Sandy Barbour

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Sandy Barbour
Gov. Wolf Joins PSU Athletes and Lawmakers to Celebrate NIL Legislation (cropped).jpg
Current position
TitleVice President for Intercollegiate Athletics
TeamPenn State
ConferenceBig Ten
Biographical details
Born (1959-12-02) December 2, 1959 (age 62)
Annapolis, Maryland
Alma materWake Forest University (B.S.)
University of Massachusetts Amherst (M.S.)
Northwestern University (M.B.A.)
Playing career
Field hockey
1977–1980Wake Forest
Basketball
1977–1978;
1979–1980
Wake Forest
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Field hockey
1981UMass (asst.)
1982–1984Northwestern (asst.)
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1982–1984Northwestern (dir. recruiting services)
1984–1989Northwestern (asst. AD)
1991–1996Tulane (assoc. AD)
1996–1999Tulane
2000–2002Notre Dame (assoc. AD)
2002–2004Notre Dame (deputy AD)
2004–2014California
2014–presentPenn State

Anne Saunders "Sandy" Barbour (born December 2, 1959) is the Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics at the Pennsylvania State University. Prior to her current position at Penn State, she was the Athletic Director of the University of California, Berkeley from 2004 to 2014.[1] She was also named one of the top 100 influential women in business in San Francisco.[2]

Barbour served as athletic director for Tulane University from 1996 until resigning in 1999, having joined the staff as an associate athletic director in 1991.[3] She was instrumental in hiring football coach Tommy Bowden, who produced an undefeated 12–0 1998 football season that finished with the Green Wave ranked No. 7 in the nation. When Bowden was hired away by Clemson, Chris Scelfo was hired by Tulane as new head coach over Bowden's offensive coordinator Rich Rodriguez.[4] There remains to present uncertainty as to whether Barbour recommended Rodriguez for the head coaching job but was overruled by then Tulane President Scott Cowen for the hiring instead of Scelfo. Barbour resigned as Tulane athletic director on August 9, 1999 before Scelfo had coached a down in any regular season game for the Green Wave.[5] On her resignation she stated, "There's no doubt about it -- this is not the way I wanted to go out at Tulane."[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Jon Wilner (26 June 2014). "Cal's Sandy Barbour out as athletic director". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  2. ^ "Sandy Barbour". Penn State Official Athletic Site. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  3. ^ Sandy Barbour Resigns as Athletics Director, Aug. 9, 1999
  4. ^ a b Tammy Nunez, Another first for Sandy Barbour as Tulane's former AD takes over at Penn State, The Times-Picayune, July 31, 2014.
  5. ^ "Tulane AD Gives Resignation".

External links[]

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