Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WHAT NEW CONTRACTS

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will potentiall­y cost schools.

tickets. Donors currently get to deduct 80 percent of those contributi­ons. Without the tax break, giving could plummet.

In its most recent survey, USA Today found 78 football coaches and 41 men’s basketball coaches making $1 million or more, topped by Nick Saban’s $11.1 million salary at Alabama. If the tax proposal does become law, Alabama would face a $2.24 million tax bill every year.

“Right now, there’s so much uncertaint­y,” Alabama Athletic Director Greg Byrne told The Associated Press. “All we know is, it’s going to have an impact.”

Many schools are taking a similar wait-and-see approach, at most doing some preliminar­y number-crunching about the potential impact on their budgets. In the meantime, coaches continue to get eye-popping contracts. Twelve Power Five schools hired new coaches this year — including Mississipp­i, which gave a four-year deal to interim coach Matt Luke — and the lowest annual salary among that crop is $1.9 million.

Eight of the 12 schools, including the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le, are paying their new coaches less than their predecesso­rs. But most of those who are making less are either first-time head coaches or have thinner resumes than the men they replaced. For highly coveted coaches, salaries continue to grow.

Willie Taggart, for example, will make $5 million annually at Florida State, which is $700,000 less than Fisher made before he left for Texas A&M. That still makes Taggart one of the dozen highest-paid coaches in the country.

Texas A&M stressed that no public funds will be used to pay Fisher’s salary. But the tax bill doesn’t make any distinctio­ns about where the money comes from.

Tom McMillen, a former Democratic congressma­n from Maryland who is now the CEO of the Lead1 Associatio­n, which represents Division 1 athletic directors, doesn’t expect the new tax to drive down salaries. they “Certainly have to choose our schools, between if a great football team and getting a coach that’s going to deliver that and making cuts elsewhere, they’re probably going to make cuts elsewhere,” McMillen said. The hit on universiti­es from getting rid of the season-ticket tax deduction and adding the salary tax will be in the hundreds of millions of dollars annually, McMillen said, and he believes Olympic sports subsidized by football and basketball revenue likely will be affected the most. But John Colombo, a University of Illinois law professor who has studied the economics of college sports, said cuts to other programs “would have to be done on the sly” to avoid an outcry from faculty. He said schools most likely would raise ticket prices or hit up their donors, arguing that more money is necessary “to stay competitiv­e.” “The way to deal with football coaches’ salaries is to turn college athletics back into an amateur sport played by real students on the side, not a minor league for the pros,” Colombo wrote in an email. “Maybe Congress ought to spend some time thinking about how to make that happen instead of adopting indiscrimi­nate policies that make no sense at all.”

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