CEDAR FALLS — Not one, but two members of the Bowlsby family have temporary jobs within the University of Northern Iowa sports landscape.
Bob Bowlsby and his son, Kyle, landed the gigs around the same time and both may have a say in the ongoing athletic director search.
Following a competitive bidding process, the public university contracted with Bowlsby Sports Advisors on Dec. 21 to assist during the hiring process for the high-profile position, The Courier has learned. Kyle Bowlsby, founder and president of the consulting firm, is the son of Bob Bowlsby, who officially became interim athletic director on Jan. 3.
The senior Bowlsby, known most recently for his time as Big 12 Conference commissioner, is also listed online as one of Bowlsby Sports Advisors’ two vice presidents. However, Pete Moris, university relations director, said after speaking with Bob Bowlsby that he is not a paid employee and has no financial stake in the company.
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“University legal counsel confirmed that he is in compliance with Iowa Code 68B.2A,” said Moris during a telephone interview about the potential for a conflict of interest. Tim McKenna was the institution’s top attorney at the time. He’s since retired.
Moris later noted that Bob Bowlsby disclosed there was no financial gain through his role with Bowlsby Sports Advisors in writing to the university’s procurement office in December.
Bob Bowlsby is a sports icon in the Cedar Valley and Iowa. A Waterloo native, he was UNI’s AD from 1984 to 1991, Iowa University AD from 1991 to 2006, Stanford University AD from 2006 to 2012, and Big 12 Conference commissioner from 2012 until 2022, among many stops and opportunities throughout his illustrious career that have reportedly earned him at least seven figures in compensation.
Work at UNI
Kyle Bowlsby signed the $45,000 agreement on behalf of Bowlsby Sports Advisors to immediately provide services for UNI’s search for the replacement of former Athletic Director David Harris, according to the contract obtained through a public records request.
“That’s Kyle’s deal,” Moris said.
Bob Bowlsby’s appointment likely took effect after Bowlsby Sports Advisors’ work started; however, his hiring was announced in late November following acceptance of the official job offer from President Mark Nook.
The father is getting paid $6,250 per month, or what equates to $75,000 annually, for his job running department operations in the interim, according to UNI correspondence provided to The Courier and a record with appointments approved retroactively Jan. 10 by the Board of Regents.
Moris said Bob Bowlsby is not involved in the AD search committee, nor does its members report to him or his department.
“That does not preclude the president from asking for an opinion outside the committee,” said Moris, adding, “it’s likely he’ll ask Bob’s opinion.” Adam Amdor, assistant director of communications, pointed to his experience as the reason why.
Now 72, the senior Bowlsby is in UNI’s Athletics Hall of Fame with more than four decades of athletic leadership and sports management experience. At the same time he’s now serving in his temporary gig at UNI, Bob Bowlsby is “essentially” an unpaid “consultant” to Bowlsby Sports Advisors, Moris said.
“His only involvement is higher level, like strategic planning, and will lend input on things like NIL (name, image and likeness) or bigger picture trends in college athletics,” said Moris.
Bowlsby Sports Advisors of Dallas was selected from a pool of eight total search firms responding to the Division I university’s request for proposals.
The others were Buffkin/Baker, Collegiate Sports Associates, Heinze & Associates, Korn Ferry, Parker Executive Search, TurnkeyZRG and Witt/Kieffer, according to a document provided by Moris.
The firm’s “significantly” lower bid – $7,000 less than the second lowest, and 33% less than the average of the other seven – was ultimately why it was awarded the consulting work, said Moris.
Bob Bowlsby was not involved in the selection of Bowlsby Sports Advisors, said the university spokesperson. It’s believed to be the first time UNI has worked with the son’s firm.
Firms were allowed to submit proposals from Nov. 28 until Dec. 18, a UNI bidding database shows. The online record notes the Bowlsby firm as the winning proposal.
The university looks to be getting a better deal than in 2016 when the last AD search was conducted.
Provided in response to The Courier’s records request as an expense on the university’s books for the 2016 search was the $60,500 agreement with Collegiate Sports Associates, better known in the industry as CSA in Raleigh, North Carolina, for similar consulting services.
The current partnership with Bowlsby Sports Advisors was not stated in any announcement made or materials released by the university.
However, Kyle Bowlsby is listed as the only contact on job listings for the university’s ninth AD. He also addressed the work on his company’s website and personal social media account, without mentioning his father’s new role.
“We are officially in market for the next director of athletics at the University of Northern Iowa. A top tier FCS job with one of the best head coaching staffs in the country,” he wrote Feb. 15 on X, formerly Twitter. “Big-time facilities projects are in the works. A diehard fan base. There has never been more momentum on campus.”
Kyle Bowlsby did not respond to calls and messages seeking further comment for this story.
Conflict concerns
Morris denied the university had any concern when asked during an interview focused on the Bowlbys’ concurrent tenures at UNI.
“We have a search committee and all this is standard procedure. It’s similar to the process for a dean. … Given the nature of the role, it’s very standard procedure in athletics when dealing with a high profile coaching or athletic director, that you have assistance in the process,” said Moris.
UNI’s online statement on internal policy 4.03 for “Conflict of Interest in Employment (Nepotism)” notes in part that the university “permits the employment of qualified individuals who are related to employees as long as the relationships are disclosed and either the conflict can be mitigated or such employment does not, in the opinion of the university, create a real or potential conflict of interest.”
There’s been no past news reporting to suggest anything nefarious about Bob Bowlsby during his time at other jobs. Plus, the consulting firm is established with a few dozen clients right now.
Earl Smith, a longtime sports sociologist and expert, however, said “the red flags” popped up when presented with the fact that Bob Bowlby’s son was involved in the search firm while his father held the high-level position at the university.
“That, to me, is crazy,” said Smith, a University of Delaware and Wake Forest University professor. His initial reaction resembled that of attorneys with ties to government in northeast Iowa when first presented with the basic details by The Courier.
“Maybe it’s above board, but it just doesn’t look that way. That’s the problem they would have,” Smith added in a time when “nepotism exists throughout the sports world.”
When Smith learned about the additional details surrounding the situation – most provided by Moris to The Courier but never publicized – he amended his comments.
“I would change my original opinion or assumption, and I’m someone who wouldn’t have any problem saying it like it is,” Smith said. He described Bob Bowlsby’s latest stint as admirable, giving his time in retirement to UNI when he could be doing something more relaxing like golf.
He commended the firm’s hire for being stated online in a few places. But if Smith were in charge at the university, he would have done everything in his power to sidestep the situation and avoid any possible implications.
“I don’t care how low their bid was … there’s too many overlaps,” Smith said.
AD predecessors
Harris, the last UNI AD, left in January for an athletic director job at Tulane University in New Orleans – exactly like his predecessor Troy Dannen did.
The Tulane opportunity became available when Dannen left for the University of Washington. Last week, Washington announced that Dannen is now heading to the University of Nebraska after the short tenure there.
Jean Berger, UNI’s deputy athletic director in 2016, was the interim athletic director during that previous AD search.
According to state employment records, she saw her earnings go from $91,562 to $119,672 before she took another job as the first female executive director of the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union.
That IGHSAU job was previously held by Dannen, who was the executive director from 2002 until he became AD at UNI in 2008.
Harris had a salary of $232,101 as UNI’s AD in 2023, according to state records. He had worked as the senior associate athletic director at Iowa State University before taking the job at UNI in 2016.
The UNI AD job is posted at “$210,000 to commensurate.”
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Do you think that creativity is an innate gift? Think again. New research highlights how anyone can train their creative muscles by rethinking the anxiety, frustration and anger they encounter in daily life.
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Do you think that creativity is an innate gift? Think again. New research highlights how anyone can train their creative muscles by rethinking the anxiety, frustration and anger they encounter in daily life.
Many questions remain after a 6-year-old shot a Virginia teacher. Research shows watching gun violence on screen can desensitize kids to firearms' harm.
A study says students who work while enrolled in college are about 20% less likely to complete their degrees than similar peers who don’t work.
Short, frequent walks throughout the day are key to helping prevent the harmful effects of a sedentary lifestyle.
Many people look to diet trends or new exercise regimens to get a healthier start on the new year. But there is one strategy that’s been shown time and again to boost both mood and health: meditation.
NASA had a banner year in 2022. Its missions dealt with the farthest, closest, hottest and coldest conditions in the universe.
Childbearing goals have remained remarkably consistent over the decades. What has changed is when people start their families and how many kids they end up having.
Green jobs go beyond solar panel installation and wind turbine maintenance. They’re found in fields from design to economics and in many types of management.
As omnivores, humans can choose not to consume any animal products. But what happens when we feed a vegan diet to our carnivore companions?
It turns out that when it comes to health, married people have an edge, especially married men.
Are our animal companions showing off when they share more than toys with us? And what should we do about it?
Fitness and religion make a potent combination, one people have explored for centuries.
On Jan. 22, 2023, more than a billion people globally will welcome the Year of the Rabbit – or the Year of Cat, depending on which cultural traditions they follow – as the start of the Lunar New Year.
Detox diets and cleanses supposedly clear the body of allegedly toxic substances. But the evidence suggests otherwise.
Cold weather brings itchy, irritated, dry and scaly skin. Although most conditions aren’t dangerous, they can be painful and frustrating to deal with.
Edgar Allan Poe, who would have turned 214 years old Jan. 19, remains one of the world’s most recognizable literary figures. But is his appeal less about the power and complexity of his prose, and more about the view of him as a perennial underdog?
When it comes to sharing content of children on social media, what’s legal isn’t always what’s ethical. Some of the now-adult children of influencers are pushing back.
For the first time since 1961, deaths in China have outpaced births — and unlike that one-year decline, the downward trend is likely to continue.
A new neuropsychology study on California wildfire survivors found chronic cognitive problems in addition to anxiety and PTSD.
A vaccine for bees may evoke images of teeny hypodermic needles, but this product works in a sophisticated way that reflects the social structure of honeybee colonies.
A passport from the United Arab Emirates will get you into far more destinations than one from Afghanistan. Gaps like this have big implications for people’s ability to travel, reside and work.
While excess weight arises from a complex interplay of genes, environment, diet and activity, new research finds Americans hold parents responsible for excess weight in their kids.
While excess weight arises from a complex interplay of genes, environment, diet and activity, new research finds Americans hold parents responsible for excess weight in their kids.
A passport from the United Arab Emirates will get you into far more destinations than one from Afghanistan. Gaps like this have big implications for people’s ability to travel, reside and work.
A vaccine for bees may evoke images of teeny hypodermic needles, but this product works in a sophisticated way that reflects the social structure of honeybee colonies.
A new neuropsychology study on California wildfire survivors found chronic cognitive problems in addition to anxiety and PTSD.
For the first time since 1961, deaths in China have outpaced births — and unlike that one-year decline, the downward trend is likely to continue.
The rising cost of living doesn’t hit all Americans equally. Yet the benchmark figure for charting the rising cost of living excludes people in rural areas.
Researchers are trying to understand whether ultra-processed foods erode brain health in the aging process.
Researchers are trying to understand whether ultra-processed foods erode brain health in the aging process.
The rising cost of living doesn’t hit all Americans equally. Yet the benchmark figure for charting the rising cost of living excludes people in rural areas.
A Chinese high-altitude balloon violated U.S. airspace, a serious enough breach to nix a high-level diplomatic meeting in Beijing. The balloon itself, however, was not much of a threat.
Here’s how chemicals can cause cancer, and how scientists classify chemicals based on on how carcinogenic they are — sometimes with controversial results.
America’s complicated history with race can be told through the lives and times of Black Americans, a view that some state legislatures have moved to restrict, if not outright ban.
America’s complicated history with race can be told through the lives and times of Black Americans, a view that some state legislatures have moved to restrict, if not outright ban.
A Chinese high-altitude balloon violated U.S. airspace, a serious enough breach to nix a high-level diplomatic meeting in Beijing. The balloon itself, however, was not much of a threat.
Here’s how chemicals can cause cancer, and how scientists classify chemicals based on on how carcinogenic they are — sometimes with controversial results.
Annual flu vaccines are in a constant race against a rapidly mutating virus that may one day cause the next pandemic. A one-time vaccine protecting against all variants could give humanity a leg up.
Birds and dinosaurs lived together for millions of years, but only toothless birds survived the asteroid impact that upended life on Earth.
Students may need a listening ear and reassurance in the aftermath of having witnessed a school shooting.
Vinyl chloride, which is used to make PVC plastics, dilutes fairly quickly in outside air and water. One concern for lingering exposure from the derailment involves private wells.
Middle age means staying a step ahead on both the medical and financial fronts.
If Easter is associated with celebration and triumphal joy for Christians, Lent is more a season of soul-searching and spiritual discipline. Here are some articles exploring the history and significance of Ash Wednesday and Lent.
The mental health of teenagers has grown far worse over the last decade. But a new report shows that, compared with boys, teen girls are disproportionately experiencing sadness and hopelessness.
High-quality bus service is the fastest route to rapid, comprehensive public transit in the United States. This country was once a leader in bus transit, and with adequate funding, it could be again.
Smartphone cameras tend to be more advanced than their clunky, point-and-shoot predecessors. But the allure of cameras from the early 2000s reflects a broader search for meaning.
Aging is a major risk factor for many chronic diseases. Figuring out what influences longevity and how to identify rapid agers could lead to healthier and longer lives for more people.