Q&A: As costs rise, AD Jennifer Cohen says USC is well-positioned amid college sports chaos
USC AD Jennifer Cohen greets Lincoln Riley after a win over NEB last fall. (Bonnie Ryan / AP)
Ryan Kartje (LA Times) — Jennifer Cohen has heard her peers this spring lament the precarious state of college football, with the College Football Playoff format in flux, the College Sports Commission under fire and the current model of college athletics hanging by a proverbial thread. As athletic director at USC, Cohen understands the reasons for their doom and gloom.
There’s little clarity about where things stand in college athletics right now, let alone where they’re going. Plus, it has never cost more to run an athletic department — or a football program, with the price tag of rosters exceeding $40 million this season — in part because of name, image and likeness rights.
“There’s no doubt that this last year’s been frustrating, and that’s because we tried to fly a plane and build a plane at the same time,” Cohen told The Times last week. “So it’s certainly not going swimmingly, right?”
Before discussing all that’s wrong with the current college sports landscape, Cohen wants to remind everyone that it hasn’t all been bad.
“It’s important to talk about what are the positives that came from what’s happened,” Cohen said.” And from my perspective, student athletes have benefited now more than ever, you know?”
At USC, Cohen has managed to steer the athletic department through the chaos. As costs have risen exponentially with the advent of revenue sharing, Cohen says department revenue at USC is up almost 60% over a three-year span, sponsorship values have doubled and USC donors have poured money into the Trojan Athletic Fund, which is up 707% since she started.
Jennifer Cohen and former USC president Carol Folt, flash the “V for Victory” hand sign in 2023 introducing Cohen as USC’s new AD. (Ringo Chiu / For The Times)
And later this summer, USC will open a $200-million football facility — a rarity in an age when such spending has more often taken a backseat.
None of that is to say USC is immune to the coming financial crunch in college sports.
“We also have to manage expenses, and we’re trying to do that and still support what we think is part of our DNA, which is [keeping all] 23 programs,” Cohen said. “As you look at the financial benefits that football brings to this place, the more you’re gonna take those revenues from football and put it back into football and to football student athletes versus other programs, you’re gonna feel the pinch. And so we’ve tried to mitigate that with new strategies on revenue generation.”
But what about when football rosters costs balloon to $50 million … or $60 million? What about $100 million?
“Hopefully not,” Cohen said. “We’ve gotta match roster spends with revenues and, and, and, and how we run a business.”
“I don’t think there’s one simple answer to this, and I do think that we are at a point where we’ve got to figure out as an industry, how do we do this in a smart way and not just let our competitiveness get the best of us? But that’s hard when football winning is the only way that you pay your bills.”
The Times sat down with Cohen last week to discuss the state of affairs in college football and USC’s athletic department. The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
With college football in such an uncertain place, do you feel like there needs to be some form of outside intervention? Or some major governance change that would help solve these problems?
“I think at some point in time we’re gonna have to find something. I mean, obviously we’re a year in. So I think first we all need to look in the mirror — myself included, as a leader — and say, ‘What did we do in this new system that worked? And what have we done in this new system that doesn’t work? And the question becomes, ‘Can you get everybody across the Power Four [conferences] to do that exercise and be honest enough to find some sort of solutions together? Or do you need to start looking at other solutions? I, for one, fully believe in federal support. I understand why it’s needed. I’m somebody that spent a lot of time on that earlier in my career, and, you know, the patchwork situation of laws is not fair from a competitive standpoint. It’s also very confusing to student athletes and to their families and to our coaches. But I am absolutely not holding my breath for that.
Eric Musselman and Jennifer Cohen introduce him as the Trojans’ basketball coach in 2024. (Myung J. Chun / LAT)
“The most important place where I’m spending my energy is figuring out how we are going to win in whatever environment that we’re dealt. Because I don’t have as much control in my current role to solve for all of those national issues. I am 24/7 thinking about how USC is going to compete in whatever environment we’re in. And I feel really confident that we will. But as somebody that loves college sports, I also think that we are gonna have to find a different alternative than how we’re operating right now to have a sustainable and durable model.”
USC seems to be in a really strong place with NIL, stronger certainly than when you were hired. How would you say that USC has gotten to that point?
“ When we got here, my mantra was if you’re not ahead, you’re gonna get behind. And so there were a lot of areas that we focused on to just try to improve and get ahead, and NIL was one of them. There’s a natural ability here to be really competitive in NIL — especially in the third-party space with brands. You know, we were just looking at some data the other day just in this new CSC-NIL Go model. Our brand deals are valued 2 1/2 times more than the national average, and I think that really speaks to both USC, the city of L.A., and obviously the quality of the student athletes that we have. And I think it’s just been a strategy of embracing the new era, recognizing that it’s really cool to be able to have student athletes benefit in that new era, and it’s important, and that you have to be competitive in that space.
“And so I think it was just a matter of having intentionality in a plan and getting all of our stakeholders aligned around that plan, and it was an urgent matter to keep trying to get ahead in that space. Because if we weren’t, other people were. That’s how we’ve been tackling it, and so we’re really proud of how robust the program is now. But we’re gonna have to keep getting better at it. We’re gonna have to keep evolving.”
The Big Ten has come out in favor of expanding the College Football Playoff to 24 teams. What are your thoughts on that?
“We’re unified as a league around 24, there’s no doubt about that. And obviously that’s gaining traction in some of the other conferences as well. And so where we’re unified, USC’s gonna support that. I think that there’s merits in the 24 model. I also think there’s plenty of fair questions around that. It has to make sense for everybody. So that’s kind of where we stand on it.
Jennifer Cohen wearing headset as she’s interviewed before a football game in 2023. (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
“I think personally speaking, I would have absolutely no problem staying at 12. I think we’ve experienced a lot of change in college sports and in college football. I think we need to understand how that change is impacting not just us, but our fans and others. And so if we end up at 12, I’m confident that we’re gonna find our way in that 12 every single year. And again, uh, that’s where my focus is. I mean, I am nonstop thinking about how USC athletics can compete in whatever model that we’re in, and I feel really good about the plans that we are developing and will continue to develop because we’re gonna have to keep changing too, to make sure that we’re competitive.
Being that it’s now Year 5, is it fair to say that the expectation is that Lincoln [Riley] needs to take USC to the Playoff this year?
“The expectation has always been the same. That’s the thing, that’s the reason why I came here, is that the standard is high. We do expect to make the playoff. We do expect to have a championship run. We do expect to be competing for championships every single year. I think that’s what’s awesome about USC, is that that’s what we all expect of it. And I know that I’m not the only one that expects that. I know our fans expect that. I know that he expects that. And so I really like this team. I really like the kids that we brought in. I love the returners. I love the leadership of this team.
“We’ve got some really outstanding older young men in this program that get it, that have been through a lot and really care about this place and this program. The young guys are awesome. They’re really challenging the older guys. So I feel really good about the talent level of this team, and I feel really good about what Lincoln’s done. I think with this staff, I think we have a highly competitive staff. I think we have a really experienced staff. And then you can’t dismiss what Chad’s accomplished. You know? I think that that’s been the benefit of bringing in not just Chad, but an entire front office staff, taking the pressure off of Lincoln, taking the pressure off of the other coaches so that they can be at their best. I mean, he’s been really energized about that and really focused on taking the strengths that he has. So yeah, the expectation, I mean, we haven’t been shy about that. We expect to win, and I, I feel confident that we’re going to.”
latimes.com
___________
TrojanDailyBlog members — We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.
84 days till kick off.
This team is peaking at the right time. I always thought(maybe I was wrong) that they had great pitching but lacked some solid hitting. But now they are hitting like crazy. Hopefully they can keep this momentum going.
I didn’t see this coming. Stank has done such a wonderful job with this very good, but not great roster.I sure hope we are funding NIL for baseball, because last year we lost a lot of key pieces in the portal.Even sweeter that ucla has to watch USC play on
Trojans win the College Station Regional After losing four of five games and beginning the College Station Regional with a demoralizing 5-4 loss to TEXAS ST, USC has completely turned around its post-season prospects. USC is now headed to a Super Regional contest vs UNC in Chapel Hill, which is a best-of-three series. The eight Super Regional winners will make up the College World Series in Omaha, Neb (Friday, June 12). USC’s last four games: 19-6 over LAMAR 15-4 over TEXAS ST 14-4 over A&M 7-1 over A&M That’s 55 – 15 since the College Station Regional-opening loss to TEXAS… Read more »
Trojans lead Aggies 5-1 in the top of the 7th.
Athlon Sports’ Steven Lassan ranks the Big Ten’s College Football Coaches for 2026 1. Curt Cignetti, Indiana 2. Ryan Day, Ohio State 3. Dan Lanning, Oregon 4. Kyle Whittingham, Michigan 5. Kirk Ferentz, Iowa 6. Matt Campbell, Penn State 7. Lincoln Riley, USC The ‘26 season is a crucial one for Riley. USC has seemingly made the right on- and off-field investments in recent years, but the Trojans have yet to make the playoffs under Riley. After an 11-3 debut with the program in ‘22, USC slipped to 8-5 the following year and finished 7-6 in its first trip through… Read more »
ESPN2 tonight
USC is leading A&M 11-2 in the bottom of the 7th.
The school named after my favorite Saint just sent the Bruins home. I am so happy. SC probably loses tonight, but it’s all house money from here
OMG. ð #1 national seed UCLA can’t get out of their own Regional — and finally loses a game it should have won. In extra innings, #4 regional seed St. Mary’s, aka the “Gritty Gaels”, comes back to win 6-5 in the bottom of the 10th. Truly one of the most stunning postseason collapses in college baseball history. Bye, bye Bruins. This one’s gonna hurt for awhile. UCLA becomes the first No. 1 national seed in the 64-team era (since 1999) to be eliminated before even reaching the Regional Final. History has actually repeated itself for the Bruins — top-ranked… Read more »
St. Mary’s gets pounded by Cal Poly 14-1 but beats the #1 in the country 3-2 and 6-5. The Gaels sure had the Ruins number this weekend. Baseball is crazy.
This being Riley’s 5th yr and if he still can’t get the team into the playoff will definitely be on Jen’s mind. I don’t care what she says publically. Each year USC falls short, the grumbling gets louder how much longer are we going to deal with Riley’s shortcomings? Everyone has done their job but Riley. Bowden did his job, Jen has done her job. So far the coaches haven’t especially Riley. It’s his program and has the results evened up to his salary?
Agree, it must be frustrating for Jen that she can’t show her prowess due to an incompetent former AD hiring a coach-in-training at $100M without any mechanism in LR’s contract to terminate with cause. I’d argue that Jen and Bowden are in the top 5 of administrative positions in all of college football. They’ve created a human shield for LR, providing players, resources, competent coaches and the history of USC football. Every facet has grown, upped their game, looked in the mirror. Has LR ? Does he read the criticisms? Is he even aware of almost a dozen of his… Read more »
USC has taken a 4-0 lead over TEXAS ST behind a bases loaded homer by Kevin Takeuchi in the top of the 1st. No outs.
Update: USC leads 6-0 in the 3rd after another homer, this one by Isaac Cadena.
Our season probably ends tonight. But I am a big believer in Coach Stank. Just sorry the bruins escaped yesterday. Somehow they will find their way to the super regional next week
USC leads TEXAS ST 8-4 in the top of the 5th. Hopefully, we get to tonight’s game vs A&M.
It’s been a fun year for USC baseball. 32-1 at home is extraordinary.
The Bruins have 78 straight wins when leading after eight innings, and they lead St. Mary’s 5-4 in the ninth.