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Historic financial boon for SEC West coaches

thekspoke

Heisman Winner
May 31, 2005
16,172
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Just Outside the Motherland
Thanks to Dan Mullen and other developments this offseason, the SEC West has entered some rarefied financial air.

Late Thursday night, it was announced that Mullen and Mississippi State had, as expected, reached agreement on a new contract that includes both an extension and raise. Financially, Mullen will be paid an average of $4.275 million annually over the next four years.

In December of last year, Ole Miss' Hugh Freeze received the receiving end of a new contract that will pay him $4 million in 2015 and average $4.25 million over the next six years.

As part of a new contract announced in June of last year, Auburn's Gus Malzahn will earn $4.1 million in 2015. Add in the 2014 salaries of Alabama's Nick Saban ($7.1 million), Texas A&M's Kevin Sumlin ($5 million) and LSU's Les Miles ($4.4 million), and all seven coaches in the SEC West will make at least $4 million in the same calendar year; that's the first time in the history of college football such a thing has happened in the same division.

To put it into perspective, just eight non-SEC West coaches in 2014 surpassed the $4 million barrier: Michigan State's Mark Dantonio ($5.6 million), Oklahoma's Bob Stoops ($5.06 million), Texas' Charlie Strong ($5 million), Ohio State's Urban Meyer ($4.5 million), Penn State's James Franklin ($4.3 million), Iowa's Kirk Ferentz ($4.07 million), South Carolina's Steve Spurrier ($4.02 million) and TCU's Gary Patterson ($4.01 million).

Spurrier and Georgia's Mark Richt, armed with his new contract signed in March of last year, will make around $3.5 million in 2015 after earning $3.4 million in 2014.

All told, the seven coaches in the SEC West will make somewhere in the neighborhood of $33 million in 2015; according to the USA Today database, 11 coaches in the ACC - three (Boston College, Syracuse, Wake Forest) weren't listed - made approximately $26.6 million combined in 2014.

For further perspective, the 11 coaches in the Sun Belt conference combined to earn a total of approximately $5.3 million in 2014.

And, while this coaching arms race is ongoing across not only the SEC West but all of college football - an arms race financed by the billions of dollars universities as a whole are making off of the sport - walk-ons are being accept a place to live instead of going homeless. Priorities, y'all.
 
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