rally wrote:Wufan wrote:rally wrote:I could make a guess, but I don't have an actual number.
Miller was given an extension this year with his base increasing from $350,000.
That's not accurate. He made $350k in calendar year 2011, which was only for a partial year. As I previously mentioned, his first full year in 2012 he made $650k.
To guess, his initial contract likely progressed at roughly $650k-$700k-$750k. He then received a raise/extension last year before the Elite 8 run, which I would guess put him in the $900k-$1M range. Gregory was making roughly $1M/yr before he left for comparison. He was given another raise/extension at the end of this season. Factoring in the Elite 8 run and a couple tourney wins this season, I would conservatively guess it to be in the $1.25M-$1.5M range.
Sorry, but unless you have some evidence of that, those numbers are ridiculous.
According to this link, which relies on USA Today data from the 2014 NCAA season, he made $335,152 going into the tournament in 2014. That's roughly half of what you're claiming he made in 2012:
http://www.cincinnati.com/story/blogs/2 ... s/7215763/Forbes lists the same salary here from 2014:
http://www.forbes.com/pictures/fiei45gh ... of-dayton/His contract was extended following the 2014 tournament, apparently up to $652k, per newer USA Today salary database information. That's the amount you're claiming he made in his first full year, and half to nearly a third of what you're claiming he makes now.
http://sports.usatoday.com/ncaa/salarie ... ball/coachThese salaries also match what the University of Dayton has reported to the federal government, which you can find here:
http://ope.ed.gov/athletics/ ... According to that site, the total combined salaries of ALL Dayton men's athletic head coaches was $548,219 in 2013-14, which is plenty of room for Miller to have been making the $335k shown above, leaving an extra $213k spread among all other men's head coaches. And while Dayton is a private school and, as far as I know, not required to provide that data to the government, why would they willingly provide that optional info only to intentionally falsify it?
I have absolutely no clue where you're getting a "conservative estimate" of $1.5 million, considering that's closing in on three times what every other source I can find shows. He did just receive a contract extension; it is phenomenally unlikely he received a 130% raise within it. A conservative estimate might put him at $800-900k now.
All available data shows his salary as $335k --> $652k --> whatever he just got.