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LOS ANGELES — Carl Erskine, who pitched two no-hitters as a mainstay on the Brooklyn Dodgers and was a 20-game winner in 1953 when he struck out a then-record 14 in the World Series, died Tuesday. He was 97.

Erksine died at Community Hospital Anderson in Anderson, Indiana, according to Michele Hockwalt, the hospital’s marketing and communication manager.

Among the last survivors from the celebrated Brooklyn teams of the 1950s, Erskine spent his entire major league career with the Dodgers from 1948-59, helping them win five National League pennants.

The right-hander had a career record of 122-78 and an ERA of 4.00, with 981 strikeouts.

Erskine had his best season in 1953, when he went 20-6 to lead the National League. He won Game 3 of the World Series, beating the Yankees 3-2 at Ebbets Field. He struck out 14, retiring the side in the ninth, for a World Series record that stood until Dodgers ace Sandy Koufax got 15 in 1963. The Dodgers went on to lose the 1953 series in six games as the Yankees won their fifth consecutive championship.

Erskine’s death leaves Koufax as the lone surviving Dodgers player from that World Series team.

Erskine was an All-Star in 1954, when he won 18 games.

He appeared in five World Series, with the Dodgers finally beating the Yankees in 1955 for their only championship in Brooklyn. He gave up a home run to Gil McDougald in the first inning of Game 4 and left after 3⅔ innings. The Dodgers went on to win 8-5.

Carl Daniel Erskine was born Dec. 13, 1926, in Anderson, Indiana. He began playing baseball at age 9 in a local parks program.

After graduating high school in 1945, he was drafted into the Navy with World War II underway. A year later, Erskine asked the Navy recreation officer where he was stationed if he could play baseball. He was turned away, but a few weeks later, he was scouted by the Dodgers and discharged from military service.

He spent the next 1½ years in the minors before making his major league debut on July 25, 1948. Erskine began as a reliever, going 21-10 during his first two seasons.

In 1951, he transitioned to the starting rotation and joined teammates Roy Campanella, Carl Furillo, Gil Hodges, Jackie Robinson and Duke Snider as one of the revered “Boys of Summer.”

In 1952, Erskine had a career-best 2.70 ERA and won 14 games. The following year, he led the NL with a .769 winning percentage, along with 187 strikeouts and 16 complete games, all career highs.

When teammate Don Newcombe was pitching in the ninth inning of Game 3 of the 1951 NL pennant with the New York Giants, Erskine and Ralph Branca were warming up in the bullpen.

On the recommendation of pitching coach Clyde Sukeforth, Newcombe was relieved by Branca, who then gave up the game-winning home run to Bobby Thomson in the famed “Shot Heard ‘Round the World.”

Whenever Erskine was asked what his best pitch was, he replied, “The curveball I bounced in the Polo Grounds bullpen in 1951.”

Nicknamed “Oisk” by fans with their Brooklyn accents, Erskine pitched no-hitters against the Chicago Cubs in 1952 and the New York Giants in 1956.

Bobby Morgan preserved Erskine’s no-hitter against the Cubs with two brilliant fielding plays at third base.

“I made two super plays on swinging bunts where they just dribbled down the line and I fielded them one-handed and threw to Gil Hodges at first,” Morgan told The Oklahoman newspaper in April 2020.

Morgan, who died last year, said Erskine still thanked him years later whenever they spoke.

The Dodgers left Brooklyn for Los Angeles in 1957. Erskine didn’t enjoy being away from his family and he lasted just 1½ more years with them. He pitched his final game in June 1959 and retired at 32.

Erskine returned to his hometown about 45 miles northeast of Indianapolis and opened an insurance business. He coached baseball at Anderson College for 12 years, and his 1965 team went 20-5 and won the NAIA World Series.

He also became active in the community and served as president and director at Star Financial Bank from 1982-93.

A 6-foot bronze statue of Erskine was erected in front of the Carl D. Erskine Rehabilitation and Sports Medicine Center to honor his accomplishments in baseball and as an Anderson resident. An elementary school built on land he donated is named for him. He was inducted into the Indiana National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979.

In 2002, Erskine Street in Brooklyn was named for him.

His youngest son, Jimmy, was born with Down syndrome, which led Erskine to champion the cause of people with developmental disabilities. He wrote a book called “The Parallel,” about the similarities in the journeys of Jimmy and Erskine’s teammate Robinson in breaking down social perceptions. He was long involved with Special Olympics in Indiana and the Carl and Betty Erskine Society raises money for the organization.

Jimmy Erskine died last November at age 63, having outlived his prognosis by decades.

“Carl Erskine was an exemplary Dodger,” Stan Kasten, president & CEO of the Dodgers, said in a statement. “He was as much a hero off the field as he was on the field — which given the brilliance of his pitching is saying quite a lot. His support of the Special Olympics and related causes, inspired by his son Jimmy — who led a life beyond all expectations when he was born with Down syndrome, cemented his legacy. We celebrate the life of ‘Oisk’ as we extend our sympathies to his wife, Betty, and their family.”

Erskine also authored the books “Tales from the Dodger Dugout” and “What I Learned From Jackie Robinson.”

He is survived by wife Betty and sons Danny and Gary and daughter Susan.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Frost’s new deal at UCF totals 5 years, $22.1M

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Frost's new deal at UCF totals 5 years, .1M

Scott Frost received a five-year, $22.1 million contract upon his return to UCF as head coach and will have it automatically extended a year if the Knights appear in a bowl this season.

An executive summary of Frost’s contract was obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday through an open records request.

UCF rehired Frost in December after Gus Malzahn left after four seasons to become offensive coordinator at Florida State. Frost had his first head coaching job at UCF in 2016, and the Knights went 6-7. A year later, UCF went 13-0 with a conference championship, a bowl victory over Auburn and final ranking of No. 6.

Frost took over at Nebraska in 2018 and went 16-31 at his alma mater. He was fired three games into the 2022 season. He was out of coaching in 2023 and on the Los Angeles Rams’ staff in 2024.

Frost’s starting salary will be $3.9 million, just under the $4 million he earned in his last year at Nebraska, and will receive annual increases topping out at $5 million in 2029-30.

He can earn bonuses of $75,000 for reaching a conference championship game, $50,000 for winning a conference title, $100,000 for appearing in a College Football Playoff game and an additional $100,000 for winning one, with a first-round bye deemed a win.

He also will receive bonuses for his team ranking in the top 20 nationally in any of eight designated statistical categories.

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When it comes to GMs, college football is ‘catching up like Usain Bolt on the fourth leg of a relay’

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When it comes to GMs, college football is 'catching up like Usain Bolt on the fourth leg of a relay'

INDIANAPOLIS — College football’s biggest game changers aren’t wearing headsets anymore — and that transformation was in full force at the NFL scouting combine. As NFL general managers analyzed 40-yard dashes and on-field drills inside Lucas Oil Stadium in February, a different kind of front office summit quietly unfolded down the street.

More than 300 attendees — including 15 general managers, along with player personnel directors and recruiting staffers from 34 college football programs — crowded into a corner room on the second floor of the Indianapolis Convention Center.

There, they unpacked the forces driving college football’s newest arms race: the rise of the general manager and expanding front offices.

“It’s the fastest growing industry in college football,” Texas Tech GM James Blanchard told ESPN. “We’re hitting the golden age of the personnel world, as far as college football goes.”

Blanchard spearheaded the first of the two panels at the “Inside the League” combine symposium, which covered everything from soaring GM salaries and the rapid expansion of support staffs to negotiating with agents and the budding trend of NFL scouts moving to the college ranks.

Blanchard, who will make $1.58 million over the next three years, is part of a growing community of college GMs that now includes former Indianapolis Colts star quarterback Andrew Luck (Stanford), two-time NFL Coach of the Year Ron Rivera (Cal) and ex-Cleveland Browns GM Mike Lombardi — Bill Belichick’s first hire after he stunningly accepted the North Carolina head coaching job in December.

Unlike in the NFL, coaches still run the vast majority of college programs. But that could be changing. At Stanford, the head coach reports to Luck. Though the roles differ, Blanchard believes many of the recent GM hires could outlast their head coaches, mirroring the NFL. In the coming years, he expects college GMs to match coordinator salaries — and face similar pressure.

“That’s the way it’s trending,” Blanchard, a former pro scout, said. “The NFL has been doing business at a high level for a long time. … But now, college is catching up — and it’s catching up like Usain Bolt on the fourth leg of a relay.”

Going forward, college front offices will shoulder more responsibility than ever before. They’re overseeing 105-man rosters, scouring the transfer portal, negotiating with agents and persuading recruits to join their programs.

Soon, they’ll have to help manage a salary cap, too.

Assuming the House v. NCAA settlement goes into effect this summer, schools will have roughly $20.5 million (with increases annually) to spend on their athletes, shifting college sports to a revenue sharing model. Football is sure to receive the largest share at most programs, ushering in an NFL-style approach to roster building.

Once merely a behind-the-scenes support role, college GMs are quickly becoming the difference between winning and losing — as much as any coordinator or even head coach.

“They’re doing more than just putting together a team — they’re wearing a lot of different caps … like a head coach because they’re in charge of the roster, the [salary] cap, incoming freshmen and portal players,” said CJ Cavazos, a former Nebraska director of football relations who is now a consultant and agent and co-moderated the combine symposium alongside Inside the League founder Neil Stratton. “Half of college football general managers will be making close to a million dollars. That’s where the market is taking them.”

And that has the NFL’s attention.


AFTER FAILING TO swipe Blanchard away from Texas Tech, Notre Dame turned to the pros to fill its GM vacancy. Chad Bowden, the son of former Cincinnati Reds GM Jim Bowden, had left the Fighting Irish for USC. So coach Marcus Freeman hired Detroit Lions director of scouting advancement Mike Martin in February.

This offseason alone, several major programs hired GMs with deep NFL roots, including Nebraska’s Pat Stewart (New England Patriots), Florida’s Nick Polk (Atlanta Falcons) and Oklahoma’s Jim Nagy (Senior Bowl).

The flurry of GM hires with NFL backgrounds came with much fanfare and big paychecks, with Lombardi leading the way at an unprecedented $1.5 million per year. But it has also been met with skepticism from the GMs and player personnel directors who came up through the college ranks. To them, experience in the NFL doesn’t translate to the recruiting trail.

“[Stewart] is going to walk into Nebraska and be like, ‘Wait, I’ve got to do what now? I have to talk to this kid because his teammate is a 2028 [recruit] that we want?’ All of those things are just learned, you know,” said a fellow Big Ten GM, who questioned whether NFL executives fully understand the relationship-driven nature of recruiting. “I don’t know that Lombardi is giving Belichick 15 phone calls to make at night so that at the end of the deal, ‘Johnny Smith’ doesn’t say, ‘Well, I talked to [NC State coach] Dave Doeren once a week and I haven’t heard from Bill Belichick.'”

Several college GMs noted that NFL executives bring useful expertise, especially in scouting and evaluating players. But they also suggested the learning curve is steep, notably in forging relationships with recruits and those around them.

“You can come down and scout all you want,” a Big 12 director of player personnel said. “But the kid still has to select your school. Recruiting is involved. Regional ties are involved. … I think they’re biting off more than they can chew. It’s totally, completely different.”

But an eight-year NFL executive who recently interviewed for a college GM job called that thinking anachronistic, now that the looming House settlement is set to reshape the financial structure of college football with the introduction of a de facto salary cap.

“I’d say that just focusing on recruiting does not pay the respect to the gravity of what revenue sharing and the House case are going to have,” the executive said. “It’s going to change all of college football. Investing in something that worked previously, I’m just skeptical that’s going to matter as much in this new environment.”

He pointed to the high-profile case of Nico Iamaleava, whose camp reportedly sought a more than $1 million raise from $2.4 million after quarterbacking the Volunteers to the playoff last season. Sources close to the quarterback deny they were seeking $4 million.

When Iamaleava skipped a spring practice without permission, Tennessee coach Josh Heupel announced the team was moving on without him. Iamaleava joined UCLA in late April, prompting UCLA quarterback Joey Aguilar to transfer to Tennessee in return.

“In the pre-House world, being a great recruiter was everything,” the executive said. “Now, you have to think like the NFL: long-term decision-making, targeted resource spending, strategic investment by position — all to stay close to optimal.”

Stewart, a longtime Patriots staffer, acknowledges that evaluating the potential of teenagers and building out a high school recruiting board is a new type of challenge, but nothing has surprised him as he enters this rapidly evolving world of college athletics.

“I don’t have a lot of experience in college football right now,” he said, “but I could’ve been in the business for 15 years and I’d probably be on the same plane that everybody else is, right? Because everything’s changing and everything’s adjusting.”

One SEC director of player personnel conceded that he understands why college athletic directors and coaches would want GMs with NFL backgrounds. But he would still advise them to hire GMs with experience in adapting to the constantly changing dynamics of college football.

“That’s the thing that pisses me off,” another Big 12 director of player personnel said. “A bunch of people talk about all these GMs [from the NFL] and I want to yell from the mountaintops: You know there’s a GM in college football at Ohio State who’s the best in the game, right? He has been for the last decade. I would take notes from Mark Pantoni and start there.”

Other college veterans pointed to Pantoni as the gold standard of the modern college GM.

Pantoni, who has been with the Buckeyes since 2011 and recently inked a new multiyear deal extension, has long embodied the old guard of college front office personnel — running Ohio State’s operation long before “GM” became a formal title.

Alongside coach Ryan Day, Pantoni helped assemble one of the most talented rosters in recent memory last offseason. The Buckeyes retained key players such as receiver Emeka Egbuka and pass rusher Jack Sawyer, keeping them from declaring early for the NFL draft. They landed quarterback Will Howard, running back Quinshon Judkins and safety Caleb Downs via the transfer portal. And they won a fierce battle for five-star freshman wideout Jeremiah Smith.

Those players propelled Ohio State to its first national championship in a decade. Then the Buckeyes had the most players taken in last month’s NFL draft with 14.

“There are a lot of lessons to be learned from the NFL and there’s a lot of great expertise in the NFL,” another Big Ten GM said. “But as the guy who’s been in college recruiting for a long time, I think there’s just as many and probably more lessons from the college side that are beneficial in what we’re going through right now. … I’m not forecasting that the NFL guys aren’t going to be successful. I just don’t think they have the advantage that I think people might think they have.”

Either way, the NFL-to-college pipeline isn’t likely to slow anytime soon. Multiple NFL executives said during the combine that many in their front offices have privately expressed an interest in moving to college.

“We went to the combine and our head coach was like, ‘I know you guys are going up there to get into the NFL,'” a Big Ten GM said. “I’m like, ‘Coach, all of these NFL guys are leaving to come here!’ And these NFL guys are going to keep coming down because the money is better.”

Blanchard doesn’t mind their arrival one bit.

“I love it, from a competitive aspect. … From a financial standpoint because it’s driving the market up,” he said. “I remember when I was in the NFL, guys used to make fun of the college guys who were calling themselves GMs. … And now, all these guys are calling — ‘Hey man, how can I get in college?'”

As college front offices expand, they’re not only evaluating players, but they’re also keeping coaches in college football.


ON HIS WAY to last year’s Senior Bowl, a prominent Power 4 assistant couldn’t get off the phone. After landing in Mobile, Alabama, he was back on his phone, even while grabbing his rental car.

“We’re getting burned out,” he admitted between calls, speaking for many of his colleagues.

While pro executives and scouts are being drawn to lucrative college front office jobs, college assistants in this transfer portal and name, image and likeness era see the NFL as a path to a better work-life balance, where they can focus on what they do best: coaching on the field and in meeting rooms.

“With how much college football is changing, you have to take some of the load off of the coaches,” said Blanchard, who operates one of the country’s most autonomous front offices under Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire. “He shouldn’t have to be on the phone negotiating a hundred contract deals. … He shouldn’t have to go out and evaluate every portal and high school kid. That’s what me and my staff are for.”

Other programs, such as Oklahoma, are following Texas Tech’s lead in emulating the NFL model, where front offices oversee the roster.

“It’s a totally different landscape. … The coach-driven model, that’s a thing of the past,” said Nagy, who interviewed for the New York Jets GM job before joining the Sooners. “The workload management for a coaching staff, it’s just impossible to do the job. … I’m here to help them find players, take some stuff off their plate.”

If college recruiting departments are going to resemble NFL front offices, that won’t just require greater investment in the GM. These leaders are rethinking how they build their scouting staffs, their processes for evaluating players and even how they utilize analytics to keep up.

“The schools making playoff runs, they’re not building a whole bunch of new buildings,” said Oklahoma State director of football business Kenyatta Wright, who helped lead the second panel at the combine symposium. “Identifying talent, that’s where the next big investment is.”

As these staffs learn to manage eight-figure roster budgets for 2025 and beyond, they also recognize this heightened level of spending across the sport will bring on a new level of accountability.

As an ACC GM put it, “It’s not always going to be based on what I saw on film or gut feel. ADs want to go to their donors and say, ‘We’re spending money efficiently, look at the return on investment we’ve had. Look at the better players we’ve got. We’ve been right more.'”

Maryland recently hired former Terps great Geroy Simon to be the GM of its entire athletic department. Simon said in his role he can make sure the salary cap is “being spent wisely” across all sports.

“Nobody knows exactly what the right [model] is,” Blanchard said. “Whatever the blueprint, schools across the country are racing to invest in their front offices.”

Cavazos said in the next five years, he could even see most college front offices having double-digit staffers working under a GM “just scouting and recruiting daily.”

In turn, he predicts next year’s combine symposium turnout will be even larger.

“Everybody’s learning right now from the unknown, and everybody’s trying to figure out what’s going to be best for their staff and their team,” he said. “But the schools that get in front of it are the ones that will be successful.”

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Big 12 gives commish Yormark 3-year extension

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Big 12 gives commish Yormark 3-year extension

The Big 12’s board of directors has voted to give commissioner Brett Yormark a three-year contract extension, the conference announced Tuesday.

Yormark’s extension will run through 2030. He had originally agreed in 2022 to a five-year deal through 2027.

The Big 12 presidents are rewarding Yormark’s work stabilizing and modernizing the Big 12 in the wake of the Oklahoma and Texas announcing their departures in 2021.

“We have made great progress over the last three years, and our best days are ahead,” Yormark said in a statement. “I am thrilled to continue to work alongside our member schools as we grow and strengthen the Big 12 into a Conference that is innovative and prepared for what the future may hold.”

Yormark took over for Bob Bowlsby in 2022, and he led two signature moves for the league — a new television deal and a four-school expansion. His early declaration of the Big 12 being “open for business” has served as a fitting mantra for a tenure that has been highlighted by his constant pursuit of dealmaking.

Yormark has done considerable work in upgrading the experience and feel of both the Big 12 football and basketball championships, helping elevate those events. The Big 12 also added a conference-wide football pro day under Yormark, the first of its kind in college sports.

The aggressive pursuit and consummation of a new television deal is Yormark’s biggest moment as commissioner. Early on in his tenure in the summer of 2022, he prioritized and achieved early negotiations with Fox and ESPN more than a year before the exclusive negotiating window. A few months later, the Big 12 agreed to a six-year, $2.28 billion deal.

By going to the table early, the Big 12 positioned itself ahead of the Pac-12, which proved an inflection point in the Pac-12’s spiral.

The Pac-12’s weakness and failure to land a television deal of significant heft led to the Big 12 luring Colorado, Arizona, Arizona State and Utah as members. Yormark led that charge in July and August of 2023.

Along with the addition of those four schools, he helped oversee the transition of four additional members that agreed to come aboard before his arrival — UCF, BYU, Cincinnati and Houston.

Yormark has also been aggressive in further expansion, although the league has been unreceptive to the additions of Connecticut in all sports and Gonzaga in basketball. (The talks with Gonzaga eventually faded, and that school joined the refurbished Pac-12. The discussions with UConn stalled in September.)

Yormark was relatively unknown in college sports when the league hired him in 2022. He came from the agency Roc Nation and prior to that worked as the president and CEO of Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment (BSE) Global, which manages and controls the Barclays Center and the Brooklyn Nets. He also worked for NASCAR.

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