Nebraska Athletic Director Trev Alberts has decided to leave his alma mater to take the athletic director job at Texas A&M.
Alberts, per sources, informed Nebraska Athletics’ staff of his decision Wednesday evening via email, apologizing that he “was not able to communicate these changes to you in person.”
The Journal Star first reported the news of his final decision and departure before Alberts sent his email.
Alberts, the former star Husker linebacker, had been at the helm of the Nebraska Athletics program since 2021, coming to his alma mater after the surprising retirement of Bill Moos. Before taking over at Nebraska, Alberts was the athletic director at the University of Nebraska Omaha for 12 years.
People are also reading…
This athletic director shuffle comes months after NU lost its system president, Ted Carter, to Ohio State. Carter then filled the OSU AD job with A&M’s Ross Bjork, who will take over this summer for a retiring Gene Smith. It also comes less than a year after the retirement of Nebraska Chancellor Ronnie Green and a little over a year after Alberts hand-picked Matt Rhule to be NU’s football coach.
It is unclear as of now who Nebraska’s interim athletic director will be.
The news of Alberts potentially leaving Nebraska for Texas A&M leaked out of Texas early Wednesday with a report from the Houston Chronicle saying Alberts had become the top target for the Aggies’ opening.
Officials from both Nebraska and Texas A&M during the morning and early afternoon denied that any decision had been made, including NU’s interim president Chris Kabourek.
Alberts’ presumed deal at Texas A&M would be a five-year contract that will put him “near the top of the SEC and among the Top 10 athletic directors nationally,” according to a report from ESPN.
Alberts — who made $1.7 million per year as Nebraska’s AD — has not responded to a request for comment from the Journal Star.
For context, Bjork was making $1.5 million annually at Texas A&M before his departure for Ohio State. Bjork, at Ohio State, is set to make just over $2 million per year, according to the Columbus Dispatch.
This was not the first time Alberts had been considered for another position since taking over Nebraska’s Athletics Department in 2021.
According to sources familiar with the situation, Alberts was a finalist for the College Football Playoff executive director position and also previously interviewed for the vacant Big Ten commissioner job before the conference hired Tony Petitti last May.
Just 120 days ago, then-NU President Carter opted to double Alberts’ salary and sweetened his contract with a series of potential bonuses in an effort to keep the athletic director at Nebraska for the long term.
The 8-year extension, which was set to run through 2031, doubled his base pay from $853,882 to $1.7 million; provided a $500,000 retention bonus if he stayed at Nebraska through September 2025; and an annual bonus of $300,000 for every year he remains in the job through the end of his contract.
If Alberts stayed the full eight years, he would have been eligible to receive a $3 million completion bonus, as well as performance bonuses if Husker athletes meet academic and athletic goals.
The contract also included liquidation damage buyouts to be paid to Nebraska if Alberts left before the end date. According to the contract, if Alberts were to leave Nebraska before the end of 2024, he’d owe the university $4.12 million.
The Nebraska Board of Regents did not need to approve the contract extension, but several regents gave their full support to the measure. Last year, the board opted to move responsibility for the Husker athletic director out from under the UNL chancellor to the NU system president, giving that position broad leeway to incentivize Alberts to stay put.
In the fewer than three years that Alberts had helmed the athletics department at his alma mater, he has been the architect of multiple ambitious endeavors, including the world-record-setting Volleyball Day in Nebraska event at Memorial Stadium and the stadium’s massive renovation project that includes the demolition of South Stadium and modernization of other areas. The expected price tag of that endeavor: $450 million in privately-raised funds.
Alberts is also currently a defendant in a lawsuit filed in February in U.S. District Court alleging that he failed to ensure the Nebraska women’s basketball coaching staff, namely former associate head coach Chuck Love, maintained appropriate boundaries with former Nebraska guard Ashley Scoggin.
In the lawsuit, Scoggin accused Love of using his position and influence with head coach Amy Williams to groom Scoggin into a sexual relationship. Also in the lawsuit, Scoggin accused Alberts. After the team discovered Love and Scoggin’s inappropriate relationship, Love was placed on paid leave and Scoggin was dismissed from the team.
According to the lawsuit, Scoggin later had a meeting with her parents, Williams and Alberts in which she said the university employees “were motivated to avoid scandal and embarrassment” to the women’s basketball team instead of protecting a student-athlete.
The lawsuit states Alberts did not acknowledge it was improper for coaches to pursue sexual relationships with athletes, and there was no discussion about whether or not Love had acted inappropriately leading up to Scoggin being in his hotel room.
According to the lawsuit, Alberts later told Scoggin and her parents that Williams would decide how the situation would be handled, in which the punishment was affirmed. Scoggin said in the lawsuit no investigation was ordered until she started a Title IX complaint on March 11, 2022. Nebraska dropped the Title IX investigation after Love resigned in May.
With Alberts’ departure, he became the second athletic director to leave Nebraska for Texas A&M. Bill Byrne — the longest-tenured Nebraska athletic director in recent decades — did so in the early 2000s.
» This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
- • Texts from columnists
- • The most breaking Husker news
- • Cutting-edge commentary
- • Husker history photo galleries
Be the first to know
Get local news delivered to your inbox!
Must See
-
Football
/ 3 weeks agoHuskers Fight Hard but Fall Short Against UCLA
LINCOLN – The Nebraska Cornhuskers gave it their all on Saturday, with standout efforts...
-
Football
/ 1 month agoGAMEDAY: Nebraska Set to Face Undefeated Indiana in Key Big Ten Showdown
Bloomington, IN – It’s Game Day, Husker Nation! Nebraska (5-1, 2-1 Big Ten) returns...
-
Football
/ 2 months agoBlackshirts Shine as Nebraska Tops Rutgers 14-7 on Homecoming
Lincoln, NE – Nebraska’s Blackshirt defense played a starring role in the Huskers’ 14-7...
By Chris
You must be logged in to post a comment Login