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  • Boise State, Hawkins agree to five-year, $2.6 million contract

    Dec. 7, 2004
    SportsLine.com wire reports

    BOISE, Idaho -- Boise State coach Dan Hawkins signed a five-year, $2.6 million contract extension on Tuesday that could keep him with the Broncos through the 2009 season.

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    "I'm very excited about what we have accomplished and even more excited about what is possible in the future," Hawkins said in a statement.

    The contract will pay Hawkins a base salary of $525,000 per year.

    The deal appears to take another highly desirable coach off the market. Hawkins' name has come up as a possible coaching candidate at places such as Washington, Mississippi and Stanford, and at Florida before Urban Meyer got the Gators job.

    California coach Jeff Tedford, who had been speculated to be a target of Washington's search, also signed a five-year extension on Monday. Louisville's Bobby Petrino, whose agent contacted Ole Miss, released a statement Tuesday saying he planned to stay with the Cardinals.

    Hawkins' new deal is packed with incentives.

    If Boise State wins at least six games, Hawkins would receive a 5 percent raise the following year. Eight or nine wins guarantees a 10 percent raise, while winning 10 or more games would give Hawkins a 15 percent raise.

    Additionally, Hawkins will get 1/12 of his salary if Boise State finishes in the top 25, and he would get an additional $10,000 bonus if the Broncos finish in the top 10.

    The contract also allows Hawkins to receive 1/12 of his salary bonus for a conference championship and a 5 percent bonus for a bowl appearance without a conference championship.

    If Hawkins stays at Boise State until 2008 he will receive a $350,000 bonus and if he stays until the end of the deal 2010 he gets an additional bonus of $150,000. If Hawkins wants to leave Boise State, it will cost him or his new team $850,000 to buy out the contract.

    During Hawkins' four years with Boise State, as head coach, Boise State has won three consecutive Western Athletic Conference championships and compiled a 44-6 record, including a perfect 11-0 this year.

    Since Hawkins took over at Boise State four seasons ago, the Broncos led the country in scoring twice and are second this year. The 10th ranked Broncos will play Dec. 31 in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Tenn., against No. 7 Louisville.

    "I'm looking forward to continuing to grow this program further," he said.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved

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  • DJRamFan
    Hawkins to consider longer stay at Boise State
    by DJRamFan
    Dec. 3, 2004
    SportsLine.com wire reports

    POCATELLO, Idaho -- Boise State coach Dan Hawkins is considering a five-year, $2.6 million offer from the university that could keep him with the school through 2009.

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    The State Board of Education on Thursday approved the new contract offer, which would boost Hawkins' salary more than 30 percent from this year.

    Hawkins, who has led the Broncos to 22 straight victories, said he wouldn't make a decision until Sunday, at the earliest.

    "I need to get back and mull it over and talk with my family and powwow," said Hawkins, who made $50,000 when he joined Boise State as an assistant head coach in 1998.

    The offer, which Hawkins himself helped structure, includes big bonuses and incentives -- but penalties if he left before the end of the deal. If Hawkins stayed for less than the full five years, it would cost him or his new employer $850,000 to end the agreement.


    Dan Hawkins has coached Boise State to 22 consecutive wins.(AP)
    "This is a package that (Hawkins) consented to," Boise State president Bob Kustra said. "We've discussed this with him over the course of the last few days. He knows everything that's in it, and he thought it was a very attractive offer for Boise State to make."

    Hawkins' name has come up as a possible candidate for several high-profile job openings, including Florida, and Washington.

    Hawkins said none of those schools have contacted him and he intends to consider the Boise State offer first.

    During his four years as head coach at Boise State, the Broncos have won three consecutive Western Athletic Conference championships and compiled a 44-6 record.

    Hawkins, 44, signed a deal two years ago that will net him $501,500 this season, including bonuses, if he remains employed at Boise State through March 1, 2005.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
    -12-04-2004, 02:01 PM
  • DJRamFan
    Groh agrees to new five-year contract with Virginia
    by DJRamFan
    Aug. 19, 2005
    CBS SportsLine.com wire reports




    CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- Virginia football coach Al Groh agreed to a new five-year contract Friday that will make his annual compensation $1.7 million, a raise of nearly $1 million over the first contract he signed with the school.

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    Groh went 30-21 in the first four years of his original seven-year deal, which will be superseded by the new contract, school officials said.

    The new deal calls for an annual salary of $240,000 and $1.46 million in compensation for fund-raising responsibilities, radio and television appearances and product endorsements. It also includes possible bonuses if Virginia goes to a bowl game.

    Groh's original seven-year deal included a salary of $200,000 and total compensation of $765,000 annually.

    "Coach Groh has provided strong leadership for the university's football program, and we want to ensure continuity in its future academic and athletic successes," athletic director Craig Littlepage said in a statement released by the school.

    The Cavaliers have won at least eight games and played in a bowl the past three years under Groh, who left after one season as head coach of the New York Jets to return to his alma mater and replace the retiring George Welsh in 2001.

    "In part, this contract also is driven by the view that our program is emerging as a top 20 program under his guidance and has been in contention for the Atlantic Coast Conference title," Littlepage said.

    Virginia opens this season at home against Western Michigan on Sept. 3.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004-2005, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
    -08-19-2005, 02:23 PM
  • DJRamFan
    Virginia Tech offers Beamer raise to more than $2 million
    by DJRamFan
    Aug. 23, 2005
    CBS SportsLine.com wire reports




    BLACKSBURG, Va. -- Virginia Tech has offered football coach Frank Beamer a new contract that would boost his average annual compensation from $1.3 million to more than $2 million for the next seven years.

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    "The university and myself believes that coach Beamer is the one who built this program, and we absolutely want coach Beamer to be here for the very rest of his career," athletic director Jim Weaver said Monday night on the weekly Hokie Hotline radio show.

    He said he hoped the deal could be completed before Virginia Tech's Sept. 4 opener at North Carolina State. The holdup is Beamer's refusal to agree to any new contract that doesn't include raises for each of his nine full-time assistant coaches.

    "That's all I'm looking for," Beamer said Saturday. "I don't need all the other stuff."

    Weaver said Beamer and his agent, Jimmy Sexton of Memphis, Tenn., asked him and other university officials to examine assistant coaches' salaries at other top programs and pay Beamer's aides accordingly. He said that analysis is in progress.

    "I'm not sure when we'll get to the end of the line, but we're committed to getting there," Weaver said.

    Beamer, 58, who is starting his 19th season as Tech's coach, signed his current contract in 2000. At the time, Beamer's salary and the combined $1.1 million being paid to his assistants ranked among the highest in the sport.

    Since then, coaches' salaries have skyrocketed, with several signing deals for $2 million or more annually. Virginia's Al Groh received a new deal last week worth $1.7 million this season and more than $2 million when the contract runs out in six years.

    Compared to other top programs, Tech's assistants are being paid below the norm. Seven schools in the Southeastern Conference paid their assistants an average total of $1.3 million in 2004.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004-2005, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
    -08-24-2005, 07:07 PM
  • DJRamFan
    Louisville's Petrino to make $1M a year in redone contract
    by DJRamFan
    Dec. 21, 2004
    SportsLine.com wire reports

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Louisville coach Bobby Petrino signed a new contract Tuesday that will pay him $1 million a year and a $100,000 bonus if the Cardinals win the national championship.

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    The 43-year-old Petrino was making $550,000 a year under his old contract. The new deal adds a $50,000 bonus if the Cardinals reach the Bowl Championship Series title game and another $50,000 if they win it.

    Louisville will join the Big East next season. The Cardinals were not eligible to automatically qualify for the BCS as members of Conference USA.

    "That's what our goal is," Petrino said of the BCS. "It's certainly something that's out there for us and something we're committed to getting done."

    The No. 7 Cardinals went 10-1 this season, earned the highest ranking in school history and led the nation in points and yards per game. Petrino has been mentioned as a candidate for several major coaching jobs in the past month, but assured members of Louisville's athletics association board Tuesday morning that he was never going anywhere.

    The new contract, like the old one, runs through the 2010 season. Petrino will earn a $1 million bonus if he stays through the 2007 season.

    "I'm looking forward to the upcoming years," he said. "This is the place I want to be, this is the place my family wants to be. We're looking forward to the future."

    Louisville athletic director Tom Jurich still expects Petrino's name to come up when higher-profile jobs open.

    "There are certainly schools out there that have more money than us," Jurich said. "But we're going to do everything in our power to keep everything stabilized here."

    The Cardinals play No. 10 Boise State (11-0) in the Liberty Bowl on Dec. 31.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
    -12-21-2004, 10:20 AM
  • DJRamFan
    Paterno leaves decision to university on salary court ruling
    by DJRamFan
    Aug. 13, 2005
    CBS SportsLine.com wire reports




    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Penn State coach Joe Paterno said Saturday that he will defer to the university on how to respond to a court ruling that would make his salary public record.

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    "Whatever the university wants to do is fine. If you want to release it, release it. If you don't want to release it, don't release it," Paterno said during his preseason news conference at Beaver Stadium.

    A Commonwealth Court panel ruled 3-2 on Friday that the State Employees' Retirement System correctly decided last year that a newspaper reporter could see salary information for Paterno and other high-ranking university officials.

    Jan Murphy of The Patriot-News of Harrisburg had asked for documents that reflect years of service, salary and salary history for Paterno, Penn State's head coach since 1966, as well as three other Penn State administrators.

    The school has said that it will appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court. Spokesman Tysen Kendig said Friday that none of Paterno's salary is funded by taxpayer dollars.

    Penn State is one of the four "state-related" universities in Pennsylvania. Total state aid to Penn State and the three other schools -- Temple, Pittsburgh and Lincoln -- has been about $650 million per year in recent years.

    "I think the university will do what they think is best for the university. As far as I am concerned, that's how I'm going to leave it," Paterno said.

    AP NEWS
    The Associated Press News Service

    Copyright 2004-2005, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
    -08-16-2005, 03:27 PM
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