I see at least three:
Balancing revenue vs. non-revenue sportsIMHO there is no chance of any non-revenue sports being cut under a new AD, at least in the first two or three years. As I've noted previously, many of the major donors, including the named supporters of the SAHPC, are people whose ties are as great or greater to non-revenue sports as to football and hoops. I can't imagine Barbour would have been removed without their agreement, and I assume one of the preconditions was that a new AD would maintain the current list of sports, at least for a period. That probably rules out eliminating or reducing the budgets for other sports in order to shift more money to the major sports, especially since Title IX would require most cuts to be in men's sports. I believe that also rules out getting a new AD from anywhere in the SEC, where everything other than football is an afterthought.
Academics co-existing with athleticsThe new AD will need to try to figure out a way to get the faculty to be more supportive of athletes, not by being soft on them in terms of grades, but by being accommodating to athletic schedules, for example, as long as the players get the work done, and by working with whatever tutoring support the athletic department provides. I believe the AD will have helpful support from Dirks in approaching faculty. Having now looked at the finances, I'm sure Dirks has realized that any attempt by Cal to go Ivy League/University of Chicago left the dock when the decision to upgrade the stadium was made. Therefore, we have to figure out how to help players be successful in the classroom and on the field.
Balancing tradition with revenueWe've all bemoaned the decline in the game-day experience for football and basketball. A new AD will need to fix that. I'm guessing that Dirks, given his background having worked there, is aware of the problems they're now having in this regard at Michigan, and wants to stop the similar slide that may be occurring at Cal. Unfortunately, fixing it is a bit circumscribed by the TV contract, which gives the school very little control over game times. My approach would be to be upfront, and to raise ticket prices and/or contribution limits to make up for the revenue that would be lost by eliminating game day promotions. Facility naming can continue, because that doesn't necessarily hurt the game-day experience.
These are not easy problems to fix, in light of the stadium debt. I would guess the best candidate is one from another Pac-12 school, or maybe another school that combines academics with Division I sports (tOSU, Michigan, North Carolina?).
Balancing revenue vs. non-revenue sportsIMHO there is no chance of any non-revenue sports being cut under a new AD, at least in the first two or three years. As I've noted previously, many of the major donors, including the named supporters of the SAHPC, are people whose ties are as great or greater to non-revenue sports as to football and hoops. I can't imagine Barbour would have been removed without their agreement, and I assume one of the preconditions was that a new AD would maintain the current list of sports, at least for a period. That probably rules out eliminating or reducing the budgets for other sports in order to shift more money to the major sports, especially since Title IX would require most cuts to be in men's sports. I believe that also rules out getting a new AD from anywhere in the SEC, where everything other than football is an afterthought.
Academics co-existing with athleticsThe new AD will need to try to figure out a way to get the faculty to be more supportive of athletes, not by being soft on them in terms of grades, but by being accommodating to athletic schedules, for example, as long as the players get the work done, and by working with whatever tutoring support the athletic department provides. I believe the AD will have helpful support from Dirks in approaching faculty. Having now looked at the finances, I'm sure Dirks has realized that any attempt by Cal to go Ivy League/University of Chicago left the dock when the decision to upgrade the stadium was made. Therefore, we have to figure out how to help players be successful in the classroom and on the field.
Balancing tradition with revenueWe've all bemoaned the decline in the game-day experience for football and basketball. A new AD will need to fix that. I'm guessing that Dirks, given his background having worked there, is aware of the problems they're now having in this regard at Michigan, and wants to stop the similar slide that may be occurring at Cal. Unfortunately, fixing it is a bit circumscribed by the TV contract, which gives the school very little control over game times. My approach would be to be upfront, and to raise ticket prices and/or contribution limits to make up for the revenue that would be lost by eliminating game day promotions. Facility naming can continue, because that doesn't necessarily hurt the game-day experience.
These are not easy problems to fix, in light of the stadium debt. I would guess the best candidate is one from another Pac-12 school, or maybe another school that combines academics with Division I sports (tOSU, Michigan, North Carolina?).