Gene Smith (athletic director)

Last updated

Gene Smith
Biographical details
Born Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Alma mater University of Notre Dame
Playing career
1973–1977 Notre Dame
Position(s) Defensive end
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1986–1993 Eastern Michigan
1993–2000 Iowa State
2000–2005 Arizona State
2005–2024 Ohio State
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
NCAA Division I FBS National Champion
*1973 (player)
*1977 (assistant coach)
*2014 (athletic director)
Corbett Award (2016)

Gene Smith is a former American college administrator and former college football player and coach who was most recently senior vice president and Athletic Director for Ohio State University.

Contents

He was named the university's eighth athletic director on March 5, 2005. Prior to his tenure at Ohio State, he served as athletic director for Arizona State, Eastern Michigan, and Iowa State.

Early life/playing and coaching career

A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Smith played defensive end for four years at Notre Dame [1] including the 1973 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team that won the AP National Championship. He graduated from Notre Dame in 1977, becoming the first member of his family to graduate from college. That year, he became an assistant coach of the Fighting Irish football team, which would go on to win the Undisputed National Championship. [2]

Administrative career

Smith is the eighth person to hold the athletics director position at Ohio State. He previously served as director of athletics at Arizona State, Iowa State and Eastern Michigan universities and is entering his 33rd year in the role.

Smith was identified as one of Black Enterprise's "50 most powerful African-Americans in sports". He has previous affiliations with the NCAA Management Council, the NCAA committee on Infractions, the Rose Bowl Management Committee, and the NCAA Football Rules Committee. Smith was named to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Committee in 2006 and became the chair in 2010. [3]

In January 2014 Smith was promoted to senior vice president of the university where he continues in his duties as athletic director, while also having an expanding role in other areas of the university. [4]

During Smith’s tenure, Ohio State has dominated Big Ten Conference play, with 105 teams and 331 individual conference championships. In addition, more than 90 percent of graduating seniors earned jobs, enrolled in graduate school or moved on to professional sports. On the national stage, Ohio State teams have won 24 teams and 104 individual national championships during Smith’s tenure and collected 1,586 All-America honors.

Along with his development team, Smith has recently raised more than $130 million for the construction of the Schumaker Complex, Covelli Arena and Ty Tucker Tennis Center and a renovation at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center – the Wandell Family Player’s Suite.

Smith oversees a total of 525 employees in athletics and business advancement, with an annual budget of $300 million, and a football program with a $1.5 billion valuation, as estimated by the Wall Street Journal. But what Smith is most proud of is the exemplary culture within his units, recognized by Forbes as “one of the best ten organizations to work for in sports” and the only college program on its list.

Smith currently serves on the Boards of Directors of the Columbus Sports Commission, Columbus Cub, Columbus Arena Management and Columbus Museum of Art. [5]

He announced he would be retiring effective June 30, 2024. [6]

Personal life

Smith is the father of four children.

Awards and honors

Player

Coach

Administrator

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References

  1. Smith, Gene (April 12, 2017). "Gene Smith Bio". Ohio State Buckeyes .
  2. 1 2 "Ohio State Buckeyes | Ohio State University Athletics". Ohio State Buckeyes.
  3. The Men's Division I Basketball Committee
  4. "Buckeyes' Gene Smith gets raise, new title". ESPN.com. January 28, 2014.
  5. "Buckeye Champions – Ohio State Buckeyes.com". Archived from the original on March 16, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2016.
  6. "Buckeye goodbye: AD Smith to retire in 2024". ESPN.com. August 9, 2023. Retrieved August 10, 2023.
  7. "Sports Awards – ASAMA.org". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved March 22, 2016.