Bryan Blair steps into the Syracuse athletic director chair this week, and the timing gives the move a little extra weight. July 1 marks the start of the business and fiscal cycle for college sports, and Blair begins his tenure on Wednesday as the school’s 12th full-time athletic director in 156 years.
That number says plenty about how rare long-term stability can be in the job. Industry website Athletic Director U, based out of Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, says the average Division I athletic director lasts seven years. Syracuse’s own history stretches a little longer than that, with the 11 previous athletic directors averaging 10 years apiece since 1910.
The names at the top of that list help tell the story. Jake Crouthamel lasted 26 years, from 1978 to 2004.
Daryl Gross came in almost exactly at the school’s long-term average, running the department from 2004 to 2015. Mark Coyle’s stint was the brief outlier, lasting just one year before the Minnesota job opened up in his home state.
Crouthamel’s run was nearly matched by Lew Andreas, the Syracuse legend who served as athletic director for 27 years from 1937 to 1964. Andreas also coached the basketball program for 12 seasons through 1949-50.
Those two long tenures line up with two of the biggest milestones in Syracuse athletics history, as Andreas and Crouthamel oversaw the modern-era football title in 1959 and the basketball title in 2003. That puts Syracuse in a small club of just 11 Division I schools to win both.
The job Blair inherits looks different from the one his predecessors knew. NIL and budgeted direct payments to players have changed the way departments operate, and Syracuse’s priorities now run through fundraising for football, basketball, then lacrosse and the other programs, along with rebuilding attendance and squeezing the most revenue possible out of the Dome.
Syracuse’s place in the latest Learfield Cup standings gives a snapshot of where the department stands across the board. The National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics released its final standings last week, and Syracuse finished 59th out of 361 Division I schools. In the ACC, that placed the Orange 14th among the league’s 18 programs, including Notre Dame.
The Learfield Cup uses a point system that rewards schools across both men’s and women’s sports, with more points available the deeper teams go in postseason play. Syracuse’s best finish came in 2015-16, when the Orange placed 21st nationally under Gross during a stretch when he pushed hard to support the non-revenue sports.
Blair has already started shaping the department around his own approach. In his first two months, he announced a hand-picked senior staff with experience at schools from every Power Four conference plus Notre Dame. Nicole Harris will oversee women’s sports, Charles Small will handle basketball, and Yulander Wells Jr. will be responsible for football, each working alongside the associate athletic directors assigned to their programs.
In Other News...
Bryan Blair Just Gave Syracuse Fans Their First Real Glimpse Of His Plan
Bryan Blair is still early in his run as Syracuses athletic director, but he used his new newsletter, Orange Report: Off the Top of the Dome, to give fans a clearer sense of how he is approaching the job. Since arriving from Toledo, he has been learning the department, settling his family, and handling the sort of transition work that comes with hiring a new mens basketball coach and taking over a major Power Four program.
Now Blair is starting to sketch the bigger picture, and it is one Syracuse fans will recognize as ambitious. He wants the Orange back in the national conversation, with a stronger overall athletics operation and a better in-person experience inside the Dome, while also leaning into the universitys academic strengths as part of the winning formula. The broad vision is on the page, and the next question is how quickly he can turn it into something visible on the field and in the stands. [Read more 🡒]
Syracuse Recruiting Buzz Builds Around Elite Wing With Familiar Ties
Will Brunsons recruiting profile keeps gaining steam, and Syracuse remains in the mix as one of the programs tracking the 2028 wing closely. The four-star small forward has already built a strong rsum at Rutgers Preparatory School, and he is now headed to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida for the 2026-27 high school season, a move that should only raise his national visibility as he continues to draw high-major attention.
For Syracuse, the connection is worth watching because the Orange have already re-offered Brunson after first getting involved in June 2025. He is active with Renaissance Hoops on the AAU circuit, and with offers piling up from a long list of major programs, the next phase of his rise figures to be closely monitored in college basketball circles. [Read more 🡒]
Why Tunmise Adeleye Could Matter Fast For Syracuse Up Front
Tunmise Adeleye arrives in Syracuse with a rsum that suggests he can help right away up front, and the Orange are banking on that kind of immediate impact as they reshape the defense under new coordinator Vince Kehres. The redshirt senior defensive lineman joined the program in January after a winding college path that included stops at Texas A&M, Michigan State, Texas State and UNLV, and he brings the kind of experience Syracuse has been looking to add to its front.
Adeleyes latest season gave a clear glimpse of why he was appealing, as he piled up 48 tackles, six sacks and three pass deflections in 13 games for UNLV. He also finished that year on a strong note with starts in the final six games, and now the question for Syracuse is how quickly that production and versatility translates into a starting role and a larger workload in the heart of the defense. [Read more 🡒]
