Jamie Pollard’s retirement marks the end of a long run that reshaped Iowa State athletics from the inside out.
Pollard, who has led the Cyclones since 2004, announced that his time as athletic director is winding down after 22 years with the school. The search for his replacement is set to begin this fall, and his retirement will officially take effect on June 30, 2027, unless a successor is in place before then.
His departure closes a significant chapter for Iowa State, where he built strong ties with several of the program’s biggest names, including football coach Matt Campbell, women’s basketball coach Bill Fennelly and men’s basketball coach T.J. Otzelberger.
That connection matters, especially now that Pollard’s exit raises questions about what comes next for Otzelberger in Ames. He has previously turned down interest from major programs such as the North Carolina Tar Heels, and Pollard was widely seen as a key reason he stayed.
Iowa State would obviously prefer that stability continues, particularly after Campbell left for the Penn State Nittany Lions. That move was a financial upgrade for Campbell, but it also underscored how much the Cyclones have grown under Pollard’s leadership.
The numbers tell the story clearly. As Chris Williams of Cyclone Fanatic shared, the revenue streams built during Pollard’s tenure pushed the school to a level that once seemed out of reach.
When Pollard took over in 2005, media and licensing brought in $7.88 million. By 2024, that figure had climbed to $43.68 million.
The athletic department’s budget followed the same trajectory. It stood at $28.2 million when Pollard arrived, and a $141.1 million budget was approved for 2026.
Fan support grew right alongside the finances. Ticket revenue rose from $9.12 million in 2005 to $23.37 million in 2024, while football season tickets more than doubled from 22,000 to 45,000. The department itself also expanded dramatically, growing from 50 employees to 250.
That kind of growth over two decades is hard to ignore, especially in a college sports landscape that keeps changing. NIL will demand a different skill set from the next athletic director, but Pollard leaves behind a foundation that gives Iowa State plenty to build on.
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What makes this one especially intriguing is the ripple effect it could have beyond a single roster spot. A receiver ranked among the top names at his position and in his home state can do more than catch passes down the road, since commitments like this often help shape how other recruits view a programs ceiling and offensive direction. For Iowa State, the hope is that this is the kind of addition that can become a cornerstone, not just a headline. [Read more 🡒]
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The bigger picture is what comes next, because the EYBL calendar is down to its final major stop and the stage only gets brighter from here. For Iowa State, the appeal is not just that the class is rated at the top of the country, but that these players still have one more chance to reinforce why so many people around the circuit are talking about them. [Read more 🡒]
