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Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Study links high pay for college coaches with improved athlete recruitment

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E. Gordon Gee President at West Virginia University | Official website

E. Gordon Gee President at West Virginia University | Official website

West Virginia University research has revealed that college football coaches’ salaries influence the quality of players they can recruit.

“College football coach salaries at big-time programs have increased substantially in recent years,” said Brad Humphreys, professor of economics at the WVU John Chambers College of Business and Economics. “We showed one reason for the increase is that colleges can recruit better athletes when they can offer them great coaches — and great coaches command higher salaries.”

Humphreys and professor Jane Ruseski published their results in the journal Applied Economics.

“For decades, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA, hasn’t allowed colleges or universities to compete for student-athletes on a price basis,” Humphreys explained. “Instead, the NCAA limited athletes’ compensation to the cost of attending college and schools began competing to attract players in non-monetary ways.

“That could mean lavish practice facilities or larger stadiums, or it could mean higher-quality coaches. Our work is the first to show that this non-price-based competition for athletes happened in an industry where no such competition was thought to exist.”

The 2021 Supreme Court decision in NCAA v. Alston allowed student-athletes to begin profiting from opportunities like brand endorsements, but the NCAA still largely restricts colleges to offering players scholarships that cover tuition, room, board and other costs of higher education. Big-time NCAA football and basketball programs bring in major revenues that, since they can’t go toward player compensation, pay the salaries of coaches and administrators.

“High-quality college coaches are better at developing athletes for post-college professional careers,” Humphreys said. “They generate wins, so athletes who play for high-quality coaches get to experience more victories, more championships. We found the bigger a head coach’s salary, the higher that coach’s quality and profile, and the more successful their team’s recruitment efforts.”

Humphreys and Ruseski estimated the effect of head coach salaries on recruiting success for 90 NCAA Division I-A football schools between 2006 and 2015. They used data including player rankings from 247Sports, which measures the quality of different schools’ recruiting classes.

The average score awarded to a recruiting class by 247Sports over the 2006 to 2015 seasons was 172. The researchers discovered that for every $1 million bump in the salary of the head coach, the quality score of the incoming recruiting class jumped by an average of 77 points.

“This is consistent with the presence of an arms race in intercollegiate athletics,” Humphreys said. “In an arms race, firms race to outdo each other not through price wars but through strategies like facilities, equipment, product quality, customer service, personnel. Now NCAA institutions are engaged in an athletics arms race in the form of escalating coaches’ salaries and multimillion-dollar investments in facilities — a rational response to NCAA regulations that limit compensation to athletes.”

The study showed that while top earner Nick Saban brought in more than $7.4 million in 2015 at the University of Alabama; on average head football coach earned $1.8 million per season during this period. However; salaries veered sharply upward over course study emphasized Humphreys.

In 2006; average head football coach sample earned about fourteen times more than full-time faculty member whereas by 2015; this ratio had increased twenty-six times faculty member's salary

Humphreys believes steep rise coach compensation can't be adequately explained "rising tide" revenues earned college football teams

"Our results imply increase head football coach salaries represents strategic interaction among athletic departments as they compete high-quality coaches When one school gives head coach raise competing schools will follow creating upward spiral salaries There policy implications given head football coach state flagship public university often state's highest-paid public employee"

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