Reginald Ruffin, Tuskegee AD, Named Nation’s Best in Division II

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Reginald Ruffin, Tuskegee University’s Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics, just added another line to an already stacked resume. He’s been named the 2025-26 NACDA NCAA Division II Athletic Director of the Year. The honor comes from the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. It recognizes leadership, integrity, and service across collegiate athletics.

Ruffin stood as the only HBCU recipient among this year’s national award winners. He was formally recognized at the NACDA Convention in Las Vegas. He’d actually learned of the honor earlier this year. Still, receiving it in front of his peers from across the country made it hit differently.

How Reginald Ruffin Built This Résumé

Ruffin didn’t just inherit a strong program. Since fully stepping into the AD role in 2023, he’s overseen serious growth across the department. Tuskegee softball captured both the SIAC regular-season and conference titles under his watch. Men’s basketball won an SIAC regular-season title too, and reached the SIAC Championship Game in both 2025 and 2026. Women’s basketball also reached the championship game in 2025, which speaks to depth across marquee sports.

The success runs beyond the revenue sports as well. Women’s track and field captured three straight SIAC championships — the 2025 indoor title, the 2025 outdoor title, and the 2026 indoor title. Women’s tennis added back-to-back SIAC titles in 2024 and 2025. That kind of across-the-board consistency is exactly what an Athletics Director of the Year award is built to recognize.

A Career That Started With Football

Before athletics administration, Ruffin built his name on the field. He’s a 1998 graduate of the University of North Alabama, where he became a two-time All-American at two different positions. He played defensive end in 1995 and 1996, then linebacker in 1997. During his UNA career, the Lions won two Division II National Championships and went 43-9 overall. He still holds the school’s career sack record with 34, along with the single-season mark of 11.

That playing career fed directly into his coaching path. Ruffin later served as athletic director and head football coach at Miles College. Over nine seasons there, he led the Golden Bears to four SIAC championships. He also picked up an additional SIAC Championship Game appearance along the way. That track record is part of why Tuskegee brought him back for a second stint leading its own athletics department.

What This Means for Tuskegee

The NACDA award is now in its 28th year, and it spans seven divisions across collegiate athletics. Winning it isn’t about one big moment. Instead, it rewards administrators who build sustained success across an entire department, year after year.

Tuskegee president Dr. Mark A. Brown praised Ruffin’s commitment to the university, calling his dedication to student-athletes limitless. The celebration also drew support from Tuskegee stakeholders, including Board of Trustees member Jonathan Porter and Tuskegee University National Athletic Association President Dale Powell. Their presence reflected how much respect Ruffin has built, both within the HBCU space and across national athletics circles more broadly.

Ruffin, for his part, kept the focus on the people around him rather than the individual honor. “We have been able to do some great work, none of which could be accomplished without all of the stakeholders invested in Tuskegee,” he said. Even mid-celebration, he was already looking ahead to what comes next for the department.

For HBCU athletics as a whole, moments like this matter. National awards rarely single out HBCU administrators, so Reginald Ruffin’s recognition puts a spotlight on the kind of leadership happening at Tuskegee. It’s the sort of validation that can help with recruiting, fundraising, and simply getting HBCU programs taken seriously on a national stage.

Building Toward What’s Next

Ruffin’s tenure hasn’t just been about championships already won. Under his leadership, Tuskegee also launched its first-ever men’s and women’s soccer programs, set to begin competition in late August. That expansion reflects a broader philosophy: growing opportunities for student-athletes rather than simply managing what already exists. Because Tuskegee already fields strong programs in basketball, softball, track, and tennis, adding soccer signals real ambition for the department’s future.

Tuskegee student-athletes have also earned recognition beyond the scoreboard during Ruffin’s time as AD. The university was named among 26 finalists nationally for the NCAA Division II Award of Excellence, a recognition tied to community engagement and student-athlete leadership. Programs like the Macon County Helping Hands Food Drive gave student-athletes real-world experience serving their community, on top of their athletic and academic commitments. Together, these efforts show a department building success on multiple fronts at once, not just chasing wins.

That range is likely part of why NACDA chose Ruffin for this honor. Athletic directors are typically judged on wins and titles alone. Instead, this award weighs the full picture: competitive success, institutional growth, and genuine investment in student-athletes’ lives beyond their sport. Tuskegee’s trajectory under Ruffin checks every one of those boxes.

Looking ahead, Ruffin has made clear he isn’t finished building. With new sports launching, a stacked list of recent championships, and a department earning attention on the national stage, Tuskegee’s athletics program looks positioned for continued growth. For now, though, this award gives the Tuskegee community a well-earned moment to celebrate the man leading that charge.