Everything about Michael Slive totally explained
Michael Lawrence Slive (born
July 26,
1940) is the current
commissioner of the
Southeastern Conference (SEC), an
American college athletics association. As part of his role as the SEC Commissioner, he served as the coordinator of the
Bowl Championship Series for the 2006 and 2007 regular seasons. He is also a member of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Committee through September 2009 and will serve as the chairman of the committee for the 2008-2009
academic year.
Slive became the seventh commissioner of the SEC on
July 1,
2002. He previously was the first commissioner of
Conference USA from
1995-2002 and was the first commissioner of the
Great Midwest Conference upon its founding in
1991.
A native of
Utica, NY, Slive graduated from
Dartmouth College with a
Bachelor of Arts degree in
1962. He earned a
J.D. from the
University of Virginia School of Law in
1965 and an
LL.M. from the
Georgetown University Law Center in
1966. Early in his career, he practiced law in New Hampshire, served as judge of the Hanover, N.H. District Court from
1972-77, and was a partner in a Chicago law firm. He was assistant director of athletics at Dartmouth College, assistant executive director of the
Pacific-10 Conference, and director of athletics at
Cornell University. In
1990, he became senior partner and founder of the Mike Slive-Mike Glazier Sports Group, a legal practice specializing in representing colleges and universities in athletics-related matters.
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