DURHAM, N.C. — To replace the retiring Kevin White, Duke needed to look at the person who’s worked closest with the longtime athletics director.
Nina King, a rising star in the industry who’s worked for White at both Notre Dame and Duke since 2005, will be named Duke’s new vice president/athletics director, the school announced Wednesday.
The 42-year-old King would be the first woman and first person of color to head Duke’s athletic department. She’s been on Duke’s staff since 2008, most recently as senior deputy athletics director overseeing football and women’s basketball among other duties.
“I am thrilled that Nina will be our vice president and director of athletics,” Duke president Vince Price said in a statement. “In her time at Duke, Nina has demonstrated extraordinary leadership, earning the esteem of our coaches, student-athletes, athletics staff and colleagues in athletics departments across the country. Nina is recognized as a committed advocate for inclusive excellence in collegiate athletics, and she has represented Duke on committees of the NCAA, ACC and many other national organizations. I can imagine no better person to carry on Kevin White’s exceptional record at Duke.”
People are also reading…
In the North Carolina Triangle, N.C. State was the first ACC school to hire a woman as athletic director when Debbie Yow held that job from 2010 until her retirement in 2019. In 2017, Virginia’s Carla Williams became the first Black woman hired as an athletics director at a Power Five conference school and Vanderbilt hired Candice Storey Lee to lead its athletics department last year.
King becomes the sixth female athletics director among the Power Five conference schools. Three are in the ACC in King, Williams and Pittsburgh’s Heather Lyke.
“Thrilled for this incredible new opportunity!” King posted on Twitter Wednesday. “Love my Duke family and so excited to continue our tradition of excellence.”
Like Williams and Lee before her, King’s first job as an athletics director will come at the Power Five level.
“This is truly a magical moment within the life of Duke athletics,” White said in a statement. “Nina King is indeed the absolute perfect choice to lead this storied program. Nina, unequivocally, possesses all the intellectual and relationship skills, coupled with inordinate subject knowledge, which, in my humble view, represents a very serious leadership 'upgrade!' To be sure, I could not possibly be more excited for both Duke University and the amazing King family.”
Currently, the ACC’s longest-tenured AD, White, 70, announced his retirement last January, saying he would step aside in August. He’s been Duke’s athletic director since 2008 when he replaced Joe Alleva.
According to sources familiar with the search, King emerged the choice from a field that included, at one point or another, Villanova athletics director Mark Jackson, Rice athletics director Joe Karlgaard and Florida executive associate athletics director Lynda Tealer, among others.
Richard Wagoner, a former Duke Board of Trustee chair and General Motors CEO who led the search committee to replace White, said King embodied what the group wanted in the hire.
“We set out on a national search to find the best possible leader, someone with the experience, intellect and vision to meet the challenges of the future and a sharp understanding of our commitment to excellence in academics and competition,” Wagoner said in a statement. “The committee was enthusiastic about Nina’s candidacy, and I could not be more excited to see her at the helm of Duke athletics.”
A graduate of Notre Dame, Tulane
King is a Notre Dame graduate with an accounting degree who also received her law degree from Tulane. A team manager for Notre Dame’s women’s swimming and diving team as an undergrad, she was Notre Dame’s director of rules education from 2005-08 when White was athletic director there. After White became Duke’s athletic director on May 31, 2008, King also joined him at Duke that September.
In addition to managing Duke athletics together, she and White collaborated to teach a sports business course for graduate students at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business.
“Nina King is a terrific choice, and congratulations to Duke on an outstanding hire,” ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips said in a statement on Wednesday. “Nina is a person of tremendous integrity with quality experiences and insight that will serve Duke, its student-athletes, coaches, alumni and fans extremely well. We look forward to having her join the exceptional team of ACC Athletics Directors, and will continue to benefit from her servant leadership.”
As the primary administrator for Duke’s women’s basketball and football teams, King led the search and hiring of Kara Lawson as the women’s basketball coach last July.
“This is a historic hire for Duke University,” Lawson said in a statement. “Congratulations to Nina; she is a star! She leads with intelligence, competitiveness and compassion. I am excited to work together with her. The future is bright for our department because I know we have the right person to represent us in every way. One of the main reasons I chose to come to Duke was because of the diversity that exists at every level. This is a powerful statement by president Price and our Board of Trustees.”
In addition, King has led Duke’s senior staff/sports administrator group that oversees the school’s 27 athletic teams while also overseeing the department’s human resources plus the recreation and physical education program.
NCAA women’s basketball selection committee
Nationally, King joined the NCAA women’s basketball selection committee in 2018, becoming vice-chair for the 2019-20 school year and chairing the group that selects teams for the tournament last spring. The NCAA expanded the committee from 10 to 12 members in April, approving a one-year extension for King to chair the committee for a second consecutive year for 2021-22.
In 2015, King spearheaded the formation of Duke’s student-athletic civic engagement program, known as ACE.
“This hire is an important step for the continuity of the outstanding culture that exists within Duke athletics,” Duke men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski said in a statement. “Serving as one of Kevin White’s most trusted advisors for his entire time at Duke, Nina King has served our university well in whatever roles have been assigned to her. She has represented the Duke department of athletics with distinction both internally and externally, including many roles on the national stage. That national presence is important in our school’s leadership position in an ever-changing college sports environment. Personally, I have enjoyed working with Nina and look forward to working with her even more in the future.”
As a student, after completing her undergraduate degree but before finishing law school, King interned at the NCAA office with finance and information services and also twice at Nike with in legal and sports marketing departments.
In 2018, Sports Business Journal named King to its annual Forty under 40 class, honoring her for excellence and innovation before the age of 40.
While Duke conducted its search to replace White this spring, King was a candidate to become Northwestern’s athletics director. That school promoted Mike Polisky to that position on May 3 but Polisky resigned nine days later due to a campus backlash.
Northwestern has re-opened its hiring process but King has landed the job she wanted at Duke.
Current state of Duke athletics
King will take over a Duke athletics program dealing with pandemic-spawned losses university officials say will be between $15-25 million.
Despite obstacles the pandemic presented, the Blue Devils thrived on the playing courts and fields by winning an ACC-best six championships this school year. That included the softball program, in its fourth season of competition, winning the ACC tournament last weekend.
At the same time, Duke struggled in its most high-profile sports with football going 2-9 overall and 1-9 in ACC play last fall in coach David Cutcliffe’s 13th season with the Blue Devils. Krzyzewski’s basketball team posted a 13-11 record and missed the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1995.
Lawson’s first season as Duke’s women’s basketball coach ended after four games when, following positive COVID-19 tests in December, the players decided to opt out for the remainder of the season.
Once she takes over for White, King is almost certainly faces the prospect of eventually hiring replacements for both the 74-year-old Krzyzewski and Cutcliffe, who’ll turn 67 in September.
In the meantime, both Cutcliffe and Krzyzewski expressed their happiness with King’s promotion on Wednesday and said they are happy to work with her in her expanded role at Duke.
“I am thrilled for Nina and her family,” Cutcliffe said in a statement. “She has prepared for this opportunity her entire professional life, learning from the best of all time in Dr. White. Nina understands what it takes to build a great program on the coaching and playing side of athletics while possessing the unique ability to sit at the business, academic and legal tables comfortably. Without question, Nina will champion the core mission of Duke University while lifting the student-athletes to a new level of excellence. Duke Football is excited to move forward!”
The biggest NCAA basketball tournament upsets
(16) UMBC 74 vs (1) Virginia 54 -- March 16, 2018
The University of Maryland-Baltimore County was the first and only 16 seed to knock off a No. 1 seed in the first round of a NCAA Tournament. And it wasn’t even close: UMBC defeated Virginia by 20 points. UMBC lost in the second round of the tournament to Kansas State. K.J. Maura (11) and teammate Jourdan Grant (5) of the UMBC Retrievers celebrate their 74-54 victory over the Virginia Cavaliers during the first round of the 2018 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Spectrum Center on March 16, 2018 in Charlotte, N.C.
(6) North Carolina State 54 vs (1) Houston 52 -- April 4, 1983
Top-ranked Houston was stocked with future NBA Hall of Famers Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon, but that didn’t stop Jim Valvano’s North Carolina State team from accomplishing the near impossible. As time expired, N.C. State's center dunked the game-winner, and the Wolfpack completed the upset in the championship game. Benny Anders (32) of the University of Houston Cougars goes up for the slam dunk against the North Carolina State Wolfpack during the National Championship game in Albuquerque, N.M. on April 4, 1983.
(3) Texas Western 72 vs (1) Kentucky 65 -- March 19, 1966
The 1966 Texas Western team was the first team to start five black players in an NCAA basketball championship game. Texas Western was up against powerhouse Kentucky coached by legend Adolph Rupp who was seeking his fifth NCAA title. The Miners pulled off the upset and went down in history. Don Haskins, coach of Texas Western College (UTEP) in action with Willie Worsley (24) as his team defeated Kentucky 72-65 in the national championship game in the 1966 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championships held March 19, 1966 in Cole Fieldhouse on the campus of the University of Maryland, College Park, Md.
(8) Villanova 66 vs (1) Georgetown 64 -- April 1, 1985
It was a Big East rematch in the 1985 NCAA Championship game, and top-ranked Georgetown was led by future NBA Hall of Famer Patrick Ewing. Villanova’s Ed Pinckney scored 16 points and the Wildcats shot 79 percent from the floor to complete the upset. As an eight seed, the 1985 Villanova team remains the lowest-seed team to ever win the NCAA Tournament. Patrick Ewing (33) of Georgetown guards Ed Pinckney (54) of Villanova at the 1985 NCAA Championship Game at Rupp Arena on April 1, 1985 in Lexington, Ky.
(11) George Mason 86 vs (1) Connecticut 84 -- March 26, 2006
George Mason became the first team from the Colonial Athletic Association to make the Final Four when the 11-seed Patriots upset top-ranked Connecticut in the Elite Eight. George Mason is one of three 11-seed teams to ever make the Final Four in NCAA Tournament history. After beating Connecticut in overtime, George Mason's Will Thomas, right, and teammate Folarin Campbell get busy celebrating after defeating No. 1 seed UConn, 86-84 in Washington D.C. during the NCAA tournament on March 26, 2006.
(11) Virginia Commonwealth 71 vs (1) Kansas 61 -- March 27, 2011
Five years after George Mason made history by being the lowest-ranked team to ever make the Final Four, Virginia Commonwealth joined the rare group. VCU pulled off the long-shot win against top-ranked Kansas in the Elite Eight by holding the Jayhawks to 35 percent shooting from the floor and 10 percent shooting from three-point range. This game put VCU coach Shaka Smart on the map. VCU's Jamie Skeen scored a game high 26 points against Kansas. Virginia Commonwealth University defeated the University of Kansas, 71-61, in the Southwest Regional Final of the men's NCAA Division I Basketball Championships at the Alamodome on March 27, 2011, in San Antonio, Texas.
(6) Kansas 83 vs (1) Oklahoma 79 -- April 4, 1988
A Big 12 Conference rematch in the 1988 NCAA Championship game. Top-ranked Oklahoma had already defeated six-seed Kansas twice during the regular season, and the Sooners were led by future NBA All-Star Mookie Blaylock. Kansas forward Danny Manning helped the Jayahwks pull off the upset with 31 points and 18 rebounds to win the NCAA championship. The 1988 Kansas team became known as “Danny Manning and the Miracles.” Kansas forward Danny Manning (25) dunks past Oklahoma center Stacey King (33) during the NCAA Final Four basketball championship held April 4, 1988 at the Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
(15) Coppin State 78 vs (2) South Carolina 65 -- March 14, 1997
Entering the opening round of the 1997 NCAA Tournament, Coppin State had never won an NCAA tournament game. South Carolina was a 30-point favorite, but that didn’t stop the Eagles from outscoring the Gamecocks 38-18 in the final 13 minutes of the game to pull off the upset. Guard Fred Warrick of the Coppin State Eagles shoots a jump shot as center Nate Wilbourne of the South Carolina Gamecocks tries for the block during on March 14, 1997 at the Pittsburgh Civic Arena in Pittsburgh.
(15) Hampton 58 vs (2) Iowa State 57 -- March 15, 2001
Hampton’s first-ever appearance in the NCAA tournament was a shocker. The 15-seed Pirates upset Jamaal Tinsley and two-seed Iowa State. Jamaal Tinsley (11) of the Iowa State Cyclones walks off the court after the Hampton Pirates won 58-57 during the first round of the NCAA Tournament on March 15, 2001 at the Boise State University Pavilion in Boise, Idaho.
(15) Norfolk State 86 vs (2) Missouri 84 -- March 16, 2012
Eleven years after Hampton accomplished the two-seed upset, 15-seed Norfolk State was a 21-point underdog against two-seed Missouri. Norfolk State completed the upset behind future New York Knicks forward Kyle O’Quinn who recorded 26 points and 14 rebounds against the Tigers. Norfolk State Spartans center Kyle O'Quinn, center, and Missouri Tigers forward Ricardo Ratliffe (10) chase after a rebound in the second half of a second-round game in the NCAA men's basketball tournament at the CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Neb., on March 16, 2012.
(15) Lehigh 75 vs (2) Duke 70 -- March 16, 2012
The first time basketball fans heard of NBA All-Star C.J. McCollum was when he scored 30 points for Lehigh in a first-round upset against Duke during the 2012 NCAA Tournament. Lehigh's Gabe Knuston (42) celebrates a 75-70 lead over Duke with 0.4 seconds to play at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina, on Thursday, March 16, 2012, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
(15) Florida Gulf Coast 78 vs (2) Georgetown 68 -- March 22, 2013
An unlikely run to become the first 15 seed to reach the Sweet 16, Florida Gulf Coast started with an upset over two-seed Georgetown in the opening round of the 2013 NCAA Tournament. The Eagles went on a 21-2 run to start the second half against the Hoyas and never looked back. Because of the amount of dunks and alley-hoops that Florida Gulf Coast threw down, the Eagles received the nickname “Dunk City.” Florida Gulf Coast forward Chase Fieler (20) protects the ball from Georgetown forward Mikael Hopkins (3) and guard Markel Starks (5) in the second half of a second-half game in the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia on March 22, 2013.
(9) Northern Iowa 69 vs (1) Kansas 67 -- March 20, 2010
College basketball fans who watched the 2010 NCAA tournament remember the name Ali Farokhmanesh. The Northern Iowa guard led the nine-seed Panthers with 16 points to upset top-ranked Kansas in the second round. Northern Iowa guard Kwadzo Ahelegbe (11) watches as teammate Ali Farokhmanesh (5) hits a 3-pointer that all but shattered Kansas' hopes of a comeback late in the second round of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at the Ford Center in Oklahoma City on March 20, 2010.
(15) Middle Tennessee State 90 vs (2) Michigan State 81 -- March 18, 2016
Michigan State had a talented lineup in 2016 led by AP Player of the Year Denzel Valentine. But that didn’t stop 15-seed Middle Tennessee State from upsetting the two-seed Spartans in the first round of the 2016 NCAA Tournament. The Blue Raiders forward Reggie Upshaw scored 21 points, and Middle Tennessee State hit 11 of 19 three-pointers to complete the upset. Middle Tennesee State's Perrin Buford drives past Michigan State's Eron Harris in the second half during the first round of the NCAA Tournamet on March 18, 2016, at Scottrade Center in St. Louis.
(16) Fairleigh Dickinson vs. (1) Purdue -- March 17, 2023
Fairleigh Dickinson became the second No. 16 seed in history to win an NCAA Tournament game, stunning top-seeded Purdue 63-58 behind 19 points from Sean Moore and a relentless, hustling defense. The shortest team in the tourney, the Knights showed no fear in swarming 7-foot-4 All-America center Zach Edey from the start. FDU’s players were quicker and more composed than the Big Ten champion Boilermakers.

