Kendrick Perkins, the former NBA center who spent fourteen seasons rotating through locker rooms and the last five rotating through ESPN green rooms, accepted a general manager title at Jackson State University on Tuesday. He keeps his television contract. The school announced the appointment without disclosing compensation structure or roster authority, which means the job description is still being written.
Jackson State created the position for Perkins. The men's basketball program previously operated without a dedicated GM layer between head coach Mo Williams and athletic director Ashley Robinson. Perkins will handle NIL coordination, transfer portal recruiting, and donor cultivation while Williams runs practice. The arrangement mirrors NFL team structures more than it resembles traditional college hierarchies. Williams, himself a former NBA guard, joined Jackson State in April after two seasons at Alabama State. The Tigers finished 8-24 last year.
The appointment signals two things. First, HBCUs are borrowing organizational models from professional sports as NIL shifts power away from compliance offices and toward individuals who can close deals. Perkins brings a contact list spanning front offices, agencies, and sponsors, which matters more than his one season of G League coaching experience in Grand Rapids. Second, the dual-employment model works for schools that cannot yet match power-conference GM salaries. Jackson State avoids a seven-figure payroll line while ESPN gains deeper HBCU access for its talent. Perkins filmed content at Jackson State already; now he has keys.
The structure has friction points. Perkins will miss practices, recruiting visits, and film sessions while working Bristol production schedules. His ESPN colleagues will ask him about Jackson State transfer targets on air, which creates disclosure problems. His recruiting pitch to a guard in the portal is "play for Mo Williams and build your brand in a city two hours from Memphis," which works until the guard asks why the GM is not in the gym. The answer is the same reason athletic directors are not in the gym, but athletic directors do not also have television shows.
The Tigers open the season in November. Their non-conference schedule is not yet public. Perkins has until then to sign transfer additions, finalize NIL packages, and learn whether the role expands or contracts based on results. Jackson State's athletic budget runs roughly $18 million annually, far below the $200 million-plus operations at SEC schools ninety minutes north. The gap explains why the program invented a job for someone who already had a job.
Watch whether other HBCUs replicate the structure. Delaware State, North Carolina A&T, and Southern already hired former NBA players as head coaches. If Perkins closes a major transfer or lands a regional sponsorship deal, expect athletic directors at peer schools to start mapping their own dual-employment pitches to analysts and podcasters with active phone trees. The job description arrives after the hire, which is how these things happen now.