USA TODAY International Edition

BEING HEAD COACH CAN MEAN LESS MONEY

SPECIAL COLLEGE REPORT ASSISTANT COACHES’ PAY

- Dan Wolken, Steve Berkowitz and Christophe­r Schnaars @DanWolken, @ByBerkowti­z, @chrisschna­ars USA TODAY Sports

Imagine being the athletics director of a school in the Sun Belt, Mid- American Conference or even Conference USA. Your head football coach has just left or been fired, meaning it’s time to go into coaching search mode.

Like any good AD, you’ve been monitoring the landscape, knowing this day could come. You’ve made a list of the brightest young assistant coaches in the country ready for head coaching jobs, and if you get lucky you might become a launching pad for the next Urban Meyer, who got his start at Bowling Green, or Gus Malzahn, who went from Auburn’s offensive coordinato­r to Arkansas State’s head coach.

But the landscape for assistant coaches has changed rapidly, par- ticularly for those who work in the so- called Power Five conference­s. Pay for assistant coaches at top programs has become so good — including multiyear, guaranteed contracts in many cases — that there is often little financial incentive to take jobs at smaller schools where they can prove themselves as head coaches.

As a result, the way ADs at smaller schools approach coaching searches has changed.

It used to be that almost any head coaching job in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n was considered more attractive than a coordinato­r position, but as the financial gap has grown between the Power Five and the so- called Group of Five conference­s — which includes the American Athletic, Conference USA, Mid- American, Mountain West and Sun Belt — teams competing for national championsh­ips have placed significan­t value on coordinato­rs.

The average assistant coaching salary in the Southeaste­rn Conference this year came in just over $ 447,000, a number that eclipses that of 12 FBS head coaches, including Northern Illinois’ Rod Carey and Dino Babers, whose move from Bowling Green to Syracuse became official Saturday.

The salary for all FBS assistant coaches was nearly $ 245,000, according to an analysis by USA TODAY Sports.

Pay for C- USA head coaches averaged $ 628,000 this year, while the Sun Belt’s head coaches averaged $ 542,000. There are 57

Spike in pay for top assistants tempers aspiration­s to be in charge

assistants at public schools in the Power Five conference­s who made more.

As an athletics director at a Group of Five school said, most assistants want to be head coaches but, understand­ably, find it difficult to pass up a guaranteed multiyear contract that can be worth about $ 750,000 annually to be a coordinato­r for a Power Five school. The AD asked not to be identified because he recently went through a coaching search.

Of the 19 head coaching vacancies filled so far during this hiring cycle, 12 have been assistants from Power Five schools. Among those, four were hired by Power Five schools as head coaches and four more were promoted from within.

Only four Power Five assistants have taken head coaching jobs outside the Power Five: Scott Frost ( Oregon offensive coordinato­r to Central Florida), Mike Norvell ( Arizona State offensive coordinato­r to Memphis), Mike Jinks ( Texas Tech associate head coach/ running backs to Bowling Green) and Seth Littrell ( North Carolina assistant head coach/ tight ends to North Texas).

Last year, five Power Five assistants took head coaching jobs outside the Power Five, three of whom landed in the American Athletic Conference ( Houston’s Tom Herman, Tulsa’s Philip Montgomery and Southern Methodist’s Chad Morris). In Morris’ case, it took a financial commitment of $ 2 million a year from SMU to lure him from Clemson, where, as offensive coordinato­r, he made $ 1.3 million.

While schools in the American seemingly have the resources to lure highly paid assistants such as Morris and Norvell ( who was making $ 950,000 at Arizona State), most other Group of Five schools do not.

There’s even been movement the other way: Central Michigan head coach Dan Enos got a $ 190,000 raise last year to leave and become Arkansas’ offensive coordinato­r, while Garrick McGee left a head coaching job at Alabama- Birmingham following the 2013 season to become Louisville’s offensive coordinato­r. After Bill Cubit was fired at Western Michigan in 2012, he landed at Illinois as offensive coordinato­r and saw his salary increase from $ 380,000 to $ 400,000.

The impact of that trend is that college football hiring season has almost separated into two pools. The hottest coordinato­rs are either going to take head coaching jobs in the American or wait for a Power Five gig to open, while schools in other leagues generally have to look at a completely different group of candidates.

One AD said unless a school could pay more than $ 750,000 for a head coach, it would be more likely these days to promote from within or look to a lower division for coaching talent than go grab an assistant out of the Power Five.

Recent examples of that would be Buffalo hiring Lance Leipold last year out of Division III Wisconsin- Whitewater, UNLV hiring a high school coach in Tony Sanchez and Wyoming grabbing Craig Bohl out of Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n power North Dakota State.

Either way, the days of highprofil­e assistants clamoring for any head coaching jobs they can find appear to be over. And everyone in the business of hiring coaches has had to adjust.

 ?? JOHN REED, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? New South Carolina head coach Will Muschamp was the highest- paid assistant this season, making $ 1.6 million at Auburn.
JOHN REED, USA TODAY SPORTS New South Carolina head coach Will Muschamp was the highest- paid assistant this season, making $ 1.6 million at Auburn.
 ?? MARVIN GENTRY, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Kirby Smart made $ 1.5 million as an Alabama assistant in 2015.
MARVIN GENTRY, USA TODAY SPORTS Kirby Smart made $ 1.5 million as an Alabama assistant in 2015.
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