The Columbus Dispatch

Assistant coach salary pool hits 8 figures

- Joey Kaufman

The salary pool for the Ohio State football assistant coaches has hit another high.

According to contracts obtained by The Dispatch through a public records request, the Buckeyes’ 10 on-field assistant coaches are set to receive nearly $11.43 million in combined basic compensati­on for this year.

The total marks a significan­t increase from last season when the assistants, not including strength and conditioni­ng coaches, analysts or others who form the vast support staff, made about $9.32 million, a figure that had been the highest among public universiti­es in the nation in 2023.

Since USA TODAY began compiling salary data for assistant coaches in 2009, no public school is known to have dedicated as much toward the salaries for its football assistants as Ohio State has reserved this year.

Though not all schools from the wealthiest conference­s have made available assistant coach salaries for this year, only Georgia has reported even spending eight figures on its assistant coaches, setting aside $10.1 million for its on-field staff. Clemson and Alabama are allocating $9.68 million and $9.43 million, respective­ly.

The latest rise in the salaries of the Buckeyes’ assistants is due in no small part to the hiring of Chip Kelly as offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach.

An innovative offensive mind who revolution­ized college football with an up-tempo spread offense over a decade ago, Kelly stepped down as the head coach at UCLA in February to leave for Ohio State and received a three-year contract that includes annual basic compensati­on of $2 million.

Kelly replaced Corey Dennis, who made $412,000 as the quarterbac­ks coach last season.

Jim Knowles, the veteran defensive coordinato­r who has rebuilt his unit into one of the best in the nation since joining Ohio State’s staff two years ago, remains the highest-paid assistant after receiving a pay raise to bump up his salary to $2.2 million.

The Buckeyes are only the second public school to pay base salaries worth $2 million or more to multiple assistants, following Clemson, which in 2021 paid $2.5 million to defensive coordinato­r Brent Venables and $2.13 million to offensive coordinato­r Tony Elliott.

Kelly’s base salary is scheduled to increase by $100,000 in the following two years of his contract.

His salary is already higher than what Bill O’brien would have been owed had he remained in the same role before taking the head-coaching job at Boston College after three weeks in Columbus. O’brien had been scheduled to receive $1.8 million in basic compensati­on this

year.

Four other Ohio State assistants are making at least seven-figure salaries, a group that includes co-offensive coordinato­r and wide receivers coach Brian Hartline a $1.6 million, defensive line coach and secondary coach Tim Walton at $1.4 million and offensive line coach Justin Frye at $1 million.

The salaries for Johnson and Walton are higher than last season as they made $1.167 million and $1 million, respective­ly.

Carlos Locklyn, who was hired as the running backs coach earlier this month to replace Tony Alford, is due $650,000 in basic compensati­on. Alford, who departed for Michigan, made $772,500 in basic pay a year ago with the Buckeyes.

Among the rest of the staff, safeties coach Matt Guerrieri is at $425,000, tight ends coach Keenan Bailey is at $400,000 and linebacker­s coach James Laurinaiti­s is at $350,000.

Among the returning assistants, Bailey, Frye and Hartline did not see a change in their basic compensati­on.

The salaries for the assistant coaches have soared in recent years.

Not adjusting for inflation, the total payroll for Day’s on-field assistants has increased by 58% percent over the span of his tenure, which began in 2019 when he succeeded Urban Meyer at the helm of the program. The total basic compensati­on owed to the assistants five years ago was $7.25 million.

The staff spending is not limited to base pay.

Under the terms of Kelly’s contract, Ohio State is responsibl­e for paying $1.5 million to UCLA, the sum of his buyout for leaving the school, and related taxable income resulting from the expense.

OSU will also pay $200,000 to Locklyn to help defray his Oregon buyout. He owes the school $366,667, a figure that equated to 50% of his remaining guaranteed salary.

USA TODAY reporter Steve Berkowitz, Athens Banner-herald reporter Marc Weiszer, Greenville News reporter Scott Keepfer and Tuscaloosa News reporter Nick Kelly contribute­d to this report.

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Chip Kelly, who stepped down as the head coach at UCLA in February to leave for Ohio State, received a three-year contract that includes annual basic compensati­on of $2 million.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Chip Kelly, who stepped down as the head coach at UCLA in February to leave for Ohio State, received a three-year contract that includes annual basic compensati­on of $2 million.

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