The gist of it is this: NDSU had no chance of matching the deal and athletic director Gene Taylor said as much Sunday in a press conference. He also remarked that the school has not been near the top when it comes to compensating its football coach in the Missouri Valley Football Conference.
Bohl’s base salary is $206,500 with annual increases of 5 percent. His performance bonuses, media and appearance fees and ticket sales compensation added up to an estimated $360,000 or more. That is not at the top of the Missouri Valley Football Conference, Taylor said.
“We may structure it somehow differently in terms of how you get to the final number,” Taylor said. “But I don’t see us going back a great deal because we want to get the best coaching candidate out there.”I found that hard to believe. Bohl has the clause in his contract that gives him 3 percent of the ticket revenue sold for NDSU home games, which is probably in the $30,000 to $40,000 range. There aren't many programs with a clause like that, it appears. He was getting a raise of five percent each year and from June 1, 2012 to May 31, 2013, Bohl made $367,843, according to state payroll records, making him the fifth-highest-paid public employee in North Dakota.
He was doing pretty good and I suspect he's one of the best paid coaches in all of FCS, not just the Valley. For comparison, I pulled up all of the salary numbers I could find for head coaches in MVFC. (Please note: Unless noted, these are base salary figures. Like Bohl, most coaches are being compensated for media appearances for winning conference games or playoff appearances and those figures are not included.)
Illinois State's Brock Spack |
Illinois State – Brock Spack: $258,072 (2013), $268,080
(2014)
Age: 51 - Signed
through: 2016
Bonuses:
$10,000 per playoff game; owes ISU $25,000 if he leaves before the contract
expires. $500/month car allowance.
Indiana State: Mike Sanford: $180,000.
Age: 58 - Signed through: 2017. 5-year deal signed in December 2012.
Missouri State: Terry Allen: $108,211 per season.
Age: 56 - Signed
through: 2014. Was not extended by AD Kyle Moats in 2012 and Moats said the university couldn’t afford to fire/dismiss Allen in 2013.
Age: 55 - Signed a contract extension to stay at NDSU on Jan. 1, 2013 through 2021. His performance bonuses, media and appearance fees and
ticket sales compensation added up to an estimated $360,000 or more. Leaving for University of Wyoming at season's end.
Northern Iowa: Mark Farley: $296,280.
Age: 50 - Signed through: 2015. A previous contract was extended by five years in 2008.
South Dakota: Joe Glenn: $131,060 in 2013-14; one year contract. Age: 64.
South Dakota State: John Stiegelmeier: $160,012 in 2013-14; one year contract. Age: 56.
Southern Illinois: Dale Lennon: $216,456 in 2012; one year contract.
Age: 52 - Signed
through 2014: Received two year extension in 2011. Initially signed for five years in 2007 at $200,000 per year. Notes: If SIU fires him, they owe him a max of
one’s salary. If he resigns or leaves for another job, he owes SIU $100,000.
Western Illinois: Bob Nielson: $206,892 in 2013.
Age: 54 - Signed through: 2017. Signed a five-year deal in December 2012.
Youngstown State: Eric Wolford: $200,000 base salary.
Age: 42 - Signed through: 2014, the final year of his initial five-year deal.
Bonuses: $20,000 for winning a national championship; A $3,000 bonus for each year the Penguins win the Missouri Valley Football Conference; A $3,000 bonus for each YSU playoff game; A $12,000 bonus if the Penguins earn an Academic Progress Rate score of 925 or greater; $50,000 each year for “marketing income,” (TV, radio, speaking engagements, sponsorships); Car allowance worth about $400 per month
and membership in a local country club.Missouri State's Terry Allen |
In order, it goes like this (with the years at the school and school record in parentheses):
UNI's Farley: $296k (13th year, 111-50)
Ill St's Spack: $258k (5th year, 33-24)
SIU's Lennon: $216k (6th year, 42-28)
NDSU's Bohl: $206k (11th year, 101-32)
WIU's Nielson: $206k (1st year, 4-8)
YSU's Wolford: $200k (4th year, 24-21)
Ind St's Sanford: $180k (1st year, 1-11)
SDSU's Stiegelmeier: $160k (16th year, 111-81)
USD's Glenn: $131k (2nd year, 5-18)
MoSt's Allen: $108k (7th year, 33-56)
A few interesting things out of that I'll cover via bullet points:
- The top of the conference gets paid like coaches who could leave someday. That's especially true for Spack, Lennon and Bohl. Nielson got a very good deal for coming from Division II Minnesota-Duluth last year and while Farley has made his home at UNI, there's nothing saying he couldn't try an FBS job someday.
- Captain Obvious here but South Dakota stands out with one-year contracts. Almost every coach in the conference has received a five-year deal and the one-year deals are an issue. Luckily, both SDSU and USD have stable coaching situations (We think.).
- When Joe Glenn was hired almost exactly two years ago, he was starting at $126,000, very close to what John Stiegelmeier was making at the time at SDSU. He told the Yankton Press and Dakotan that he wanted USD to have more money for assistants. Meanwhile, Stig has jumped up to $160,012 this season. It makes sense, with SDSU making the playoffs twice and having more athletic revenues than USD in each of those years.
- Interesting to compare Glenn's deal to the one that Bohl will be getting at Wyoming, where Glenn was the coach from 2003 to 2008. Glenn's first deal had a base salary of $140,004 per year for five years. With all of the incentives, it would bring him up to as much as $550,000 per year. Bohl will make a minimum $750,000 this upcoming season, without accounting for any additional incentives.
- Wow. Missouri State is in bad shape. Terry Allen probably would have been fired twice by now if the Bears had any money. But they don't and he's likely a lame duck head coach heading into his final year of his deal. This is why they've had to play two FBS games per year and Allen has not fared well there. I'm shocked to see him so low on the list and while there's some bonuses in play, he's much further down on the salary list than I first thought.
- Seven of the ten coaches in the league are between the ages of 50 and 56. The only outliers are the considerably younger Wolford, and Sanford and Glenn, who have both made FBS head coaching stops.
- UNI basketball coach Ben Jacobson makes $512,151 per year, twice as much as colleague Mark Farley. But Farley didn't bring his team to the Sweet Sixteen in 2010.
- NDSU, South Dakota, Western Illinois and Youngstown State are the four schools that spend more money paying their football coach than their men's basketball coach. Given that most of the schools are in the basketball happy Missouri Valley Conference in the winter, that's not much of a surprise. The widest margin between the two is probably in Macomb, where Jim Molinari makes about $117,000, $93k less than the football coach Nielson. SDSU coach Scott Nagy has a base salary of $200,000 per season.
"one year contracts are an issue."
ReplyDeleteAre they, though? SDSU has the longest tenured coach in the MVFC. And if longer contracts carry security against firing in the form of mandated buyouts, they also impose buyouts on the coach as well, whereas SDSU coaches who get better offers can accept and move on (as two successive baseball coaches have.)
Ultimately, I think the contract length is an issue only if the department has a practice of using that length as a bargaining tactic or to justify quickly dismissing coaches, as far as I know, that's not what goes on at SDSU.
That is a good point on the buyouts. Clearly, there's some sort of success for SDSU in that regard for men's and women's basketball and football, where SDSU has had its coaches for at least 14 years and nobody else in Division I has that across those three sports.
DeleteYou would think there would be more commitment from both sides in a long term deal but we know that's not true in many places. There seems to be some job security because many schools aren't trigger happy on firing coaches or don't have the resources to do so.