Wake Forest named Steve Weinman its first General Manager for Basketball and Senior Associate Athletics Director for Analytics, a combined role that signals the program's preparation for revenue-sharing compliance and operational complexity arriving in July 2025. The dual title mirrors structural changes spreading through Power Conference programs as they staff for direct athlete payments and transfer-portal acceleration.
Weinman arrives from consultant work and prior stops including analytics roles with NBA teams. The GM title at Wake Forest carries budget authority over roster construction, which in the revenue-sharing model means discretion over $20-22 million in annual athlete payments across football and basketball. The analytics portfolio extends beyond basketball—Weinman will report to athletics director John Currie and oversee data infrastructure for Olympic sports, sponsorship yield optimization, and donor modeling. Wake Forest athletics operates on roughly $95 million in annual revenue, middle-tier for the ACC.
The move matters because it creates a specific decision point for roster spend independent of coaching whim. Revenue-sharing implementation forces programs to make tradeoffs: whether to pay a five-star freshman $800,000 or distribute that across three rotational transfers. A GM with P&L responsibility, rather than a coach negotiating his own buyout leverage, changes the incentive map. Several SEC programs have hired GMs in the past eight months; Wake Forest is the first ACC school to attach the analytics vertical to the role, which suggests they're modeling retention curves and NIL yield rather than just negotiating deals.
The hire also reflects preparation for House settlement compliance, which requires transparent accounting of athlete compensation and leaves little room for the booster-NIL opacity that defined 2022-2024. Programs need someone who can explain to the NCAA why a defensive tackle received $415,000 while a rotation guard received $290,000. That's Weinman's job now. Wake Forest plays in a 14,665-seat arena and lacks the donor base of Duke or North Carolina, so efficient allocation matters more than raw budget size.
Coach Steve Forbes remains, but now operates within a GM structure. Forbes went 39-31 over the past two seasons, respectable but not immune to pressure if the program misses the tournament again. The GM layer gives the athletics director someone to hold accountable for roster ROI without immediately firing the coach—a useful buffer when buyouts still run $4-6 million for sitting coaches.
Watch whether Weinman hires a dedicated basketball analyst within 60 days, which would signal serious infrastructure spend. Also watch Wake Forest's transfer activity in the April-May window; a GM-led program typically moves faster because it's already modeled the replacement cost. The ACC's media deal pays $42 million per school annually, trailing the SEC and Big Ten, so margin discipline separates tournament teams from .500 records.
Weinman's LinkedIn lists no prior college experience, which means Wake Forest is betting that pro-style org charts work better than the traditional coach-as-emperor model. If the Demon Deacons finish top-four in the ACC next season, expect three more programs to post similar job descriptions by September.