August 6, 2009
Meyer gets raise, extension, & thank you notes from Saban, Miles
Florida head coach Urban Meyer inked a six-year contract extension this week, locking the Gators coach in Gainesville at a cool, crisp $4 million per year. The new deal, which runs through the 2014 season, keeps Meyer's $500,000 buyout option unchanged, according to ESPN.
The agreement - which runs roughly until Meyer's youngest, Nate, is finished with school - is a win-win for the coach and the Gators.
"I continue to be very thankful and appreciative for everything the University of Florida and the athletic program has done for me and my family," Meyer said in a statement. "Dr. [Bernie] Machen, Jeremy Foley and the community make this a special place, and I'm honored to be a part of it."
As a condition of the new agreement, Meyer will donate $1 million to the Florida Opportunity Scholars Program, which both he & basketball coach Billy Donovan are promoting to support first-generation, financially disadvantaged students.
The raise puts Meyer into lofty salary territory, as the highest paid coach in the SEC (for now, Saban is said to be renegotiating) and one of just a handful of coaches over the $4 million hurdle (Carroll and Weis are the others, reportedly, and Bob Stoops who earns over $6 million per year with loyalty incentives).
There's no arguing that Meyer is one of the finest coaches in the country. His track record, courtesy of the Miami Herald, speaks for itself.
Meyer is 44-9 at Florida and 14-3 against the Gators' traditional rivals: Tennessee (4-0), Georgia (3-1), Florida State (4-0), LSU (2-2) and Miami (1-0). Florida is 2-0 in the Southeastern Conference Championship Game and 2-0 in BCS National Championship games."I believe that Urban Meyer is the best at what he does," UF president Bernie Machen said by e-mail. "He demands excellence of his players on the field and in the classroom. Not only did the University of Florida win a national championship in January, but all 13 seniors earned degrees and the 2008 football team tied an SEC league record with 37 players named to the SEC academic honor roll."
The lone apparent blemish to Meyer's tenure at Florida is a troublesome string of arrests by his players. Since taking over in 2005, Meyer has seen nearly 30 of his players arrested for a variety of misdemeanors and felonies. Several, including former Gators Ronnie Wilson and Jamar Hornsby and current player Dustin Doe, were arrested more than once.
Meyer's new agreement should help quell the brouhaha created when he called Notre Dame his "dream job" more than once last season. At a charity golf tournament last month, Meyer again said that he was "never" going to Notre Dame.
I stand by what I said last November and still believe that Notre Dame should dump Weis and bring a truck full of money to Meyer's doorstep, but... this deal makes it damn near impossible to lure Meyer away with just money. Urbie is probably the Gator head coach for many, many, many years to come.
Of course, this likely puts Skip Holtz squarely in the sights for the Irish. Sorry, ECU.
But the biggest winners in the wake of Meyer's extension are Alabama's Nick Saban and LSU's Les Miles.
Saban, who is reportedly negotiating a new agreement with Alabama, had a huge bargaining chip thrown into his lap. News of Meyer passing the Crimson Tide coach could vault Saban into the $4.2M/$4.3M range.
For his part, Miles could put himself in line for a huge payday as a condition of his contract with LSU. The coach of the Tigers has language in his agreement that guarantees that he will be the highest paid coach in the SEC by at least $1,000 if he wins the national championship. In other words, raise the crystal ball this year and that $3.76 million paycheck takes a nice fat bump - no extension required.
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