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NIL era coaches contract

Posted on 10/29/25 at 6:47 pm
Posted by bass
Member since Oct 2016
4647 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 6:47 pm
I hope LSU doesn’t get into another $100 million contract.

Makes no sense. Said coach could piss everyone off 3 years in and LSU is stuck. Start off at 3 to 4 million a year 5 year contract and renegotiate if coach is any good.

Who cares what Urban Meyer or any other of these dinosaurs thinks. You not getting a huge payout for sucking, sorry! Next!

Posted by jpainter6174
Boss city
Member since Feb 2014
6219 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 7:10 pm to
Not sniffing a top coach for 3-4… our d cordinator makes 2.5 for fricks sake.. some of y’all are retards.
Posted by bass
Member since Oct 2016
4647 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 7:44 pm to
quote:

Not sniffing a top coach
Like who? Most of the top coaches aren’t going anywhere. You’re right, some of yall are retards
Posted by Big Jim Slade
Member since Oct 2016
6210 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 7:53 pm to
Unfortunately $10-15mill is the going rate for a top tier coach. But the contracts need void clauses, such that the schools aren’t stuck. Maybe tie it to a number of losses for consecutive years or final standings in the conference. The school has the option to void the remainder of the contract if the team has 4 or more losses for 2 consecutive years. Or caps on the length of the term, renewable each time. The coaches need some risk such that getting fired isn’t basically an incentive.
Posted by mdomingue
Lafayette, LA
Member since Nov 2010
41721 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:13 pm to
Who do you want as coach?

How much are you willing to pay them?

How long of a contract will you offer them?

Are you willing to offer guarantees?
Posted by Mr Roboto
Seattle
Member since Jan 2023
6687 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:14 pm to
Posted by SaintInBham
Birmingham
Member since Sep 2015
1066 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:20 pm to
So at some point you have to assess the ROI on coaches salaries. In the world of NIL, we could be getting to a tipping point where paying a tier 2 coach and investing the rest of the money in the roster will get you a better return than a $15M coach. This is basically the NFL model and college football is heading in that direction.
Posted by lostinbr
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Oct 2017
12527 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:37 pm to
quote:

So at some point you have to assess the ROI on coaches salaries. In the world of NIL, we could be getting to a tipping point where paying a tier 2 coach and investing the rest of the money in the roster will get you a better return than a $15M coach. This is basically the NFL model and college football is heading in that direction.

It’s complicated by the rules around NIL and revenue sharing though.

The revenue sharing portion from the school is capped at $20.5 million for the whole athletic department. The cap will increase by 4% each year for the next two years then will be re-evaluated based on 22% of average power conference athletic revenue. So theoretically the dev share cap should hover around that 22% average.

That means that 78% of your athletic department revenue (assuming your school has average P4 revenue) can’t be used to pay players. For schools like LSU with higher-than-average revenue, the percentage is higher.

On the NIL side it’s obviously a different beast.. boosters can spend their money where they want for the most part. So as long as your coach’s salary is coming from the athletic department’s normal recurring revenue, there’s a limit to how much you can divert to players. As soon as you reach a point where private donors are paying for the coach’s salary (e.g. a buyout scenario) you’re theoretically spending dollars you could have spent on NIL instead.

The big difference in the NFL is that the salary cap is based on 48% of total league revenue, rather than 22%. Also the fact that team owners expect a profit (making that 48% an even higher percentage of total costs) while college athletic departments are non-profit. Of course the flip side is that NFL teams aren’t funding non-revenue sports.

The end result is that the economy of college sports is.. messy. And it’s not quite as straightforward as simply diverting coaching salaries to players.
Posted by jdd48
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2012
23350 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:51 pm to
It's going to be that much no matter who the name actually is.
Posted by davidb104
DeRidder
Member since Jun 2014
179 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:55 pm to
There's a market for the top head coaches. Most have several schools they can pick from. You either pay according to the market, or you settle for less. If you settle for less, you may get lucky; but don't expect to play hardball with a top-level head coach and his agent.
Posted by jmaclsu
Amite, Louisiana
Member since Dec 2007
910 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:57 pm to
I’m Sure selfo at SLU would jump on that in a heartbeat
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