Wake Forest named Steve Weinman general manager for basketball and senior associate athletics director for analytics, a newly created position combining operational control of the roster with oversight of the school's data infrastructure. The hire reflects the Atlantic Coast Conference's accelerating arms race in basketball operations, where smaller-market programs now compete with power brands for transfer portal talent by centralizing decision-making authority.
Weinman arrives from a consulting background in sports analytics and will report directly to Athletics Director John Currie. The role bundles responsibilities previously split across three departments: transfer portal evaluation, NIL compliance coordination, and institutional research. Wake Forest declined to disclose compensation, but comparable dual-function positions at Power Five schools range from $250,000 to $400,000 annually, with performance incentives tied to roster retention and recruiting class rankings. The school's basketball budget sits near $8 million, roughly half that of Duke and North Carolina programs 30 miles away.
The structural choice matters because it signals how mid-tier ACC programs plan to survive conference realignment and revenue compression. Wake Forest finished 16-17 last season under head coach Steve Forbes, missing the NCAA tournament for the third consecutive year. Transfer portal activity spiked across college basketball in spring 2024, with over 1,800 players entering the portal—a 22% increase from the prior cycle. Programs without dedicated general managers often lose recruits to competitors who can offer faster NIL deal structures and clearer playing-time projections. Weinman's analytics mandate suggests Wake Forest will use predictive modeling to identify undervalued transfers and high-school prospects, a tactic Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech deployed to improve their 2023 recruiting classes by an average of 18 spots in national rankings.
The hire also reflects the professionalization of college athletics administration. A decade ago, analytics roles were typically part-time appointments handled by graduate assistants. Today, Power Five schools employ full-time data teams averaging four to six analysts. Weinman's dual title gives him authority to integrate roster decisions with institutional data on academic performance, injury risk, and donor engagement—variables that matter for NCAA compliance and Alumni Association fundraising but rarely inform coaching decisions in real time. The structure mirrors NBA front offices, where general managers hold final say over roster composition while head coaches focus on game preparation. Wake Forest's move suggests Forbes will cede some control over recruiting prioritization, a shift that has historically caused friction between coaches and administrators at schools like Texas and Auburn.
The timing aligns with Wake Forest's broader athletics overhaul. The school recently completed a $45 million renovation of its basketball practice facility and hired three new assistant coaches in the past 18 months. Weinman's appointment completes the operational layer between Currie's strategic oversight and Forbes's on-court execution. His first tasks will include evaluating Wake Forest's current roster for transfer portal departures, building predictive models for the 2025 recruiting class, and establishing NIL deal templates that satisfy NCAA compliance while remaining competitive with peer schools. The ACC's upcoming media rights negotiation—expected to conclude by fall 2025—will determine whether Wake Forest can expand its basketball budget to match the $12 million to $15 million range of programs like Miami and Virginia.
Watch for Weinman's first public roster move during the spring transfer window, which opens in mid-April. Wake Forest has three scholarships available for the 2025-26 season. Coordinator hires in the analytics department are expected by June, with job postings already circulating for two analyst positions focused on player evaluation and opponent scouting. Forbes's contract runs through 2027, and his buyout drops from $4 million to $2.5 million after next season—a detail that matters if Wake Forest misses the tournament again and donors begin asking whether the new front-office structure is enough.
The hire positions Wake Forest as a testing ground for whether college programs can adopt professional sports governance models without alienating coaches who built their careers on recruiting relationships and gut instincts. Weinman's success will be measured not in win totals but in roster stability, recruiting efficiency, and whether Wake Forest can close the talent gap with ACC powers while spending half their budget.
The takeaway
Wake Forest merges basketball operations and analytics under one executive, a structure mid-tier programs are using to compete in the transfer portal without matching power-conference budgets.
wake forestcollege basketballanalyticsaccroster managementtransfer portal
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