billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 8:21 amI wasn’t aware that there was more than one stratosphere.

billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 8:21 amI wasn’t aware that there was more than one stratosphere.
FCS Coaches Poll
O Really wrote: ↑Mon Nov 13, 2023 2:21 pmThe $76mill buyout is obscene. Not to say they shouldn't have fired him - I don't care one way or the other. But whoever cut that deal should be sacked and whoever hired those who cut that deal should be sacked.
Not that it's really related, but I wonder if there was something else they could do with $76mill instead of giving to a guy you don't want to work for you. Hmmmm, wonder what it might be.
https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/def ... 110419.jpg
$146M in buyouts owed to fired Power 5 football coaches since '22
Texas A&M's record $76 million contract buyout for fired football coach Jimbo Fisher accounts for more than half of the approximately $146 million Power 5 schools owe to fired head football coaches since the start of the 2022 season, according to publicly available data.
Fisher's buyout is nearly triple the highest known coaching contract buyout at a public school. The previous record was set by Auburn's 2020 buyout of football coach Gus Malzahn, which cost $21.7 million.
According to an ESPN analysis of athletic department financial records and contracts, Power 5 and Group of 5 programs spent more than $533 million in dead money -- owed to coaches who were fired without cause with time left on their contracts -- in the 11-year period from Jan. 1, 2010, to Jan. 31, 2021. That included payments to football coaches and men's and women's basketball coaches and accounted for head and assistant coaches.
$37.2M total at AuburnAlso included in the $146 million owed since the beginning of the 2022 season:
• $15.5 million for Bryan Harsin, fired from Auburn in October 2022....
Deion is 4-6. Vs Nevada and @Hawai'i are his last gasps for a Bowl.• $8.7 million for Karl Dorrell, fired from Colorado in October 2022....
... B. David Ridpath, Ohio University sports business professor and a member of The Drake Group, an organization that lobbies Congress on issues in college athletics, said that despite claims of donors footing the bill for buyouts, "regardless of where the money comes from, all money is state money at a public institution." While he said he understands some severance is needed for coaches fired for performance reasons, it doesn't make sense to pay out their entire contracts for essentially a failure to perform.
Ridpath said the ability of schools to pay these buyouts shows that they can come up with the money to pay athletes, which is a highly debated issue among university leaders, the NCAA, conferences, legislators and athlete advocacy groups.
"I would like to think [the Fisher buyout] would be so outrageous that the Texas public policy groups or state legislators or federal delegation says, 'Hold on a second. Our public institutions should not be doing this,'" Ridpath said. "What I fear is, this is only going to get larger. The only thing that will stem this tide is if the labor is paid," and more money goes to the athletes instead of the coaches.
The $146 million calculation does not include contract money potentially owed to former Michigan State coach Mel Tucker, who was fired for cause in September amid a sexual misconduct investigation, or to former Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald, who was fired following an investigation into hazing allegations. Fitzgerald is suing Northwestern for wrongful termination, and Tucker has said he is preparing to file a similar lawsuit against Michigan State.
Another possible rule change would be to make poor or mediocre team performance a "for cause" reason for firing, thus negating most of the buyouts. If so,O Really wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 2:17 pmNCAA probably has a whole floor of lawyers thinking up funky rules. No reason they can't have one that says maximum pay for any coach, from any and all sources can't exceed X amount. Penalty would be disqualification from coaching any NCAA school and a big ding to the university program.
Did you read my post detailing Tubby’s contract? That’s basically how things were.Vrede too wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 3:30 pmAnother possible rule change would be to make poor or mediocre team performance a "for cause" reason for firing, thus negating most of the buyouts. If so,O Really wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 2:17 pmNCAA probably has a whole floor of lawyers thinking up funky rules. No reason they can't have one that says maximum pay for any coach, from any and all sources can't exceed X amount. Penalty would be disqualification from coaching any NCAA school and a big ding to the university program.
Jimbo Fisher could be ousted for 5-7, 2-6 in 2022 and 6-4, 4-3 in 2023;
Bryan Harsin could be ousted for 6-7, 3-5 in 2021 and 3-5, 1-4 in 2022;
Gus Malzahn could be ousted for 6-4, 6-4 in 2020, maybe. Before that he did pretty good. I'm not sure that his firing was fair nor that any contract would be written to call the ouster "for cause". Arguably, he merited a buyout. This is where O Really's salary cap would come into play.
I missed that part of your post.billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 4:14 pmDid you read my post detailing Tubby’s contract? That’s basically how things were.
His buyout of only 10% of remaining contract wasn’t unusual.
Agreed.Boosters pay the buyouts anyway and 10% is more doable.
I would worry that these 75% and above guarantees could encourage a coach to quit caring. Sort of retiring in place like Harsin did.
If I had performed poorly as an ER RN I couldn't have been fired "for cause"? Maybe I don't understand the legalities of the phrase.
$15.3 million goes a long way in Boise.billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 4:14 pm... I would worry that these 75% and above guarantees could encourage a coach to quit caring. Sort of retiring in place like Harsin did.
Age 47. Up in the air whether he'll ever return to coaching, but he's had feelers out.Bryan Harsin 'thriving' away from football after rocky tenure at Auburn
... Harsin is back home in Boise, Idaho, with his family and a group of close friends, some of whom he went to college with at Boise State. He never sold his house when he made the move to Auburn on Dec. 22, 2020, and when he was fired 22 months later, it was an easy decision to head back....
(blah blah blah life is good for the Harsins)
Gene Chizik is the third.... New Auburn coach Hugh Freeze is the school's third head coach in four seasons. Auburn has fired its past five coaches and paid a total of $44.2 million in buyout money to the past three....
2023 ScheduleEugene C. Chizik Jr. (born December 28, 1961) is an American football coach who is currently the defensive coordinator and Assistant Head Coach for Defense at North Carolina....
Return to North Carolina
After a multi-year hiatus from coaching, Chizik returned to Chapel Hill and was named assistant head coach for defense, following the departure of defensive coordinator Jay Bateman. He replaced Bateman on January 8, 2022. Chizik serves as the de facto defensive coordinator, with the defense utilizing his preferred scheme, despite Charlton Warren and Tommy Thigpen having co-coordinator titles. His 2022 Tar Heel defense finished close to the bottom of the FBS in many statistical categories, ranking 102nd out of 131 teams in total defense. Most notably, in an early-season game against Appalachian State, Chizik's defense allowed forty points and 338 total yards of offense in the fourth quarter alone, though the Tar Heels would hang on to win 63–61.
Last three coaching contracts counting Chizik's buyout.billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 5:48 pm“What else is notable about Freeze’s contract?
If you thought Auburn learned from its last two coaching contracts, think again. Both Gus Malzahn and Bryan Harsin were owed at least 70 percent of their remaining contract, without any offset from another job, totaling around $37 million combined after they were fired. Freeze’s buyout would pay him 75 percent of the remaining contract if fired without cause, also without any offset. The only difference is Freeze’s buyout would be paid in equal monthly installments, while Malzahn and Harsin were owed 50 percent of the buyout within 30 days of being fired.”
I've found a lot of employers don't understand it either. "For cause" oversimplified means that the employee did something that was against known rules, which could include staying out of legal trouble, not bad-mouthing the employer, not doing anything very unethical, trying to bang the Dean's wife, yada. It would also include intentionally tanking the team. But if the employee is making a reasonable effort to do what he understands he's supposed to and gets poor results, that's not "for cause"
Great minds . . . While you were posting:
Thanks. Hence, the right has forced "right to work" and "at will" employment states upon nurses like me and tens of millions of other Americans.O Really wrote: ↑Wed Nov 15, 2023 7:18 pmI've found a lot of employers don't understand it either. "For cause" oversimplified means that the employee did something that was against known rules, which could include staying out of legal trouble, not bad-mouthing the employer, not doing anything very unethical, trying to bang the Dean's wife, yada. It would also include intentionally tanking the team. But if the employee is making a reasonable effort to do what he understands he's supposed to and gets poor results, that's not "for cause" ...
You can believe again!
Northwestern set to give David Braun head-coach title, sources say
Northwestern is set to promote interim football coach David Braun to the permanent head-coaching role, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.
Braun, hired in January as defensive coordinator by former coach Pat Fitzgerald, has led Northwestern to five wins, more than the team's combined win total from the past two seasons (four). He is the first Northwestern coach to win five games in his first season since Walter McCornack in 1903.
North Dakota State won national titles in 2019 and 2021, lost in the Quarterfinals in 2020 and lost in the Championship game in 2022, not bad.... Braun, who grew up near Milwaukee, Wisconsin, had never been a college head coach or worked at an FBS school before Fitzgerald hired him following four seasons as North Dakota State defensive coordinator. The Winona State defensive lineman made stops at his alma mater, UC Davis and Northern Iowa before joining the North Dakota State staff in 2019.
Not bad!He has called defensive plays for Northwestern and seen the unit improve substantially, going from 82nd to 46th in points allowed and from 62nd to 29th in yards allowed. The Wildcats have allowed just 16.8 points per game in their past five games.
The Wildcats could become bowl eligible with a win over Purdue on Saturday or at Illinois on Nov. 25....