Wake Forest hired Steve Weinman as General Manager for Basketball and Senior Associate Athletics Director for Analytics, merging data infrastructure with roster control under one executive. The appointment makes Weinman the point person for transfer portal decisions, NIL coordination, and recruiting analytics—functions previously scattered across coaches, compliance, and siloed analytics staff.
Weinman arrives from a market where GM titles are proliferating but authority varies wildly. At Wake, he reports directly to Athletics Director John Currie and will coordinate between head coach Steve Forbes and the athletic department's collective partnerships. The dual-title structure mirrors recent hires at Clemson and Virginia Tech, where programs formalized front-office layers to manage name-image-likeness deals and transfer evaluations that now resemble free agency. Wake's move is notable for combining the GM function with senior oversight of analytics infrastructure, giving Weinman budget control and hiring authority for both basketball operations staff and the broader analytics unit that services 18 varsity programs.
The timing reflects urgency. Wake Forest men's basketball finished 13-19 last season, missing the NCAA tournament for the third consecutive year despite Forbes' $3.1 million annual salary placing him in the ACC's top half. The program's transfer portal activity has been reactive—Wake signed seven portal players in 2024 but struggled to retain departing talent, losing four rotation players including starting guard Bobi Klintman to the draft and overseas contracts. Weinman's portfolio suggests Wake is diagnosing this as a process problem, not just a talent problem. His remit includes standardizing player evaluation models, structuring NIL packages competitively within the ACC's mid-tier ($2-4 million annual collective budget range), and formalizing the interface between Forbes' staff and external collectives.
The broader implication: Power 4 athletic departments are acknowledging that coaches can no longer manage recruiting, retention, compliance, and analytics simultaneously at the required tempo. Wake's structure separates Forbes from administrative load, theoretically freeing him to coach while Weinman handles the transactional layer. Whether this improves outcomes depends on whether Weinman has final say on roster construction or merely coordinates inputs. The job description does not specify approval authority, which matters when a coach making $3.1 million wants a player the GM's models flag as overpriced.
Wake's analytics unit has been functional but not competitive with peer schools. Virginia's sports analytics infrastructure, by comparison, employs 12 full-time analysts across revenue and Olympic sports, with dedicated basketball resources that include real-time shot-tracking and opponent preparation models. Wake has operated with three analysts covering all sports. Weinman's expanded title signals investment, but the budget attached to his hiring authority will determine execution speed.
Watch whether Weinman hires a dedicated basketball analyst in the next 60 days, which would confirm expanded departmental budget. Watch also whether Wake's December transfer portal activity shows faster decision cycles and tighter financial discipline than prior windows. Forbes is entering a contract year in 2025-26; if Wake underperforms again, Weinman's role could shift from supporting the current coach to sourcing the next one, making this hire a structural hedge.
The Wake Forest job is now a test case for whether analytics directors can operate front offices, or whether programs will ultimately hire former agents and executives with transactional muscle memory. Weinman has the title. The portal opens in 41 days.
The takeaway
Wake Forest formalizes GM role with analytics executive controlling basketball operations as ACC programs build transactional layers between coaches and collectives.
wake forestfront officeanalyticsacc basketballsteve weinmangm structure
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