Times-Call (Longmont)

Contract details for Coach Prime’s assistants

- By Brian Howell bhowell@prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

With five new coaches on staff and another in a new position, the Colorado football program will have the largest assistant coach salary pool in its history this season.

The 10 full-time assistant coaches will make a combined $4.65 million in base and supplement­al salary, per contract details obtained by Buffzone. That’s slightly higher than the previous record of $4.59 million last year, although less than what it would have been had the 2023 staff stayed intact for this year.

After head coach Deion Sanders assembled his first staff a year ago, that group was slated to make $4.925 million in 2024. Staff changes, however, have led to that number coming in a bit lower, but still a record high.

Changes included new coordinato­rs Pat Shurmur (offense) and Robert Livingston (defense) being hired this offseason.

Shurmur signed a two-year deal worth $1.65 million. He will be paid $800,000 this year and $850,000 in 2025. He replaces Sean Lewis, who left CU in December to become the head coach at San Diego State. Lewis was slated to make $900,000 this year had he stayed.

Livingston signed a two-year contract worth $1.795 million. He is slated to make $800,000 this year and $995,000 in 2025, which would be a single-season record high for a CU assistant. The current record is the $850,000 salaries of Lewis and former defensive coordinato­r Charles Kelly last season. Kelly, like Lewis, was slated to make $900,000 this year, but left CU to become the co-coordinato­r at Auburn.

New receivers coach Jason Phillips signed a two-year deal that will pay him $315,000 this year and $340,000 in 2025. It’s a similar deal that previous receivers coach Brett Bartolone signed a year ago. Bartolone, meanwhile, has shifted to become the tight ends coach and his contract was amended, giving him a $60,000 raise to $400,000 for this year.

Vincent Dancy, who was an analyst last year with the Buffs, was promoted to the role of outside linebacker­s coach. With that, he signed a two-year contract that will pay him $350,000 this year and $375,000 in 2025. That’s a similar deal to what his predecesso­r, Nick Williams, signed a year ago. Williams has since left for a job at Syracuse.

Phil Loadholt, the new offensive line coach, signed a one-year contract worth $325,000. He is replacing Bill O’boyle, who left the Buffs originally to join Lewis at

SDSU, but ultimately took a job at Northweste­rn last month.

Four returning assistants, Gary Harrell (running backs), Andre Hart (linebacker­s), Kevin Mathis (cornerback­s) and Sal Sunseri (defensive line) are going into their final seasons of two-year deals signed a year ago. Harrell, Hart and Mathis are getting $25,000 salary bumps from last year, with each slated to make $425,000. Sunseri is set to receive a $60,000 bump to $385,000.

Until recently, the CU board of regents had to approve all contracts valued at more than $250,000 annually. Due to a policy change in 2022, however, only contracts valued at $1 million or more need to go the board for approval.

In addition to paying a bit less for the staff this year than originally expected, CU will receive a total of about $475,000 from four coaches who left the program for other opportunit­ies and terminated their contracts early: Kelly ($212,500), former tight ends coach Tim Brewster ($100,000), Williams ($87,500) and Bill O’boyle ($75,000).

Because Lewis left for a head coaching opportunit­y, he does not owe anything to CU.

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