Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

    April 29, 2026

    2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

    April 29, 2026

    Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

    April 29, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Vimeo
    VandyFans.com
    Subscribe Login
    • Home
    • Forum

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball lands Northwestern State transfer forward Vernell Atamah – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026
    • Football
      1. Schedule
      2. Roster
      3. Recruiting
      4. View All

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively Arrive at Film Festival

      January 14, 2021
      8.9

      Review: Mobile Carriers Eying on 5G Rollout in Generation Z Models

      January 13, 2021

      New Samsung Galaxy Receives Wi-Fi Certifications

      January 13, 2021

      Digital Calendars & Organizers to Get You Organized in 2021

      January 13, 2021
    • Men’s Basketball
      1. Schedule
      2. Roster
      3. Recruiting
      4. View All

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      The 19 Best Hand Sanitizers That Meet Our Guidelines

      January 14, 2021

      Doctors’ Advise on Sanitizers You Should Not Use

      January 14, 2021

      Apps Comparison Feb. 2021 – Best Apps for Meetings

      January 14, 2021

      How a Year of Living With Covid-19 Rewired Our Brains

      January 14, 2021
    • Women’s Basketball
      1. Schedule
      2. Roster
      3. Recruiting
      4. View All

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      The Former Garage 2021 Transformed into Modern Luxury Home in Anreo Suburb

      January 14, 2021

      8 Fabulous Design Tips to Create a Luxurious Bedroom

      January 14, 2021

      The 21 Best Furniture Brands to Check Out Now

      January 14, 2021

      Modern Condominiums Delivers Luxury Five-Star Living For Today’s Buyers

      January 14, 2021
    • Baseball
      1. Schedule
      2. Roster
      3. Recruiting
      4. View All

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

      April 29, 2026

      2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

      April 29, 2026

      Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

      April 29, 2026

      Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

      April 29, 2026

      Let’s Flip Again: Skateboards Take Off For a New Generation

      January 14, 2021

      Latest View on Food Cultures: Sharing, not Snatching

      January 14, 2021

      Modern Construction Unveils Latest Luxury Model

      January 14, 2021

      The Inauguration Music: Fun With Singers You Actually Know

      January 14, 2021
    • Other Sports

      Santorini and Athens Make Most ‘Instagrammable’ Places

      January 14, 2021
      85

      Dubai Properties Review: Sales on An Upswing, Despite Covid-19

      January 14, 2021

      Home Working Linked to Rise in Several Disorders

      January 14, 2021

      Could 2021 Be The Year of Technology for Your Family?

      January 14, 2021

      Consider Yourself an Aesthete? Don’t Miss These Houses

      January 14, 2021
    VandyFans.com
    • Home
    • Forum
    • Football
    • Men’s Basketball
    • Women’s Basketball
    • Baseball
    • Other Sports
    Home»Uncategorized»Anchor Up: Candice Storey Lee Leads Vanderbilt Athletics to Victory – Nashville Scene
    Uncategorized

    Anchor Up: Candice Storey Lee Leads Vanderbilt Athletics to Victory – Nashville Scene

    UvopiaBy UvopiaFebruary 19, 2026No Comments11 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Candice Storey Lee

    Staff Reporter
    See also: “Eight Commodores to Watch.”
    Vanderbilt University athletic director and vice chancellor Candice Storey Lee’s spacious office sits on the second floor of McGugin Center on Jess Neely Drive. It’s just across from Charles Hawkins Field — Vanderbilt’s storied baseball diamond — behind the John Rich Complex, which includes football practice fields. Every day she is surrounded by names. Some, like midcentury football star Jess Neely, served in the same role as Lee — athletic director — while others won significance in the world of Vanderbilt sports with standout athletic accolades and multimillion-dollar donations.
    Down the block stands the recently named David Williams II Recreation and Wellness Center, the university’s catchall fitness facility for climbers and swimmers and stressed college students. Williams, a trailblazing Black athletic director like Lee, died abruptly, soon after formally retiring as Vanderbilt’s vice chancellor and AD. That was almost seven years to the day before the Scene’s conversation with Lee. Williams hired Lee, then captain of Vanderbilt’s SEC-championship women’s basketball team, as an intern more than 20 years ago.
    A year after Williams’ death, Lee succeeded him atop the university’s athletics program during a period of drastic change. After decades of streaky Commodore teams finding fleeting success, Vanderbilt now has national contenders in all four major college sports — football, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, baseball — at the same time, and all in the nation’s most competitive conference. Discus thrower Veronica Fraley represented the United States at the Paris Olympics in 2024 within months of completing her Vanderbilt education.
    These Vanderbilt athletes are thriving across a variety of sports
    New transfer rules and court cases brought by college athletes, including Vanderbilt football’s star quarterback Diego Pavia, helped usher in the NIL era (allowing these athletes to profit financially with their name, image and likeness). Universities have scrambled to build programs in this new legal and financial landscape, where athletes can sign six- and seven-figure contracts before going pro. (According to a source familiar with his NIL contract, Pavia earned a little more than $1 million this season.) Money has flowed from donors to athletes via intermediary entities like Vanderbilt’s third-party collective, the Anchor Impact Fund, which disbursed more than $3 million in 2023 and 2024 according to the most recent tax filings. Unlike many pro sports deals, NIL contracts are private. On Feb. 4 the university announced “Anchored for Her,” a $50 million fundraising effort to support Vanderbilt women’s sports. Vanderbilt announced on Feb. 12 that it would dissolve Anchor Impact and manage NIL via Anchor Advantage, a new in-house initiative. 
    Success has also brought more dollars and attention to Vanderbilt sports. The elite academic institution enjoys a wealthy alumni network, and fundraising and revenue generation have gotten even more creative, from gimmicks to entire reward systems. After scoring a major football upset against Alabama during the 2024 season, Vanderbilt auctioned off pieces of its goalposts, capitalizing on a fan frenzy. Also in 2024, the university launched a “Priority Points” system that resembles a new currency for donors hoping to get better access to games and tickets. Vanderbilt has upgraded football, basketball, tennis and baseball facilities with state-of-the-art amenities that rival professional sports complexes. 
    Lee can’t write down the winning formula, but she isn’t surprised by the school’s overwhelming athletic success either. She gives credit to Williams for building a culture of integrity that prizes the student-athlete experience. Resources, like money and new facilities, have helped Vanderbilt attract and retain talent.
    Like the rest of Commodore Nation, she’s also taking time to enjoy the show.
    Candice Storey Lee
    David gave me an opportunity in 2002. I had just finished playing, and he said, “Hey, I’m starting an internship program and I want a former student-athlete.” I didn’t know him, someone had recommended me — I hope because I took great pride in the student-athlete experience and was heavily involved in the community. It was actually an internship not in athletics, but in student affairs, because David was vice chancellor for student life at the time too. From the time I was an intern to deputy athletic director, 18 years later, I always reported directly to David Williams. One of the greatest gifts he gave me — and he gave me a lot of gifts — was the gift of just exposure. To meetings, to people, to his thought process.  He gave me his time so I could ask questions, and he was unusually vulnerable. He would say to me, “Have you ever thought about being an athletic director?”  It didn’t occur to me. Other than him, I had not seen a lot of African Americans in the role, and certainly had not seen women in the role. Sometimes people have to see things in you before you see it in yourself.  A couple times I was thinking about leaving Vanderbilt for the chance to have new role, new responsibilities,  but I was getting that here. 
    I often wish that I could just sit with David now, having been in the role for almost six years. I did not realize how many balls he was juggling, and that’s coming from someone who saw him every day. He was purposeful in everything and fiercely believed in the things he believed in.  I believe fiercely, deeply, in the student-athlete experience and what sport can do for young people. If you can take that and also take a Vanderbilt degree, you can change the trajectory of your life.  Yes, we have to modernize our approach all the time, there’s NIL and much more money in it, but every decision that I make is values-based, every single time. I’ve learned that part of being a leader is, your comfort comes last.  I also believe in the importance of showing up. I try to be a lot of places, I try to make sure our student-athletes know who I am, I try to make sure our coaches know that I care about what they’re doing,  I try to give my attention to as many alums as I can. I laugh a lot — you can hear me laugh all the way down the hall. We’re gonna approach a job with joy and work really hard.
    Every time I’ve made a coaching change.  Some people may think that’s easy. You look at the record and you make a decision. Winning is a part of it, but it’s not all of it.  Your job as the athletic director, of course, is leading the department, but it’s more than that.  From a head-coach standpoint, I want to create a vision, unlock the resources and remove the impediments to give our coaches a chance to take their vision, marry it with mine, and we go. If you’re gonna do that well, you’re investing in people. We’re cultivating real trust and relationships here.
    Women’s basketball team took down No. 4 Texas Thursday night, elevating the program as a title contender
    I’ve hired seven head coaches in six years: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, men’s tennis, women’s tennis, volleyball and track. With women’s basketball, people always ask, because I came from that program, was it more meaningful? I wouldn’t say that my responsibility is for everybody, but emotionally, it runs deep on a personal level. I am an alum of the program, and we were very good.  We won an SEC championship, we went to two Elite Eights, we were number one in the NCAA tournament one year.  When I go on a coach search I think, “I’m gonna know it when I see it.”  I talked to [women’s basketball coach] Shea Ralph the very first day that I began my search.  She and I are the exact same year, and she was the best player in the country. I immediately felt like this is somebody that’s gonna be easy to lock arms with and to not just meet what we used to have, but surpass it.  To be honest with you, I have felt that with every coach I’ve hired and  with every coach we’ve been able to retain here.
    Shea’s one of the best to ever do it. She’s got high basketball IQ, an incredible relationship-builder, a great ambassador. She checks every box.  Then, unlocking the resources is about facilities,  ensuring that she has what she needs operationally.  The recruiting had to catch up, but her vision was always very clear.  I was proud of her when she was in the [Women’s National Invitation Tournament] just like I’m proud of her now. 
    Everybody that’s here, I brought them here to win.  I want to win. They want to win. The fact that we have aspirational visions, that’s not surprising. I can never predict how long it might take us to turn a corner, because breakthroughs are dependent on so many things. Some that are within your control and some that are not.  But I’m really not surprised.  I’m excited. I’m delighted when we have big games — I’ll be watching the women’s game against Oklahoma during some SEC meetings tonight, we’ll all be watching.  Part of it is having great players like Mikayla Blakes, Aubrey Galvan and Sacha Washington. 
    Yep. It’s the same thing.  The template is the same.  We’re trying to create conditions for success — and yes, sometimes you lose. I can’t guarantee you win every game. You need the right leaders. Support from the chancellor, myself, great coaches. Full alignment to unlock resources. Fundraising and also facilities, operational support, time and access. And a culture of clear communication and young people who deeply believe — stubborn enough to believe when no one else believes and yet humble enough to say, “Maybe we gotta do something a little different.”
    You still have to be able to identify people who fit your system, but roster development and roster acquisition is a new muscle for a lot of coaches.  NIL is very much tied to how you build your roster, so we had to put resources into that.  People can build and rebuild rosters in the blink of an eye now.  Earl Bennett, he’s our executive GM, he leads a new division for us called the Roster and Finance Division, which is responsible for making sure that we’re staying within the revenue share cap from the House settlement, and oversees all of our revenue share agreements, oversees NIL,  is directly connected to the sports that are sharing revenue. 
    We have had to embrace NIL. It’s the only way. The job of AD is changing — it’s always been to fundraise and hire coaches, but now you gotta think about revenue generation differently. Really, since COVID, we’ve been building the bridge while we cross it.  We are not professional sports. You can take elements from professional sports and infuse them into a higher-education landscape — that’s what we’re doing — but  I’m really careful with my language there because we don’t consider our student-athletes employees, and we don’t want to be professional sports. 
    We might be talking about more money being infused into the system now, but that allocation is not a new problem.  David Williams had to do the same thing as AD. There’s not limitless resources, and we invest where we can get the biggest return, but that’s not always financial returns.  It could be supporting our core mission, or values. The biggest change is that we have to be much more diverse in our revenue now —  you can’t meet the need by just relying on philanthropy or media rights.
    Clark Lea says all the time: “We’re one of one.”  It is objectively true that we are the only school that has this type of academic distinction in the SEC.  I want the high academics. I was drawn to Vanderbilt for that reason. I’ve always believed we could do what we’re doing.  We under-invested in athletics for a long time, it’s true. There might’ve been a fear that if you invested in athletics, it might take away from the academic distinction.  I’d love to sit with David Williams and say, “Can you believe this?” I know he wanted it, and I don’t know what he was dealing with, why the resources weren’t unlocked for him.  You gotta believe it when no one else believes it. Not only did we have believability, but we actually had tangible resources and the courage to try some stuff.  But man, it’s not magic. We want to be great at everything. 
    Staff Reporter
    {{description}}
    Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items.

    The school’s athletic director — the first Black woman to hold the position in the SEC — is …
    These Vanderbilt athletes are thriving across a variety of sports
    Your browser is out of date and potentially vulnerable to security risks.
    We recommend switching to one of the following browsers:

    source

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
    Previous ArticleAnchor Up: Eight Commodores to Watch – Nashville Scene
    Next Article Initial Reactions to Mizzou's 81-80 Win Over No. 19 Vanderbilt – Sports Illustrated
    Uvopia
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

    April 29, 2026

    2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

    April 29, 2026

    Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

    April 29, 2026

    Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

    April 29, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Our Picks

    Remember! Bad Habits That Make a Big Impact on Your Lifestyle

    January 13, 2021

    The Right Morning Routine Can Keep You Energized & Happy

    January 13, 2021

    How to Make Perfume Last Longer Than Before

    January 13, 2021

    Stay off Social Media and Still Keep an Online Social Life

    January 13, 2021
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss

    Jesse Minter calls Diego Pavia a “force multiplier” with strong habits – Ravens Wire

    By UvopiaApril 29, 20260

    When Jesse Minter went on Good Morning Football, one of the more interesting takeaways centered around what the…

    2028 edge Brayson Robinson picks up a Vanderbilt football offer – 247Sports

    April 29, 2026

    Jesse Minter delivers promising message for Diego Pavia's NFL future – Saturday Blitz

    April 29, 2026

    Vanderbilt women's basketball adds transfer Vee Atamah from Northwestern State – AOL.com

    April 29, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Your source for the lifestyle news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a lifestyle site. Visit our main page for more demos.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: [email protected]
    Contact: +1-320-0123-451

    Our Picks

    Remember! Bad Habits That Make a Big Impact on Your Lifestyle

    January 13, 2021

    The Right Morning Routine Can Keep You Energized & Happy

    January 13, 2021

    How to Make Perfume Last Longer Than Before

    January 13, 2021
    New Comments
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

      Sign In or Register

      Welcome Back!

      Login to your account below.

      Lost password?