American college athletics administrator (born 1970) Scott Stricklin Current position Title| Athletic director Team| Florida Conference| SEC Annual salary| US$1.076 million[1] Biographical details Born| (1970-05-08) May 8, 1970 (age 52) Jackson, Mississippi Alma mater| Mississippi State University (1992) Administrative career (AD unless noted) 1990–1992| Mississippi State (student asst. media relations) 1993–1998| Mississippi State (asst. media relations) 1993–1998| Auburn (assoc. media relations) 1998| Tulane (assist. AD) 1999–2003| Baylor (assist. AD) 2003–2008| Kentucky (assoc. AD) 2008–2010| Mississippi State (senior assoc. AD) 2010–2016| Mississippi State 2016–present| Florida Scott Stricklin (born May 8, 1970) is an American college athletics administrator. He is currently the athletic director for the University of Florida, a position he has held since 2016. Before being hired by Florida, Stricklin served in various capacities in intercollegiate athletics at several different schools, most notably as athletic director at his alma mater, Mississippi State University, from 2010 to 2016.[2] ## Contents * 1 Early life, education and career * 2 Athletic director career * 2.1 Mississippi State * 2.2 Florida * 3 Personal life * 4 References * 5 External links ## Early life, education and career[edit] Stricklin is from Jackson, Mississippi. He attended Jackson Preparatory School[3] in Flowood, Mississippi and earned a Bachelor’s of Science in Marketing from Mississippi State University in 1992.[2] After working as a student assistant in the media relations office of Mississippi State, where he served three years as the baseball media contact, Stricklin was named assistant media relations director following his graduation. Following a year at Mississippi State, Stricklin was named associate media relations director at Auburn, where he served as the baseball contact from 1993 to 1998. In 1998, he took over the top media relations post at Tulane and coordinated media for the 12–0 Green Wave football team that season. A four-year stint at Baylor (1999–2003) as Assistant AD for Communications and Marketing followed, before Stricklin returned to the Southeastern Conference as the Associate AD for Media Relations at Kentucky. Stricklin returned to Mississippi State in 2008 as the Senior Associate Athletics Director for External Affairs, overseeing fundraising efforts among many responsibilities. ## Athletic director career[edit] ### Mississippi State[edit] Stricklin was named Director of Athletics of Mississippi State University in 2010.[4] Under Stricklin's tenure, MSU Athletics achieved its highest-ever Learfield Director’s Cup finish (44th in 2015–16). Stricklin, who was named Under Armour’s Athletics Director of the Year in April 2016, oversaw record fundraising for Mississippi State, which has produced new facilities such as the $11.7 million Mize Pavilion at Humphrey Coliseum, the $25 million Leo W. Seal Jr. Football Complex, as well as $75 million in expansion and upgrades to Davis Wade Stadium that were completed prior to the start of the 2014 campaign. ### Florida[edit] On November 1, 2016, Stricklin was hired as the University of Florida's director of athletics[5] doubling his MSU salary of $500,000 to $1 million (and bonuses that could increase the salary to $1.4 million).[6] During his first year as director of athletics, Stricklin and head football coach Jim McElwain mutually agreed to have McElwain resign as Florida's head coach.[7] One of Stricklin's responsibilities as the University of Florida's athletic director is to act as chief financial officer (CFO) for the University Athletic Association.[5] On November 26, 2017, Stricklin hired Dan Mullen as head coach of the University of Florida football team. Mullen was head football coach at Mississippi State during Stricklin's tenure as athletic director at Mississippi State. [8] Bill Hancock, Executive Director of the College Football Playoff (CFP) announced Scott Stricklin was appointed to the selection committee by the CFP Management Committee. Stricklin will serve a three-year term beginning in the spring of 2018.[9] Stricklin came under fire in the Cam Neuberger scandal, where the former Florida Gators women's basketball coach was accused of making racist comments, throwing basketball players, and verbal abuse. Stricklin's official statement was quoted in The Alligator, UF's campus newspaper: > "At times during Coach Newbauer’s tenure there were concerns brought to our attention,” he [Stricklin] wrote. “Each time, additional information was sought, and these concerns were addressed directly with Cam as we required corrective actions and outlined clear expectations of behavior moving forward. Additionally, the UAA provided enhanced administrative oversight and presence within the program and sought anonymous feedback directly from student-athletes and staff. Ultimately, we did not see the required improvements, and following discussions with Coach Newbauer he made the decision to resign." ## Personal life[edit] Stricklin is married to the former Anne Howell, the youngest daughter of Basketball Hall of Fame member Bailey Howell. The couple has two daughters.[2] ## References[edit] 1. ^ "New Florida AD Scott Stricklin details his decision and process in joining the Gators". 27 September 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2017. 2. ^ a b c "(http://floridagators.com/staff.aspx?staff=487)" 3. ^ "Alumni - Honored Alumni - Jackson Preparatory School". oldsite.jacksonprep.net. Retrieved 29 December 2017. 4. ^ "(http://www.hailstate.com/sports/2010/7/26/204971150.aspx)" 5. ^ a b "Staff Directory - Florida Gators". floridagators.com. Retrieved 29 December 2017. 6. ^ Bonner, Michael. "Florida is pursuing Mississippi State's Stricklin to be new AD". Clarion-Ledger. Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved September 26, 2016. 7. ^ "Florida fires head coach Jim McElwain". Retrieved 29 December 2017. 8. ^ "Florida hires Miss. State's Mullen as coach". 26 November 2017. Retrieved 29 December 2017. 9. ^ "College Football Playoff Announces Selection Committee Class". ## External links[edit] * Florida profile * Mississippi State profile * v * t * e Mississippi State Bulldogs athletic directors * Daniel S. Martin (1903–1907) * Fred Furman (1907–1908) * W. D. Chadwick (1909–1930) * Dudy Noble (1930–1934) * Athletic board control (1934–1935) * Ralph Sasse (1935–1936) * Paul Barrows Parker (1936–1937) * Dudy Noble (1937–1959) * Wade Walker (1959–1966) * Charles Shira (1967–1976) * Bob Tyler (1976–1979) * Carl Maddox (1979–1983) * Charley Scott (1983–1986) * Charlie Carr (1986–1987) * Larry Templeton (1987–2008) * Greg Byrne (2008–2010) * Scott Stricklin (2010–2016) * John Cohen (2016– ) * v * t * e Florida Gators athletic directors * Alfred L. Buser (1917–1920) * William G. Kline (1920–1923) * James L. White (1923–1925) * Everett Yon (1925–1928) * Charlie Bachman (1928–1930) * Edgar C. Jones (1930–1936) * Josh Cody (1936–1939) * Tom Lieb (1940–1945) * Raymond Wolf (1946–1949) * Bob Woodruff (1950–1959) * Ray Graves (1960–1979) * Bill Carr (1979–1986) * Bill Arnsparger (1986–1992) * Jeremy Foley (1992–2016) * Scott Stricklin (2016– ) * v * t * e Athletic directors of the Southeastern Conference Eastern Division| * Scott Stricklin (Florida) * Josh Brooks (Georgia) * Mitch Barnhart (Kentucky) * Desiree Reed-Francois (Missouri) * Ray Tanner (South Carolina) * Danny White (Tennessee) * Candice Storey Lee (Vanderbilt) Western Division| * Greg Byrne (Alabama) * Hunter Yurachek (Arkansas) * John Cohen (Auburn) * Scott Woodward (LSU) * Bracky Brett # (Mississippi State) * Keith Carter (Ole Miss) * Ross Bjork (Texas A&M) # denotes interim Authority control General| * ISNI * 1 * VIAF * 1 * WorldCat National libraries| * United States *[v]: View this template *[t]: Discuss this template *[e]: Edit this template