ROLLA, Mo. â The push to create an administration-level university committee focused on the oversight of Mizzou athletics stemmed from concern over athletics department spending and broader trends within college sports, two of the groupâs members said Thursday.
The UM System Board of Curatorsâ Mizzou Intercollegiate Athletics Special Committee has generated more questions than answers since its February inception, which came just days before the abrupt departure of former athletics director Desiree Reed-Francois.
The committeeâs charter suggests it can oversee a wide range of athletics department matters, from finances and facilities renovations â including the $250 million redevelopment of Memorial Stadiumâs north concourse that was approved Thursday â to emerging issues affecting college sports.
People are also reading…
Speaking publicly about the committee for the first time since its creation, committee Chairman Bob Blitz confirmed that a desire to lend heightened attention to finances and stay informed regarding the continued college sports landscapeâs complexity were behind the decision.
âWith the statistics that we saw, we felt in filling our fiduciary duty that it was a must to step in and find out more about what was going on in the athletic department,â Blitz said. âWeâre not trying to pick coaches; weâre not trying to do those kind of things. Weâre trying to make sure that the athletic department is running in a financially responsible way and doing the best they can, that they have the best methods to raise money. This stadiumâs going to cost a lot of money. Thatâs the reason.â
In the 2023 fiscal year, which ran from July 2022 to June 2023 and was Reed-Francoisâ last full fiscal period in the big chair, Mizzouâs athletics department emerged in the black by a single dollar.
That narrow surplus stemmed, in part, from roughly $23 million in direct institutional support from the academic and administrative side of MU, up from approximately $12 million in the prior year.
Missouri athletics brought in record revenues while spending record amounts under Reed-Francois. The need for loans from the university to cover athletics expenses has drawn scrutiny from some.
In creating the oversight committee, the Board of Curators also felt it was keeping in line with administrative trends around other high-profile athletics programs, Blitz said.
âThe boards across the nation, in every university, are taking more interest and more activity in the athletic performance,â he said, âbecause athletics are becoming so complex with money and (name, image and likeness rights) and the (transfer) portal and the ticket prices and the whole branding of the university. So (across) all boards, it is not unusual that either a special committee is formed or that a liaison is directed to the athletic committee from the board or that the board itself takes it.â
The curators intentionally designated four of their nine members to be part of the athletics oversight committee: Blitz, Chairwoman Robin Wenneker, Todd Graves and Jeff Layman. Those four members tend to be more interested in topics that affect Mizzou athletics than some other board members.
Within the structure of the oversight committee, they can specialize on those issues more â like how the board handles its control of MU Health Care.
âWeâve talked about athletics and how we can elevate that. Thatâs been a clear goal for us for the last two years,â Wenneker said. âI think we all understand that. But nine of us trying to work on this is, even routinely, is cumbersome, so we took it to four. That allows the committee to be more targeted and monitor â which was a key part of that â how we can move athletics forward. So that coupled with accountability to the state of Missouri, we consider that an important responsibility.â
To date, the oversight committee has met almost entirely in closed-session meetings â two of which are scheduled for Friday and Monday. The topics of those gatherings have not been publicly disclosed.
Itâs not clear whether the creation of the oversight committee played a role in Reed-Francoisâ decision to leave MU for the same role at Arizona.
In explaining the creation of the committee, Blitz emphasized that it was a heavily deliberated decision that fell in line with normal board practices.
âWe donât do anything on a whim,â he said. âA board is just a policy-making organization. We donât have specific knowledge. We donât know how to run an athletic department. We donât know how to run a hospital. So what we do is we get experts â experts in those fields. We hire them and they give us data so we donât do anything on a whim. We rely on data.â
Mizzou to enforce buyout
Mizzou has been quiet on the status of Reed-Francoisâ contract buyout following her February departure. But the MU administrationâs attitude showed itself slightly Thursday.
Shortly after Reed-Francoisâ hiring at Arizona, that school said it expected her to âundertake best efforts to reduce or eliminate any financial buyout (she) may owe to the University of Missouri.â
Based on the terms of her contract, sheâs likely to owe Missouri roughly $3 million for leaving her deal early.
Itâs not clear whether Reed-Francois has submitted a request to lower or drop her buyout or whether Mizzou would even entertain that idea. But UM System President and MU Chancellor Mun Choi, when asked about the matter, suggested the school would hold firm.
âNothing to share,â Choi said, âbut we do have a contract, and we do expect the contract terms to be honored.â