 1 seed Kentucky volleyball (30-3, 15-0 SEC) was swept by No. 3 seed Texas A&M (29-4, 14-1 SEC) in the 2025 D-1 NCAA Women’s Volleyball National Championship.

This is the first national title for Texas A&M, joining Kentucky as the second team to win the national championship as a member of the SEC.

The Wildcats pulled out to an early lead in set one, but Texas A&M chipped away at it before forcing set point with its first lead before winning the set 26-24. Texas A&M took an early lead in set two and continued to grow it, winning set two 25-15. The Aggies gained a large lead early in set three and Kentucky was unable to come back, Texas A&M won the set 25-20 to complete the sweep.

The Wildcats kept themselves out of the match with tons of errors throughout. The Wildcats recorded 40 kills with a .148% hitting percentage, its lowest hitting percentage all season. Kentucky had 23 attack errors, nine service errors and two block errors.

Texas A&M wasn’t flawless but played much cleaner than Kentucky. The Aggies recorded 39 kills with a .257% hitting percentage.

Set One

Kentucky began the match with a 3-0 run on the back of two kills from Eva Hudson, another 3-0 run gave the Cats a 6-1 lead and forced an early timeout from Texas A&M.

The Cats continued to grow this early lead following the timeout, pulling ahead 9-3 with a solo block from Asia Thigpen.

The Aggies started to chip away at the Wildcats lead with a 4-2 run that cut Kentucky’s advantage to 15-11.

Kentucky responded with a 3-1 run to extend its lead back to six points.

Texas A&M then rattled off a 4-0 run, on four consecutive kills, that cut UK’s lead to 18-16. This forced Kentucky to call its first timeout of the set.

Hudson got a kill on the first rally after the timeout, but it didn’t end the Aggies run. Texas A&M mounted a 2-0 run to pull within one point.

Texas A&M tied the set at 20-20 with another 2-0 run.

A service ace by Molly Tuozzo gave Kentucky a 23-21 lead, forcing Texas A&M to call its second timeout of the set.

Texas A&M mounted a 2-0 run after the timeout to even the set at 23-23.

Kentucky forced set point with a kill from Thigpen, but the Aggies tied the set again at 24-24.

Texas A&M took its first lead of the set with a block from Ifenna Cos-Okpalla, forcing set point at 25-24. This led to Kentucky calling its second timeout of the set.

Texas A&M won the set 26-24 on the next rally, taking a 1-0 match lead.

The Wildcats hit .195% with 16 kills in the set, Texas A&M had 13 kills with a hitting percentage of .205%.

The Wildcats errors allowed Texas A&M to salt away at an early lead to steal the first set. Kentucky had nine attack errors, four service errors and two block errors.

Hudson, Lizzie Carr and Brooklyn DeLeye each had four kills for the Wildcats in set one.

Kyndal Stowers led the Aggies with five kills, Cos-Okpalla and Logan Lednicky had three each.

Set Two

Texas A&M got out to a 5-2 lead in set two after a service ace from Cos-Okpalla.

This lead grew to 8-4 after Kentucky recorded an error on back-to-back rallies.

Kentucky called its first timeout of the set after Texas A&M grew its lead to 10-5 with back-to-back Wildcat errors, once again.

A 4-0 run by the Aggies gave them a 15-7 lead and forced Kentucky to call another timeout.

Kentucky is digging itself a hole with errors on seemingly every rally, the Cats will need to clean it up quick.

Stowers recorded back-to-back kills to start a 4-0 run which gave the Aggies a 19-8 lead.

The Wildcats responded with 3-0 run to pull within eight.

Texas A&M put together a 4-1 run to win the second set 25-15, taking a 2-0 match lead.

Kentucky suffered from its own errors once again in set two. The Cats had 11 attack errors and just 10 kills for a -.021% hitting percentage.

Texas A&M had 12 kills with just three errors, resulting in a hitting percentage of .273% in the set.

Hudson led Kentucky with five kills in the second set. DeLeye had three kills with six digs and a block.

Lednicky led Texas A&M with five kills.

Set Three

Cos-Okpalla recorded two consecutive kills on overpasses to give A&M a 3-0 lead in set three.

A service ace from Stowers capped off a 3-0 run that grew the Aggies lead to 6-1.

The Wildcats battled back with a 4-2 run that pulled them within three points.

Texas A&M used a 3-1 run to head into the media timeout with a 15-10 lead.

The Aggies put together a 2-1 run out of the media timeout, forcing Kentucky to call its first timeout of the set.

Texas A&M grew its lead to 19-11 after the timeout. This forced Kentucky to call its second timeout of the set, looking to avoid the sweep.

Kentucky mounted a 3-1 run out of its second timeout, pulling within six points.

Texas A&M forced match point at 24-18, Kentucky pulled within four after a 2-0 run, Texas A&M eventually won the match with a 25-20 set three win.

The Wildcats hit .423% with 14 kills in set three with only three attack errors, but five service errors made the difference in the set.

The Aggies hit .310% with 14 kills and five errors.

The Wildcats will now head into the offseason, beginning preparation for next season. In 2026, the Wildcats will chase a 10th consecutive SEC regular season title, back-to-back SEC Tournament titles and another NCAA Tournament run.



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