Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Nyon seminar hears firm vow to fight match-fixing


By Mark Chaplin

Nyon seminar hears firm vow to fight match-fixing



UEFA has reiterated its determination to fight against match-fixing in football and has stressed the need for sports bodies and state law enforcement agencies to work closely together to combat the increasing dangers posed by this negative phenomenon in various sports.

The call was made at a keynote conference in Nyon organised by UEFA and the International Association of Prosecutors (IAP)on the theme of Kicking Fraud Out Of Sport. Officials from the IAP, UEFA and world football body FIFA came together with state prosecutors, anti-corruption officers and police officers for two days of deliberations.

The conference centred on fraudulent activity within regulated sporting activities, with special emphasis on match-fixing practices and other criminal activity within football and other sports which are designed to improperly influence the outcome with a view to economic or other gain.

It also examined the relationship between the official regulatory sporting authorities and state prosecutors, as well as the potential partnership opportunities in this respect. The event was considered the start of a process which aims to lead to the creation of guidelines for prosecutors and sporting regulatory authorities in this area of criminality with the backing of UEFA and the IAP.

The IAP, established in 1995, is the sole worldwide prosecutors' organisation. It now has more than 130 organisational members from over 90 different jurisdictions, representing every continent, as well as many individual members. The IAP's objectives include promoting the effective, fair, impartial and efficient prosecution of criminal offences.

Topics discussed in Nyon included prosecution of a match-fixing case, legal frameworks relating to sports frauds, betting issues and cooperation between sports bodies and law enforcement agencies. Among the speakers were UEFA legal officers, prosecutors from several European countries, and representatives from Europol, Eurojust, the Council of Europe and national football associations.

The seminar gave UEFA the chance to repeat the stark warning issued by UEFA President Michel Platini recently that match-fixing represented a mortal danger for sport, as well as UEFA's zero tolerance policy for those caught manipulating matches.

"The fight against match-fixing and corruption is certainly the top priority for UEFA, the UEFA President and the UEFA Executive Committee in the years to come," said UEFA General Secretary Gianni Infantino. "It is our job to protect football, it is our responsibility to do what we can against corruption, to fight against this cancer that we have to eradicate from football.

"It is obvious that if the fans and children have the impression that the result of a match is known before the match starts, then this clearly affects the soul of football or any other sport," he added. "To be able to efficiently fight against match-fixing, we are committed to doing everything we can – but we also need the help of the law enforcement agencies and authorities. We need to work hand in hand, we have to act very strongly and in a united way."

It was underlined at various moments in the seminar that sports bodies do not have legal capacities or powers to tackle the issue by themselves, hence the need for the public authorities to join the sports organisations in the campaign.

"Match-fixing jeopardises the integrity of the competitions, damages the social, educational and cultural values reflected by sports, and jeopardises the economic role of sports," said Pierre Cornu, UEFA's chief counsel for integrity and regulatory affairs. "The risks are increasing," he continued, citing, among other things, the dynamic development of the betting market to incorporate such elements as online gambling, in addition to the involvement of highly organised criminal organisations looking to make huge financial killings.

Highlighting its determination to eliminate the phenomenon, UEFA's Executive Committee approved a report earlier this year by its betting/match-fixing working group, which proposed measures that European football should take to address the threat of match-fixing – including the setting up of a network ofIntegrity Officers at European level.

Moreover, UEFA has established a 24-hour betting fraud detection system (BFDS) which monitors matches across Europe, including all UEFA competition fixtures, as well as all first and second division and national cup games throughout its 53 member associations. Education sessions are also held by UEFA at European youth final tournaments to warn young players in particular of the risks of match-fixing.

The seminar also heard that UEFA's actions against match-fixing included support to the European Union (EU) and Council of Europe, and cooperation with international bodies such as Interpol and Europol, as well as betting operators and other sports organisations.

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

SLC elections postponed by a week


By Sa'adi Thawfeeq

SLC elections postponed by a week


Sri Lanka Cricket's elections scheduled for December 27 have been postponed by one week and will now take place on January 3, 2012.

The Ministry of Sports which is conducting the elections stated on Friday that it was postponing the election to enable the new office-bearers to run their affairs for the full term of one year.

"If we hold elections before December 31st, there should be another election on or before March 31, 2012, according to the Sports Law in the country," Ranjani Jayakody, the Director-General at the Ministry of Sport said. "There's no point having two elections within four months. So we decided to put it off by a few days. If the election is held in 2012, the new officials can run their affairs throughout the year and according to the Sports Law, they can stay in office till March 2013."

Nominations will be called from November 24 and will close on December 9, 2011. Sri Lanka Cricket has been administered by government appointed interim committees since 2004.

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Sports grill is a family game



Sports grill is a family game


Valencia resident Tom Law finally decided he was in good field position to open up his own sports bar and restaurant.

After more than 30 years in the restaurant business, Law "just got to the point in my career when I wanted to do something on my own," said the owner of the new Gameday Sports Grille  Bar. 

The restaurant on The Old Road opened on Oct. 24 with a menu that ranges from typical sports bar fare, such as nachos and burgers, to house specialties, such as Ahi tuna and crispy brie sticks. The lineup is a combination of Law's favorites and what he has seen is successful with customers, he said.

Law has worked at every level of the restaurant business, starting more than 30 years ago, when he "got a job as a busboy and went from there." His previous experience includes chains like TGI Friday's and Damon's Grill & Sports Bar.

It was after living in Valencia for four years that he decided his first independent venture would be an area sports bar and restaurant where people could bring their kids and watch the game.

"This city is a family-focused city, and that's what our concept is about," Law said. "A place where you're safe and comfortable."

Every detail of the 8,550 square-foot restaurant is sports-related, and Law designed the facility himself. The walls are filled with sports memorabilia and the 30 televisions are tuned to games and "SportsCenter." The servers are called coaches. 

Menu items are named after sports terms, like the Personal Fowl, a chicken sandwich. 

And, of course, there's the full bar. But Law says Gameday "isn't a shot and beer joint."

"It's a family food and fun atmosphere," Law said. "Mom can bring the kids after the soccer game."

The business is also run in a family-oriented fashion. Law co-owns it with his wife, Jodi, who left the orthodontic industry to help open Gameday. 

"After this started, we decided we were going to work at this together," Jodi Law said. 

Since it is Tom's first independent project and Jodi's first time in the restaurant business, Jodi said she has been appreciative of the support from the community and the feedback she has received about the need for a sports bar.

"It's very hard work, but the people have been so welcome," Jodi Law said. 

She hopes that the restaurant can work more closely with the Santa Clarita community in the future, and plans to partner with local sports teams for fundraisers and projects.

"It would be great if we could be their destination for those types of things," she said. 


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Monday, November 28, 2011

New Turkish Law on Violence in Sports passes lightning quick




New Turkish Law on Violence in Sports passes lightning quick

A new law passed in the Turkish Grand Assembly regarding violence in sports and minimilazing the penalty for those involved in match-fixing investigations from 7-12 years to 1-3 years very quickly, which drew rubuff from Turks.

Ankara / NationalTurk – The lightning quick passing of the new sports legislation against violent act, which also include reducing penalties in matc-fixing cases has found criticism in the eyes of Turks.

As the investigation nears on Turkey's biggest the match fixing scandal, the rush of politicians to complete the law draft and passing it quickly raised eyebrows. The law draft had been prepared by the union of sports clubs under the flagship of Besiktas chairman Yildirim Demirören. Besiktas trainer Tayfur Havutcu and ex-executive Serdar Adali are among the persons pending the conclusion of match fixing investigation.

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Friday, November 25, 2011

CAS hears Alberto Contador's appeal



CAS hears Alberto Contador's appeal

LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- Sport's highest court completed a four-day hearing into Alberto Contador's doping case on Thursday, and the Spanish rider now must wait until early next year to find out if he will be stripped of his 2010 Tour de France title.

Contador made a final, personal appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport panel to complete his defense that eating contaminated steak caused his positive tests for clenbuterol during his third Tour victory.

"He spoke for about 15 minutes," CAS secretary general Matthieu Reeb told reporters after Contador left the court. "He took the case very seriously. He was present for all of the case and attended all the discussions."

Reeb said the three-man panel would need "six to eight weeks" to reach a verdict and explain its decision.

Contador did not comment as he left court with members of his legal team and got into a waiting taxi.

Lawyers for the International Cycling Union and World Anti-Doping Agency also declined comment.

Cycling's governing body and WADA appealed to CAS for Contador to get a two-year ban after he was cleared by a Spanish cycling federation tribunal last February.

If found guilty of doping, Contador can expect to receive a two-year ban and be stripped of his 2010 Tour win and other victories, including the 2011 Giro d'Italia. He finished fifth when defending his Tour title in July.

Contador was cross-examined Wednesday, according to reports in Spanish newspapers, which published daily updates of evidence presented in the closed-door sessions.

Spanish media also reported that the CAS panel asked for those involved in the case to stop leaking information.

About 20 witnesses were called to testify in sessions held mostly at the International Olympic Committee headquarters in Lausanne.

They included the Spanish butcher who sold the steak to a friend of Contador from his store in Irun; Louis Rovner, an American polygraph expert who performed a lie detector test on Contador; and the rider's former teammates on the Astana squad, Benjamin Noval and Paolo Tiralongo.

Expert witnesses called by WADA and the UCI included Australian scientist Michael Ashenden, who analyzed results from Contador's blood samples, and Hans Geyer from the laboratory in Cologne, Germany, that found the tiny amount of clenbuterol in his urine samples from the Tour.

WADA was expected to argue that the fat-burning, muscle-building drug was reintroduced into Contador's body July 20-21 last year by a blood transfusion, which itself would have been a doping offense.

The decision now rests with three experienced CAS arbitrators: Israeli chairman Efraim Barak, German law professor Ulrich Haas and Geneva-based lawyer Quentin Byrne-Sutton.

Contador's team nominated Haas to the panel. The UCI and WADA nominated Byrne-Sutton and the court appointed Barak.

The CAS verdict could be challenged later at Switzerland's supreme court if any party believes the legal process was abused.

"The Swiss Federal Tribunal can review the decision on procedural and formal issues, but it will not review the merits of the case," Reeb said.

The federal court has sent back three cases to CAS for review in the sports court's 27-year history.


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Thursday, November 24, 2011

MLB To Test For Human Growth Hormone Under New Contract


 By Lee Davis

MLB To Test For Human Growth Hormone Under New Contract

Gregg Clifton Reports in Collegiate and Professional Sports Blog that Major League Baseball (MLB) and its players union have executed a new five year collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that will run through the 2016 season. The highlights of the new CBA include blood testing for Human Growth Hormone (HGH) and a rise in the minimum major league salary from $414,000 to $480,000 in 2012 and $500,000 by the end of the deal. In addition, the pact will expand the current playoff format to 10 teams by 2013 and introduce luxury taxes on both annual draft signings and international free agent signings.
For us that the agreement includes testing for Human Growth Hormone is a small step in the right direction. Added to it that MLB and the players union have actually inked a contract is a positive development given the continuing contract problems with the NBA and previously the NFL.

While the agreement makes MLB the first pro major league in North America to conduct blood tests for human growth hormone with testing to begin in Feruary 2012, testing will only be allowed during spring training and in the offseason. MLB will conduct testing during the season for cases that have reasonable cause. I understand that testing during the season may be hard to sell to the players, but until the testing procedure is frequent, consistent and thorough, the seriousness of MLB to get HGH drugs out of baseball is questionable. The implicit message is,dont get caught using HGH, as opposed to a zero tolerance for positive tests. The penalty will be a 50 game suspension for a positive test. Testing for HGH has been occurring in the minor leagues since 2010 because that could be done without approval of the players union.

What is HGH? HGH boosts lean muscle mass, it aids in recovery and improved stamina, but it is illegal to possess in the United States without a prescription. The NYT reports , Although there is no urine test for H.G.H., Olympic athletes have been blood-tested for the substance for nearly a decade. Within baseball, however, there was skepticism about the test, with some critics pointing to the fact that it was not producing any positives. Meanwhile, evidence emerged that the substance was indeed being used in the sport.

Isnt that what the circus that is known as the Roger Clemens trial was and is all about the persistent use of performance enhancing drugs by Americas superstars and exhaustion by fans and the general public with their use?

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Fwd: London 2012 Olympics: stadium row costs taxpayer £1.3million in legal fees







London 2012 Olympics: stadium row costs taxpayer £1.3million in legal fees

The Olympic Park Legacy Company spent almost £1.3million defending judicial review claims from Tottenham Hotspur and Leyton Orient, more than its legal fees for the entire original bid process, Telegraph Sport can reveal.


The legal bills were racked up defending the decision to award West Ham preferred tenant status on the stadium, which was challenged byTottenham and Orient on the grounds that a £40million loan from Newham breached European state aid rules.

The OPLC walked away from the challenge last month when abandoning the original deal with West Ham, but not before spending almost £650,000 on solicitors fees and a further £620,000 on barristers, both of which will be paid by the taxpayer.

The figures, released following a Freedom of Information request, exceed the total legal bill of £910,000 for the 14-month bid and negotiation process that ended last month.

The OPLC has also disclosed that its chief executive, Andrew Altman, tried on five occasions to persuade Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy to abandon the judicial review. They met in person once in August and spoke on the phone four further times that month and in September.

Altman and Levy discussed the terms of a possible settlement but were unable to agree.


This month, OPLC chairman Baroness Ford accused Tottenham of ordering surveillance of the board, a claim the club deny. Police are probing allegations that private investigators hired by Tottenham illegally accessed telephone and bank records of OPLC and West Ham directors during the bidding process. Tottenham also deny that.

Two men have been arrested on suspicion of fraud in relation to the allegations. The OPLC revealed that emails between West Ham deputy chairman Karren Brady and Altman have been seized by police as part of the investigation.

Pub landlady verdict to decide League's TV demands

The fallout from pub landlady Karen Murphy's legal challenge to the Premier League's broadcast rules will continue on Dec 16 in the High Court when Mr Justice Kitchin will deliver his verdict on her appeal against illegally showing live games using a Greek satellite decoder.

Murphy is certain to be acquitted after the European Court of Justice ruled the basis of her conviction breached European law, but the key issue for the league will be what, if any, interpretation the judge offers of the ECJ ruling. This will help set the direction of the next TV rights tender, which is likely to go to broadcasters in spring or early summer. The main issue to be resolved is whether the league will need a pan-European deal.

TV rivals agree Euro 2012 deal

The BBC and ITV are close to sealing final deals with Uefa for Euro 2012 after agreeing a formula for how live coverage of England's matches will be shared.

The issue has caused acrimonious debate in the past, but the broadcasters have reached a compromise that will allow them to announce schedules after next week's draw.

Both broadcasters have been trying to ensure that they pay no more than the approximate £50million they paid for Euro 2008, for which England did not qualify, arguing that the depressed economic climate, which has contributed to falling advertising revenue for ITV and the BBC's licence-fee cut, limits their ability to pay. As the tournament is covered by listed events legislation, Sky and other pay-TV providers are unable to provide competition.

Meanwhile, the BBC's new four-year deal to show Six Nations rugby, revealed here in July, is expected to be confirmed on Wednesday. The deal, which will start in 2014, is seen as crucial to the corporation's sports offering. It was secured for a reported £40million a year after the BBC suspected genuine competition from Sky to retake the rights.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

NBA lockout costs Chicago agent, but he says it's worth it



NBA lockout costs Chicago agent, but he says it's worth it

Mark Bartelstein always talks about how he loves his job. What's not to love? His Chicago company, Priority Sports & Entertainment, is the second-largest independently owned athlete-representation firm in the country.

I've been with Mr. Bartelstein when his cell phone interrupts our conversation. Often, his caller ID tells him it's one of his athletes who wants to talk to him now.

"The joys of being an agent," Mr. Bartelstein says, excusing himself.

The joys, though, have all but disappeared for Mr. Bartelstein during the NBA lockout. His firm represents 45 NBA players, including Danny Granger, David Lee and the Bulls' Taj Gibson. He works with another 45 players in Europe.

Mr. Bartelstein still is constantly on the phone, updating and advising his players. Yet it's hardly business as usual, especially when it comes to getting paid. No paychecks for the players mean zero commissions for Mr. Bartelstein and his fellow agents, who typically get 3% to 5% on team contracts.

"Not fun," Mr. Bartelstein said. "I'm actually working harder than ever — 18-, 19-hour days. There's so much you have to deal with on a daily basis. And to not be getting paid. . . .It's not fun."

The pain intensified last week when those players missed their first paychecks of the season. And it's a hefty check they missed: The average NBA player gets $220,000.

Mr. Bartelstein said that for the past two years, he has advised clients to prepare as if there wasn't going to be a 2011-12 season. Save your money not for just a rainy day, he told them, but the ultimate storm.

But it's one thing to talk about sitting out. It's another to actually do it.

I asked Mr. Bartelstein if his players are getting anxious. "Nobody wants to do this," Mr. Bartelstein said. "You only have so many years to play in this league and to make this kind of money. To give up a half-year or a year is devastating.

"However, just because something is painful, distasteful, doesn't mean you say, 'OK, fine, I'll take this horrible deal.' The owners' strategy was based on the thought the players will cave when they start losing money. That's what they were banking on. The players are showing a terrific resolve here. They understand what they have to do."

Mr. Bartelstein is among the high-profile agents who think the players have gone far enough in making concessions to the owners. The players have agreed to a 50-50 split of basketball-related income, down from their share of 57%. But they are drawing the line on owners' proposals that would limit free agents.

Mr. Bartelstein thinks the NBA Players Assn. had no other choice but to disband the union, which will send the dispute to the courts.

"It got to the point where the union made incredible concessions to the owners and it still wasn't good enough," Mr. Bartelstein said. "They're giving them in excess of $300 million per year, more money than they ever dreamed of giving. Fine, if you're going to give all that, they still should have freedom of choice (regarding free agents).

"(The owners') argument about competitive balance doesn't hold water. That can be taken care of through revenue sharing. You see how it works for the NFL. The owners got greedy and wanted both sides. The players got the point where enough is enough."

Now it seems as if the players and the owners are on a collision course that ends in disaster. The league already has canceled games through Dec. 15. The odds of the entire season being canceled rise with each passing day.

Mr. Bartelstein still has a hard time believing the owners will allow the doomsday scenario to occur.

"My goodness, hopefully somebody from management will wake up and say, 'How can we cancel the season when we got all these concessions from the players?' " Mr. Bartelstein said. "When the owners want to make a deal, a deal will get done."

Until then, Mr. Bartelstein will continue to work the phones, urging his players to stay the course.



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Monday, November 21, 2011

2012 United States GP could be cancelled

The 2012 US Grand Prix will be cancelled unless the Texas organizers sign a contract and prove they have the funding by the end of next week, Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone said on Thursday.
Ecclestone wants the dispute with Circuit of the Americas officials in Austin settled before the seas
on-ending Brazilian Grand Prix on Nov. 27.

"It's all very simple" they don't have the money," Ecclestone told The Associated Press. "We don't have a contract. If they want to come back to us, if it's not signed before the end of next week, I suppose it won't be on the calendar next year."

Ecclestone wants a guarantee that he will be paid. "We have been working on this now for quite a few months and years so we can't do any more," Ecclestone said. "We have a World Motor Sport Council meeting on the 7th of December and we need to prepare everything before that."

Circuit of the Americas indicated that it was looking at staging the race from 2013.

"We have been excited for and working towards a 2012 USGP race and now understand that Mr. Ecclestone is interested in moving the Austin race to 2013," Circuit of The Americas president Steve Sexton said. "We know the US market is important to the teams and their sponsors and 2013 certainly allows time for the Circuit of The Americas to be ready."

The dispute has been caused by F1's decision to scrap a previous contract it had with Tavo Hellmund, a former race driver with long family ties to Ecclestone who was originally granted the right to stage the U.S. Grand Prix. The deal with Hellmund was recently cancelled over a contract breach, and F1 officials have been negotiating with the track developers.

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Salaries for college football coaches back on rise


By Erik Brady, Jodi Upton and Steve Berkowitz, USA TODAY

Salaries for college football coaches back on rise


Jimbo Fisher got a raise of roughly $950,000 after last season, his first as head football coach at Florida State, boosting his pay to about $2.8 million. So, at a time of tightening budgets, how does a public employee get a 50% raise of nearly $1 million after one year on the job?

"You're always looking at whether or not you have the potential to lose a good coach and end up having to pay more in order to get the next one," Florida State President Eric Barron says.

That sort of inflationary reasoning is a factor in the rapid rise in salaries of major-college head football coaches. An analysis by USA TODAY found that in 2006 the average pay for major-college coaches was $950,000 — coincidentally, about the amount of Fisher's raise after last season.

The average compensation in 2011 is $1.47 million, a jump of nearly 55% in six seasons.

In the six conferences with automatic Bowl Championship Series bids, the average salary rose from $1.4 million in 2006 to $2.125 million in 2011. That's a jump of about 52% — meaning salaries at schools in the other five major conferences are going up at roughly the same rate as they are at higher-profile schools.

"The hell with gold," higher education lawyer Sheldon Steinbach says. "I want to buy futures in coaches' contracts."

Critics find it troubling that this rapid rise for coaches comes at a time when instructional spending at many schools has slowed or declined amid economic struggles and shrinking state education budgets.

"Athletics has gotten so disproportionate to the rest of the economy, and to the academic community, that it is unbelievable," says Julian Spallholz, a professor in the department of food and nutrition at Texas Tech, where coach Tommy Tuberville got a $550,000 raise. "This kind of disproportion in the country is why people are occupying Wall Street."

This season, at least 64 coaches are making more than $1 million. Of those, 32 are being paid more than $2 million, nine are making more than $3 million, and three are making more than $4 million. Texas' Mack Brown tops the list; he's being paid more than $5 million. The analysis is based on contracts or other documents showing compensation from 110 of the 120 schools in the NCAA's top-tier Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS).

Average pay for major-college head coaches rose 7.3% from 2010. Average pay for those coaches was flat the year before, the only time there was no increase since USA TODAY began these analyses in 2006.

Gene Chizik's $1.4 million raise was this season's biggest, but he led Auburn to the national championship last season. Fisher's Seminoles didn't achieve as much, winning an Atlantic Coast Conference division championship before losing to Virginia Tech in theACC title game and beating South Carolina in the Chick-fil-A Bowl.

Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen got this season's second-biggest raise — $1 million. Mullen earned $1.2 million in his first season at the school in 2009, got a $300,000 raise for his second year, and the latest raise jumps his pay to $2.5 million. Last season, he led the Bulldogs to a 9-4 record, their best since 1999, and a victory against Michigan in the Gator Bowl. He also was mentioned as a candidate for head-coaching vacancies at Miami (Fla.) and Florida.

"It's all market-driven," Mississippi State athletics director Scott Stricklin says. "When we hired Dan, we paid him $600,000 less than our previous coach … with the understanding that you know when you do that, you're saving money today but if he's successful you're going to catch him up to where the market is."  

Mullen moves up from last in compensation among the 11 public schools in the Southeastern Conference to ninth. The high-price contracts of the SEC, where Chizik's $3.5 million salary ranks fourth, also influenced Fisher's raise.

Barron says Florida State conducted a market analysis and found Fisher's 2010 pay "was in the middle of the ACC pack and low for the SEC" and that he deserved a raise for coaching the Seminoles to a 10-4 finish in his first season after they went 7-6 the year before.

"That is very much the traditionalist argument for raising salaries of coaches," Steinbach says. "And the argument has some merit. That's the way the market functions."

Fisher's raise, this season's third highest, boosts him past the icon he succeeded, Bobby Bowden, who made $2.3 million in 2009, his last season.

Fisher declined to comment on his contract through a spokesman. Athletics directorRandy Spetman also declined to comment other than a two-sentence e-mail statement that said Fisher's package is competitive and no state money is used to pay coaches.

It is common for schools to say that coach pay is pooled largely from TV, media and marketing contracts. But in 2010, only about 20% of FBS athletics departments were able to pay all their bills without help from university or state funds or student fees, according to a USA TODAY analysis of universities' financial records.

Chizik, Mullen and Fisher weren't the only coaches to receive big raises. About one-quarter of the 82 public schools that retained their coaches after last season gave raises of $200,000 or more; some of those raises were built into contracts that remained unchanged. However, nine schools provided boosts of $500,000 or more to incumbent coaches via new, or amended, contracts.

The 7.3% increase in the average pay for this season would have been more than 10% if such highly paid, high-profile coaches as Jim Tressel at Ohio State, Butch Davis at North Carolina and Urban Meyer at Florida had stayed in their former jobs and retained their former salaries, rather than leaving unexpectedly. (Tressel and Davis exited amid NCAA investigations; Meyer left on his own.)

Tressel made $3.9 million last season; his successor, Luke Fickell, is making $775,000 on an eight-month contract. That works out to $1.162 million on an annualized rate, the smallest number for an Ohio State football coach since Tressel earned $1,095,750 in guaranteed compensation in the 2003-04 contract year, according to Tom McGinnis, OSU's assistant athletics director of administration and human resources.

Fickell's annualized rate is slightly less than what Indiana is paying first-year coach Kevin Wilson and it's more than what Purdue guarantees third-year coach Danny Hope.

Ohio State athletics director Gene Smith declined to comment. "Considering my coach situation, I am not interviewing on these topics," he said by e-mail.

Reaction from faculty

Richard Lapchick is a social critic and coach's son who is director of the DeVos Sport Business Management program at the University of Central Florida.

"When you see the continuing escalation of coaches' salaries, I think the typical person has resentment about that," Lapchick says. "Misery is not the right word, but the lack of economic progress for most people, or the regression from where they were, makes it doubly frustrating when they see these kinds of salaries.

"I'm teaching in the Florida system. So, while I feel fairly compensated, I know there are a lot of faculty members who haven't really seen raises, or had tiny ones the last couple of years, who like everybody else are frustrated by what's going on."

Even so, there hasn't been much faculty criticism of Fisher's raise on the Florida State campus. "I have not heard any talk about the football coach's contract," says Sandra Lewis, president of FSU's faculty senate.

Spallholz was among some members of the faculty senate at Texas Tech who questioned Tuberville's $550,000 raise to $2.059 million last winter after going 8-5 in his first season, including 3-5 in the Big 12."When this came out I stood up and said if I were Tommy Tuberville, I would be very embarrassed to accept such an increase, given the fact the faculty and staff had received nothing," says Spallholz, a former member at large of the faculty senate.

Florida State pays football coaches' salaries out of funds raised by its booster club. Even so, taxpayer money is affected at least indirectly. Federal tax subsidies are involved, as are state corporate tax subsidies since the university, athletics department and booster club are exempt from the state's corporate tax structure. (State subsidies for individual returns are not involved as there is no state income tax in Florida.)"That's not any different than any other philanthropic contribution, as far as I can tell," FSU's Barron says.

For all of the TV money that flows to athletics departments in the best-known conferences, only 22 athletics departments are self-supporting, according to the USA TODAY analysis. The majority get subsidies from the university, often through student fees."The students pay more tuition, the faculty pay by not having a pay increase, and the football coach gets a half-million-dollar raise," Spallholz says. "And this goes on in a lot of other places, not just here

"I think it speaks for itself, doesn't it? It says football is much more important on a lot of campuses than academics."

'It's a highly valued position'

The $525,000 pay raise for Utah coach Kyle Whittingham was as simple as Utah's move from the Mountain West Conference to the Pacific-12."We felt that as we made that move, we had to take people who do a good job and get them at least somewhat in the middle of the league," athletics director Chris Hill says.

Whittingham's compensation of $1.7 million is now fourth highest of the 10 public universities in the Pac-12, and Lane Kiffin at Southern California, a private school, almost certainly makes more.

Hill says Whittingham's raise is not really as large as it appears, because he says about $200,000 comes from an existing apparel deal that was outside his contract and now is included.Hill makes $400,000, meaning Whittingham makes more than four times as much as the man he works for. Hill says that's fine by him.

"It happens in a lot of professions," Hill says. "The person who runs the hospital doesn't make as much as a top surgeon. And a top salesman often makes more than somebody else. I accept that as it's just the way it is."

As does Stricklin, the Mississippi State athletics director.

"All of us are paid based on what our value is within the context of the job we do," he says. "You can make a lot of comments about society and what football coaches get paid, but the fact of the matter is it's a highly valued position. … College football coaches, especially in the South, are some of the most high-profile citizens in each of our states."

Until recent days, Joe Paterno was among the most revered citizens in Pennsylvania. Critics suggest his larger-than-life legend contributed to an atmosphere in which his program could seem to function above the law. One consequence of football coaches who make more money than the athletics directors and presidents they nominally answer to is that the coaches can come to seem more important than their bosses.

"In the case of Joe Paterno, I don't think money was as much of a factor" in the mythology that grew around him "as his longevity and the reputation he built, partly as a philanthropist," Lapchick says. "But I do think coaches' salaries can play a role in distancing them from those they report to.

"Barron, the Florida State president, says he makes $400,000 and got a bonus last year that raised his pay to $500,000. Fisher, of course, made almost two times that much in his raise alone.

What's it like to be the boss of a football coach who makes more than five times what the president does?

"I suppose it would be easy to sit there and think about that on a personal level, which is kind of the way that you've asked the question," Barron says. "I'm frequently amazed at what coaches get. … And then I Google the number of news stories about any university in the country and I realize that the top 20 stories for any university will all be about athletics. And that one mention of conference realignment will put 3,000 news stories out there."You can get a Nobel Prize at your university and you won't get anywhere near that attention. And so I think between the public and the media, they are telling us what they value."

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