The next time you see a couple of state troopers escorting Les Miles or Nick Saban at an LSU or Alabama football game, don’t get angry that the coach, surrounded by about 100 beefy football players, feels the need for additional protection from fans. It turns out they’re not there to protect the coaches; they’re there to carry their bulging wallets.
Of the highest paid public employees in each state, 40 are college football and basketball coaches who combined, pull in an eye-popping $129.1 million, according to 24/7 Wall Street, a service that provides research in several areas of business, education, economics and politics.
That’s an average of $3.225 million per year.
The remaining 10 highest paid were mostly in academics, including four college presidents, three state medical school professionals, a nursing supervisor, a commissioner of higher education and an associate professor.
Of the 40 coaches, only six—four football coaches and two basketball coaches—are paid less than $1 million a year and one of those, University of Massachusetts basketball coach Derek Kellogg, receives $994,500 per year.
The 28 football coaches make a combined $95.6 million, an average of $3.41 million per year in salary while the 12 basketball coaches combined to make $33.5 million, an average of $2.79 million annually.
The University of Alabama’s Nick Saban had been the highest-paid football coach at $6.95 million but the University of Michigan is paying first-year coach Jim Harbaugh a whopping $7 million a year. LSU’s Les Miles is paid $4.3 million a year.
For the most part, of course, their salaries are not primarily funded by taxpayers. Generally, their paychecks are underwritten by foundations supported by ticket sales and advertising deals. Harbaugh, for example, receives only $500,000 of his $7 million package from the school.
Still, the disparity in the salaries of coaches and typical state employees is enough to rankle some state employees. At Boise State University, for example, both the football and basketball coaches make a more modest salary of $500,000 but that is still more than 10 times the $40,000 or less earned by more than a third of Idaho state employees.
To counter criticism of the high salaries, some college athletic programs point out that successful coaches can bring a university tens of millions of dollars in revenue. Saban is an example of that. Before he was named head coach at ‘Bama, the school’s athletic program brought in $68 million. In 2013-2014, revenue was $153 million.
Still, critics say that athletic programs at the top tier schools like Alabama, constitute a business and coaches should not receive a cent of public funds in salary.
Which may have prompted the fable of a coach’s retort (and we paraphrase here): “I never saw anyone pay to watch a chemistry class.”
Here is the list of each state’s highest paid public employee:
ALABAMA: NICK SABAN FOOTBALL COACH $6.95 M
ALASKA: JAMES JOHNSEN COLLEGE PRES. $325,000
ARIZONA: SEAN MILLER BASKETBALLCOACH $3.07 M
ARKANSAS BRET BIELEMA FOOTBALL COACH $4 M
CALIFORNIA JAMES MORA FOOTBALL COACH $3.35 M
COLORADO MIKE MacINTYRE FOOTBALL COACH $2.01 M
CONNECTICUT KEVIN OLLIE BASKETBALL COACH $3 M
DELAWARE EKEOMA WOGU NURSING SUPERVISOR $236,156
FLORIDA JIMBO FISHER FOOTBALL COACH $5 M
GEORGIA MARK RICHT FOOTBALL COACH $4 M
HAWAII NORM CHOW FOOTBALL COACH $550,000
IDAHO BRYAN HARSIN FOOTBALL COACH $800,000
ILLINOIS JOHN GROCE BASKETBALL COACH $1.7 M
INDIANA TOM CREAN BASKETBALL COACH $3.05 M
IOWA KIRK FERENTZ FOOTBALL COACH $4.08 M
KANSAS BILL SELF BASKETBALL COACH $4.75 M
KENTUCKY JOHN CALIPARI BASKETBALL COACH $6.01 M
LOUISIANA LES MILES FOOTBALL COACH $4.3 M
MAINE SUSAN HUNTER COLLEGE PRESIDENT $250,000
MARYLAND MARK TURGEON BASKETBALL COACH $2.248 M
MASSACHUSETTS DEREK KELLOGG BASKETBALL COACH $994,500
MICHIGAN JIM HARBAUGH FOOTBALL COACH $7 M
MINNESOTA JERRY KILL FOOTBALL COACH $2.5 M
MISSISSIPPI HUGH FREEZE FOOTBALL COACH $4.3 M
MISSOURI GERY PINKEL FOOTBALL COACH $4.02 M
MONTANA CLAY CHRISTIAN COMM. HIGHER ED $351,000
NEBRASKA MIKE RILEY FOOTBALL COACH $2.7 M
NEVADA KAYVAN KHIABANI ASSOC. PROFESSOR $981,475
NEW HAMPSHIRE MARK HUDDLESTON COLLEGE PRES. $333,658
NEW JERSEY KYLE FLOOD FOOTBALL COACH $1.25 M
NEW MEXICO BOB DAVIE FOOTBALL COACH $772,690
NEW YORK SHASHIKANT LELE MED SCH. DEPT. CHAIR $551,000
NORTH CAROLINA MARK GOTTFRIED BASKETBALL COACH $2.06 M
NORTH DAKOTA ROBERT STICCA UNIV. SURGERY CHAIR $758,000
OHIO URBAN MEYER FOOTBALL COACH $5.8 M
OKLAHOMA BOB STOOPS FOOTBALL COACH $5.25 M
OREGON MARK HELFRICH FOOTBALL COACH $3.15 M
PENNSYLVANIA JAMES FRANKLIN FOOTBALL COACH $4.1 M
RHODE ISLAND DAN HURLEY BASKETBALL COACH $627,500
SOUTH CAROLINA STEVE SPURRIER FOOTBALL COACH $4 M
SOUTH DAKOTA MARY NETTLEMAN MED. SCHOOL DEAN $500,000
TENNESSEE BUTCH JONES FOOTBALL COACH $2.96 M
TEXAS CHARLIE STRONG FOOTBALL COACH $5.1 M
UTAH KYLE WHITTINGHAM FOOTBALL COACH $2.6 M
VERMONT TOM SULLIVAN COLLEGE PRES. $429,093
VIRGINIA FRANK BEAMER FOOTBALL COACH $2.42 M
WASHINGTON MIKE LEACH FOOTBALL COACH $2.75 M
WEST VIRGINIA BOB HUGGINS BASKETBALL COACH $3.25 M
WISCONSIN BO RYAN BASKETBALL COACH $2.75 M
WYOMING CRAIG BOHL FOOTBALL COACH $832,000
28 FOOTBALL COACHES: $95.6 MILLION ($3.41 MILLION AVERAGE)
12 BASKETBALL COACHES: $33.5 MILLION ($2.79 MILLION AVERAGE)
50 TOTAL COACHES: $129.1 MILLION ($3.225 MILLION AVERAGE)
10 ACADEMIC, OTHER: $4.72 MILLION ($472,000 AVERAGE)
TOTAL: $133.73 MILLION ($2.67 MILLION)


