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Best Director’s Cup finish in years earns Nebraska A.D. Trev Alberts six-figure bonus


Nebraska Athletic Director Trev Alberts has earned a bonus in his contract attached to NU’s 29th-place finish in the Learfield Director’s Cup.

Alberts’ contract — like that of his predecessor, Bill Moos — awards a bonus if the Huskers finish inside the Top 30 of the Director’s Cup. A 26-to-30th-place finish gives Alberts a $160,000 bonus. Nebraska’s 29th place finish, all but sealed before the end of the College World Series, is the school’s best finish since 27th in 2015-16. Since then, NU had finished no better than 35th, with the Cup in 2019-20 getting canceled due to COVID.

The Cup awards points to each school that makes the postseason of a given sport. The national champion is awarded 100 points, and points descend incrementally from there. Schools can score in up to 19 sports, four of which must be men’s and women’s basketball, volleyball and baseball. Schools with more sports, especially niche Olympic sports, tend to do better.

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In 2022-23, Nebraska did quite well with track and field, which scored points for NU in both indoor and outdoor events. The women finished eighth at outdoor nationals, while the men finished 17th. The Huskers made the top 30 despite four of its best-funded sports — football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and baseball — failing to reach the NCAA postseason and the Husker volleyball team bowing out in the Sweet 16, two or rounds earlier than usual.

Nebraska will finished fifth in the Big Ten behind Ohio State (third), Michigan (11th), Penn State (15th) and Wisconsin (27th). Iowa finished 48th overall and 10th in Big Ten, passing both Illinois and Michigan State once baseball points are added.

Stanford clinched the national Director’s Cup title in mid-June with its Super Regional baseball win over Texas, which will finish second. Had UT won the game, then won the College World Series, the two schools would have been close to a virtual tie.

USC and UCLA, soon to join the Big Ten, finished 10th and 14th, respectively. The Bruins won the men’s volleyball national title.

Creighton finished 90th overall and fourth in the Big East, while Omaha finished 204th overall and sixth in the Summit League.

In Division II, UNK finished 38th, Chadron State finished 113th and Wayne State finished 119th.

In Division III, Nebraska Wesleyan finished 81st.

In NAIA, Midland University finished 15th, Concordia finished 28th, Doane finished 31st, Hastings finished 33rd, Morningside finished 58th, Briar Cliff finished 111th, College of Saint Mary finished 113th and Peru State finished 169th.

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