The University of Minnesota likely made the most expensive coaching decision in its history when it fired Tracy Claeys on Tuesday, and another multimillion dollar commitment comes next.
Board of Regents Chairman Dean Johnson said Wednesday "now's probably the time to notch it up" and pay what it takes to land a top coach.
"We have to make a decision: Are we just going to have a midrange football program, or do we make substantial investments to take us to the next level?" Johnson said.
Johnson said in the current marketplace, the caliber of coach the Gophers seek likely will cost "anything from $2 million to $4 million [per year]."
Claeys was one of the lowest-paid coaches in a major conference this season, making $1.4 million. He had two years and $3.1 million remaining on his contract, but the university instead paid him a $500,000 buyout.
But the university also fired most of Claeys' staff, all except linebackers coach Mike Sherels and safeties coach Dan O'Brien. The salaries for the staff members were guaranteed through next season, so the university could eat an additional $4.5 million fulfilling those 13 contracts.
That's $5 million committed to this transaction already — Claeys' buyout plus the staff guarantees — and they will surely match that amount in hiring a new staff. Big Ten peer Purdue in December committed nearly $7 million to a new staff, giving Western Kentucky coach Jeff Brohm a $3.3 million salary and a $3.5 million budget for hiring his staff, according to the Lafayette Journal & Courier.
Forbes reports the average Big Ten salary last season was $3.52 million.