Current:Home > reviewsIndiana football coach Curt Cignetti's contract will pay him at least $27 million -TradeGrid
Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti's contract will pay him at least $27 million
View
Date:2025-04-15 23:12:20
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Curt Cignetti’s initial contract at Indiana will pay him at least $27 million, not including bonuses and incentives, across six seasons in Bloomington.
It is also heavily incentivized.
Details of the deal, which IndyStar confirmed via a memorandum of understanding obtained through a records request, include $500,000 in base salary, plus a $250,000 retention bonus paid annually on Nov. 30, beginning in 2024. Cignetti will also make between $3.5 million and $4 million in annual outside marketing and promotional income (OMPI), a blanket term for all non-base and bonus-guaranteed compensation. Cignetti will make $3.5 million across the first year of his deal, with that number rising by $100,000 each year for six years.
Indiana will, as previously reported, handle the buyout connected to Cignetti’s latest contract at James Madison, a figure understood to be around $1.2 million.
The MOU also includes a series of relatively obtainable and lucrative bonuses. If, for example, Cignetti reaches a bowl game, he will not only trigger an automatic one-year contract extension, but he will also receive an extra $250,000 in OMPI — effectively a quarter million-dollar raise — as well. Such an event would also require Indiana to add an extra $500,000 to his pool for the hiring of assistant coaches.
Cignetti’s incentives run deeper, and in particular emphasize competitiveness in an increasingly difficult Big Ten.
That $250,000 increase in OMPI in the event Cignetti leads the Hoosiers to a bowl would become permanently installed into his annual guaranteed compensation. He would also receive a one-time $200,000 bonus for reaching the bowl, and another $50,000 should Indiana win that game.
Indiana hasn’t won a bowl game since 1991.
If Cignetti wins five conference games in a season, he will be entitled to an extra $100,000. That number rises to $150,000 if he wins six league games. Those bonuses are non-cumulative, meaning he would just be paid the highest resulting number.
A top-six Big Ten finish would net Cignetti $250,000, while a second-place finish would add half a million dollars to his total compensation that year.
Winning a Big Ten championship would net Cignetti a $1 million bonus.
College Football Playoff appearances would be even more lucrative. A first-round appearance in the newly expanded 12-team Playoff would carry a $500,000 bonus, while quarterfinal and semifinal appearances would pay $600,000 and $700,000, respectively. Cignetti would be owed $1 million for finishing as CFP runner-up, and $2 million for winning a national championship. Those are also non-cumulative.
The total guaranteed value of the deal, assuming retention bonuses, is $27 million.
The university’s buyout obligation is cleaner than that of Tom Allen, Cignetti’s predecessor.
If Indiana wanted to terminate Cignetti before Dec. 1, 2024, it would own him $20 million. That number falls by $3 million each year thereafter, always on Dec. 1. IU would owe Cignetti that money paid in equal monthly installments across the life of the contract.
Were Cignetti to resign from his position before the end of his contract, he would owe Indiana a continuously decreasing amount of money in the contract’s lifespan:
>> $8 million until Dec. 1, 2024.
>> $6 million the year after.
>> $4 million the year after.
>> $2 million the year after.
>> $1 million the year after.
>> $1 million until the conclusion of the contract, on Nov. 30, 2029.
The reset date for that buyout number is also Dec. 1, annually.
In his last fully reported season at James Madison, Cignetti made $677,311, including bonuses. Before he accepted the Indiana job, JMU offered Cignetti an improved contract that in his words would have been more than enough to live comfortably and retire coaching the Dukes.
Cignetti would also be in line for $50,000 if ever named Big Ten coach of the year, and $100,000 if named national coach of the year. He will also enjoy a variety of standard benefits, including a courtesy car, unlimited family use of the university’s Pfau Golf Course, extensive access to tickets for football and men’s basketball games and “sole ownership of youth camps (Cignetti) choose(s) to operate, including retention of all net proceeds generated by those camps.” Cignetti would be required to rent any university facilities used in that case.
veryGood! (322)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Closing arguments begin in civil trial over ‘Trump Train’ encounter with Biden-Harris bus in Texas
- Tia Mowry Reveals She Is No Longer Close With Twin Sister Tamera After Divorce
- 1,000-Lb. Sisters' Tammy Slaton Addresses 500-Pound Weight Loss in Motivational Message
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Wisconsin Supreme Court agrees to decide whether Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stays on ballot
- A funeral mass is held for a teen boy killed in a Georgia high school shooting
- Ukrainian President Zelenskyy will visit a Pennsylvania ammunition factory to thank workers
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- 'Marvel at it now:' A’ja Wilson’s greatness on display as Aces pursue WNBA three-peat
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Video showing Sean 'Diddy' Combs being arrested at his hotel is released
- How Demi Moore blew up her comfort zone in new movie 'The Substance'
- Carrie Coon insists she's not famous. 'His Three Daughters' might change that.
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Over 137,000 Lucid beds sold on Amazon, Walmart recalled after injury risks
- Angelina Jolie Reveals She and Daughter Vivienne Got Matching Tattoos
- Sean Diddy Combs' Lawyer Shares Update After Suicide Watch Designation
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Golden Bachelorette Contestant Gil Ramirez Faced Restraining Order Just Days Before Filming
AI is helping shape the 2024 presidential race. But not in the way experts feared
Moment of Sean Diddy Combs' Arrest Revealed in New Video
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
South Carolina to execute Freddie Owens despite questions over guilt. What to know
Meet the 'golden retriever' of pet reptiles, the bearded dragon
Jury awards $116M to the family of a passenger killed in a New York helicopter crash