Arizona
Arizona State puts its trust in new AD Graham Rossini in uncertain time for college sports
TEMPE, Ariz. – Per The Athletic’s research, 25 percent of power-conference athletic directors received undergraduate degrees from the institution they represent. This includes BYU’s Tom Holmoe, Indiana’s Scott Dolson and Vanderbilt’s Candice Storey Lee.
Arizona State’s Graham Rossini joined this group last week, but his association with the Sun Devils goes far beyond his college days. Rossini, 44, says he’s thought about Arizona State every day since he was 11 years old. An exaggeration, perhaps, but not far off the mark.
Growing up on the Gulf Coast in Mobile, Ala., Rossini learned about Arizona State while collecting baseball cards. An Atlanta Braves fan, he came across the card of first-round draft pick Mike Kelly. On the back of Kelly’s card, Rossini read that Kelly had starred at Arizona State, winning the Golden Spikes Award, given annually to college baseball’s top player.
A seed took root.
From 1,736 miles away, Rossini started following the Sun Devils. He watched Paul Lo Duca and Antone Williamson in the 1993 College World Series. He watched Jake Plummer and Pat Tillman in the 1997 Rose Bowl. One day a high school English teacher asked students to write letters to universities requesting info for admission. Rossini’s first letter went to Arizona State. The school sent back a poster of Sparky, its maroon-and-gold mascot. Rossini hung it on his bedroom wall.
Rossini’s father worked at Chevron. His mother first worked in software and later became a teacher. Rossini was a baseball player. He wanted to play at Arizona State but then-coach Pat Murphy didn’t offer a scholarship. Rossini flew out to the desert and tried to walk on, but at 6-foot-5, he was awkward for his position. “The tallest, skinniest catcher of all time,” recalled former Arizona State catcher Tuffy Gosewisch.
Murphy, today the manager of the Milwaukee Brewers, was honest with Rossini. “You’re good enough to make the team,” he told him, “but you may never play.” He asked if Rossini might want to work as a student assistant instead.
This is where former Arizona State players say Rossini differs from other ADs. “It’s a special kind of story for me because he’s literally washed laundry for that program,” said Dennis Wyrick, who played for Arizona State from 2000 to 2003. Asked about this last week, Rossini recalled a trip to USC, driving around Compton looking for a place to wash uniforms. “And it was like, ‘Hey, whatever it takes,’” he said.
Murphy eventually made Rossini the program’s director of operations, or as Gosewisch put it, “he was like a front office by himself.” Today, friends and former co-workers describe Rossini as approachable, humble, trustworthy, passionate, genuine, thoughtful and intentional but the word that gets repeated is “detailed.”
“He literally had his hands on everything from recruiting to scheduling, to what the uniforms look like, to anything,” Murphy said before the Brewers left for a recent trip to Houston to play the Astros. “Anyone who was part of the program at this time, call one of those players. They all knew Graham had it under control.”
Indeed, when Rossini left Arizona State to take a position with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2008, Brendan Cunningham, a former student manager and ops director, said it felt like the head coach had left. The void was that big. Everyone was like, “What are we going to do without Graham?” he said.
Per The Athletic’s research, 40 percent of power-conference athletic directors were first-time ADs when they were hired. This includes Syracuse’s John Wildhack, who spent the bulk of his career at ESPN, and Colorado’s Rick George, who worked in Major League Baseball and with the PGA Tour.
Rossini joined this group of first-timers last week, and it sparked local criticism, even though for the last three years he had held senior positions and participated in major Arizona State projects, such as securing naming rights for Mountain America Stadium.
This is an interesting time for Arizona State. With the Sun Devils slow to embrace NIL and the football program handcuffed because of an NCAA investigation, many fans turned on previous AD Ray Anderson, who resigned under pressure in November. Despite Rossini’s background and experience, fans favored an outside candidate, one who had worked as an AD, to lead the university’s transition into the Big 12, where it will compete this fall.
During Rossini’s introductory news conference, school president Michael Crow said the school considered everyone imaginable for the position but throughout a six-month process promoting Rossini emerged as the best choice. Asked how many others he had formally interviewed, Crow replied: “Zero.”
Friends and colleagues of Rossini did not understand the initial negative reaction. One said anyone who disagreed with the AD choice simply did not know Rossini. Another called it a byproduct of Rossini himself, an executive who’s always worked in the shadows, more concerned about performance than publicity. (Indeed, a Google search of Rossini does not produce much beyond his work bios.)
New Beginnings 🔱#ForksUp /// #TogetherWeWin pic.twitter.com/oJahwWXYgq
— Arizona State Sun Devils (@TheSunDevils) May 24, 2024
Diamondbacks president and CEO Derrick Hall, an Arizona State product himself, got to know Rossini during Rossini’s time with Arizona State baseball. When the Sun Devils traveled to Los Angeles, Rossini and Hall, then with the Dodgers, always hooked up and Rossini would bring the team to Dodger Stadium. Once Hall moved to the Diamondbacks in 2005, he created a position for Rossini that dealt with customer experience.
Hall said it didn’t take long for Rossini to show he was capable of more. One big assignment led to another. Over 13 years, Rossini became Hall’s “go-to guy,” a vice president who handled some of the organization’s biggest projects. Rossini played major roles in bringing the 2011 All-Star Game and 2013 World Baseball Classic to Phoenix. He also became Hall’s project manager in the construction of Salt River Fields, the organization’s spring-training complex.
“He … does … not … miss … a .. detail,” Hall said, emphasizing each word.
In 2020, when the pandemic placed the world on hold, Rossini talked with Jim Phillips, commissioner of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The two had met when Rossini was a student manager with the baseball team and Phillips was finishing up his master’s degree at Arizona State. They had since stayed in touch, Phillips serving as a mentor. During their conversation, Rossini asked Phillips about the state of college athletics.
Phillips told Rossini not to dismiss it. There was something special about working with college athletes, he told Rossini. And the environment was perfect for raising a family. If your children are into sports, they have access to it. If they’re into arts and culture, they have access. Whatever it is, it’s there, Phillips said.
The talk stuck with Rossini, who returned to Arizona State as a senior administrator.
“It’s amazing how things kind of work themselves out,” Phillips said this week, noting how Rossini always struck him as an “old soul,” someone who listened and tried to learn. “Graham found himself exactly where he should be.”
Per The Athletic’s research, 43 percent of power-conference schools have changed athletic directors over the last three years. Some of this stems from ADs leaving for better opportunities, but it also reflects the need for institutions to find leaders who can navigate a changing landscape.
In addition to NIL and the transfer portal, the NCAA recently agreed to allow schools for the first time to pay athletes directly through revenue sharing. Although the deal is not final, it could be in place as soon as next year. The old collegiate model is dead. The next is still taking shape.
Crow said Arizona State worked six months to create a financial structure in athletics that can “weather any hurricane going forward, any tumult that we might encounter.” This, the president said, will allow Rossini and his staff to focus on ticket sales, NIL fund-raising, corporate sponsorships and winning.
Arizona State for years has been known as a “sleeping giant,” a label folks here have heard so much it makes their eyes roll. The alignment between administration and athletics has often been off, leaving fans wanting more, particularly from the school’s anchor programs. As athletic director, Rossini’s biggest task will be to mend relationships and convince fans and donors that Arizona State will not be left behind.
When Rossini left the Diamondbacks, Hall told him he hoped one day Rossini would become Arizona State’s athletic director. Rossini downplayed the idea, telling Hall that he simply intended to focus on his responsibilities. On a recent drive to Scottsdale for the Pac-12 baseball tournament, Rossini said becoming Arizona State’s AD may have been in the back of his mind, but it was never a driving force. It was more about purpose, less about title.
Friends, however, insist they saw this coming. Harvey Jabara, a longtime Arizona State supporter who owns a minority stake in the San Diego Padres, said he would have loved for Rossini to come to San Diego, but in the back of his mind he always knew Rossini’s heart was with the Sun Devils.
“This is the dream job for him,” Jabara said. “I think that’s unique in this day and age where so many people approach — not just in athletics, but in all parts of society — it’s always the next job that they’re pursuing. That’s not happening here as I know Graham Rossini.”
Said Murphy, strongly: “He will never leave ASU for another college job — that’s a guarantee.”
Throughout his career, Rossini has joked that he is a “professional problem solver,” someone who has done his best work when stakes are highest. That’s the environment he steps into at Arizona State, whose reality has seldom matched external hopes. He welcomes this challenge.
“There’s change around all of us,” Rossini said. “We’re prepared to be relevant in the areas that we need to today but also agile enough to react to the changes that happen around us. It’s a cliche — I don’t like using it — but I don’t see it as changes or challenges, just new opportunities.”
GO DEEPER
College football confidential: How NIL is used to keep players out of the transfer portal
(Photo of Graham Rossini at his introductory press conference as Arizona State’s athletic director: Michelle Gardner / The Republic / USA Today Network)
Arizona
AP men’s basketball Top 25: Arizona remains No. 1, Nebraska earns highest ranking since 1991
Arizona maintained its position as the No. 1 team in the Associated Press men’s basketball Top 25 on Monday, earning 42 of 61 first-place votes after a week that included a 96-75 win over No. 16 Alabama.
The Wildcats (9-0), one of seven undefeated teams remaining in Division I, already own five wins over high-major opponents.
There was little movement in the top 10 after a week with few upsets. Michigan (10-0), Duke (10-0), Iowa State (11-0) and UConn (10-1) remained Nos. 2-5, respectively. The only team to move up in the top 10 was No. 7 Gonzaga (10-1), which swapped places with No. 8 Houston (10-1) after adding another top-tier win over UCLA on Saturday.
The greater movement occurred between Nos. 10-25.
Nebraska (11-0) was the biggest riser, jumping eight spots to No. 15 after Saturday’s 83-80, buzzer-beating win over No. 18 Illinois. The Huskers, the lone power-conference team to never win an NCAA Tournament game, achieved their highest ranking since 1990-91, when they finished the season No. 11.
Illinois (8-3) and No. 23 Florida (6-4) were the biggest fallers, dropping five spots apiece.
Georgia (9-1) was the lone newcomer to the poll at No. 25, while UCLA (7-3) dropped out.
Here’s the full poll, along with my ballot:
|
Rank
|
Team
|
Record
|
Prev
|
CJ’s vote
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
9-0 |
1 |
2 |
|
|
2 |
10-0 |
2 |
1 |
|
|
3 |
10-0 |
3 |
5 |
|
|
4 |
11-0 |
4 |
3 |
|
|
5 |
10-1 |
5 |
4 |
|
|
6 |
10-1 |
6 |
6 |
|
|
7 |
10-1 |
8 |
7 |
|
|
8 |
10-1 |
7 |
10 |
|
|
9 |
9-1 |
9 |
9 |
|
|
10 |
9-1 |
10 |
8 |
|
|
11 |
9-1 |
11 |
11 |
|
|
12 |
9-1 |
14 |
15 |
|
|
13 |
10-0 |
15 |
12 |
|
|
14 |
8-2 |
17 |
14 |
|
|
15 |
11-0 |
23 |
13 |
|
|
16 |
7-3 |
12 |
17 |
|
|
17 |
8-3 |
19 |
16 |
|
|
18 |
8-3 |
13 |
18 |
|
|
19 |
7-3 |
16 |
21 |
|
|
20 |
7-3 |
20 |
20 |
|
|
21 |
8-3 |
21 |
NR |
|
|
22 |
6-3 |
22 |
24 |
|
|
23 |
6-4 |
18 |
19 |
|
|
24 |
9-1 |
24 |
22 |
|
|
25 |
9-1 |
NR |
25 |
|
|
NR |
9-2 |
NR |
23 |
Others receiving votes: USC 68, Iowa 47, Seton Hall 46, LSU 19, Kentucky 19, UCLA 16, Clemson 14, California 13, Saint Mary’s 12, Arizona State 5, Villanova 5, Notre Dame 4, Indiana 4, Miami (Ohio) 4, Miami (Fla.) 4, Utah State 2, Saint Louis 1, Wisconsin 1.
How good is Nebraska?
I caught Nebraska in person earlier this season when it beat New Mexico and Kansas State in Kansas City, Mo., and I’ve been a believer since. It’s a classic Fred Hoiberg team with a playmaking big, tons of shooting and awesome offensive execution. But what also stood out was how hard the Huskers played, and the defense is better than many of his best teams of the past at Iowa State.
The numbers are starting to back that up. The Huskers are up to 28th in adjusted defensive efficiency, the highest ranking ever for a Hoiberg defense. All this team was missing was signature wins, and it got two this past week, crushing Wisconsin 90-60 and then winning on the road at No. 18 Illinois on a last-second shot.
HE HIT IT‼️
Jamarques Lawrence’s 3-pointer right before the buzzer sends No. 23 @HuskerMBB to a dramatic win at No. 13 Illinois. pic.twitter.com/PhSr8kmnQn
— Big Ten Network (@BigTenNetwork) December 13, 2025
Arkansas could keep climbing
Arkansas fell out of my rankings for a few weeks early in the season because its computer numbers were bad after a few close calls against mid-majors. It was obvious the talent was there, but the Razorbacks just weren’t sharp early. They’re starting to play up to their talent, and I moved them up to 14th this week, which is one spot below where I had them in the preseason.
John Calipari’s best teams always have an NBA-level point guard, and he has one in Darius Acuff, who is averaging 17.7 points and 5.7 assists. Calipari also has three big wings who could develop into pros — Meleek Thomas, Karter Knox and Billy Richmond III — and as I wrote about in my weekly rankings, Trevon Brazile is playing the best ball of his career. This team is deeper and more talented than last year’s group, which got hot late and made the Sweet 16. Might still be a little low on this group.
Best team not ranked: Iowa
Iowa has yet to make the AP Top 25, but I’ve ranked the Hawkeyes the last three weeks and would argue their case was made even stronger last week in a loss. Iowa led Iowa State by 13 in the first half last Thursday at Hilton Coliseum and ended up taking a 4-point loss, which actually moved it up in the computer models. The Hawkeyes now rank 20th at KenPom and Bart Torvik, 19th in the NET and 21st at Evan Miya.
As the Hawkeyes proved against Iowa State, they are a tough out. Similar to Drake last year, Ben McCollum’s second Division I team gives nothing in transition, is hard to score against in the half court and is exhaustingly patient offensively waiting for a great shot to develop.
I can understand why my fellow voters aren’t there yet. With Ole Miss being a disappointment, you could argue Iowa is missing a signature win. The first opportunity is Jan. 3 when Iowa hosts UCLA.
Arizona
Arizona baseball pitching coach John DeRouin taking position with Mets, per report
Pitching was a big reason why Arizona made it back to the College World Series last season. The return of many key arms for 2026 makes it likely the Wildcats will again have a stellar staff.
Who guides those pitchers, however, is uncertain.
Michael Lev of the Arizona Daily Star is reporting that pitching coach John DeRouin is leaving the program for a position within the New York Mets organization. DeRouin had been elevated to pitching coach over the summer after Kevin Vance was hired as head coach at San Diego State.
DeRouin, who was a pitching strategist under Vance the previous two seasons, was integral in developing Arizona’s arms, particularly starters Owen Kramkowski and Smith Bailey and reliever Tony Pluta. That trio are among several key pitchers returning from the CWS team, with DeRouin’s promotion factoring in their decisions to stay in Tucson.
“John is like the pitching whisperer,” head coach Chip Hale said last month.
Hale could promote from within again, elevating Owen Cuffe. Whoever he hires will technically be his fourth pitching coach in five seasons. Dave Lawn handled the role in 2022-23, retained from Jay Johnson’s staff, before Vance was hired in 2024.
DeRouin is the latest in a string of college baseball coaches leaving for pro jobs. The most notable is Tennessee head coach, hired last month as manager of the San Francisco Giants
Arizona begins preseason practice in January ahead of the 2026 opener Feb. 13 against former Pac-12 rival Stanford at a tournament in Surprise.
Arizona
Report: Michigan search includes Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham, Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The firm hired by Michigan to search for a football coach to replace Sherrone Moore has contacted representatives for Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham and Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz, according to a person familiar with the situation.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because they were not authorized to share details of the search.
Moore was fired on Wednesday, when the school said an investigation uncovered his inappropriate relationship with a staffer. Two days later, Moore was charged with three crimes after prosecutors said he “barged his way” into the apartment of a woman he’d been having an affair with and threatened to kill himself.
College football’s winning program suddenly needs a coach.
After the 35-year-old Dillingham was linked to numerous open jobs last month, he said he was not leaving his alma mater.
Two weeks ago, Drinkwitz agreed to a six-year contract that increases his average compensation to $10.75 million annually.
Michigan is hoping to hire a coach this month, helping its chances of retaining recruits and keeping key players out of the transfer portal in January.
Dillingham, who is from Scottsdale, Arizona, graduated from Arizona State in 2013 and started his coaching career as an assistant for the Sun Devils. After coaching at Memphis, he was the offensive coordinator for Auburn, Florida State and Oregon before returning to Arizona State.
Dillingham orchestrated a quick turnaround, leading the Sun Devils to the Big 12 championship and the College Football Playoff for the first time last year.
Arizona State was 8-4 this season, improving Dillingham’s record to 22-16 over three seasons.
The 42-year-old Drinkwitz is 46-28 in six seasons at Missouri after going 12-1 in a year at Appalachian State. He has built the Tigers into a steady Southeastern Conference program, earning five straight bowl bids.
-
Alaska1 week agoHowling Mat-Su winds leave thousands without power
-
Texas1 week agoTexas Tech football vs BYU live updates, start time, TV channel for Big 12 title
-
Washington6 days agoLIVE UPDATES: Mudslide, road closures across Western Washington
-
Iowa1 week agoMatt Campbell reportedly bringing longtime Iowa State staffer to Penn State as 1st hire
-
Iowa2 days agoHow much snow did Iowa get? See Iowa’s latest snowfall totals
-
Miami, FL1 week agoUrban Meyer, Brady Quinn get in heated exchange during Alabama, Notre Dame, Miami CFP discussion
-
Cleveland, OH1 week agoMan shot, killed at downtown Cleveland nightclub: EMS
-
World1 week ago
Chiefs’ offensive line woes deepen as Wanya Morris exits with knee injury against Texans