Florida State head coach Mike Norvell is handing $4.5 million back to the school as part of a one-year contract restructure, the school announced on Monday.
Norvell released a statement on the decision:
I presented this to our administration in an effort to boost the support of our student-athletes while recognizing that the results and expectations need to be upheld to the highest level. I wanted to be proactive in my financial assistance through this time of transition as we all push forward to get back to the standard of Florida State football. Great days are ahead, and I'm grateful to coach these players and lead this staff. We have been hard at work to uphold the tradition here at Florida State, and I believe this step will help accelerate the process to where I know we are going.
Yahoo Sports' Ross Dellenger first reported the details:
The contribution is part of the school's new Vision of Excellence campaign intended to raise money as schools gear up to share revenue directly with athletes under the new House settlement agreement. The settlement permits each school in Division I to share at least $20.5 million with their athletes starting on July 1.
That's nearly half of Norvell's yearly salary. At $10 million, he's the sixth-highest-paid coach in the FBS among the schools with publicly available data, per USA Today.
Even more so than with the advent of the transfer portal and NIL, revenue sharing in college sports will be a paradigm-shifting development. For those at the top of the pyramid, raising the funds and finding the optimal way to distribute cash is imperative toward maintaining a competitive edge.
Having head coaches devote a portion of their salary for revenue sharing could become a regular feature. Beyond being a quick way to boost the spending pool, it can make a coach look like a more player-first leader if the cash is being funneled directly back into the roster.
In Norvell's case, it's probably not a coincidence that this also is coming after a bitterly disappointing 2024 season.
Florida State went from 13-0 in the 2023 regular season to finishing 2-10. A year on from being the toast of Tallahassee, Norvell could be plausibly coaching for his job in 2025. Hiring Gus Malzahn as offensive coordinator was a sign of the general urgency around the team.
The decline had an impact on the Seminoles' recruiting as well. They sit 20th in 247Sports' composite team rankings for 2025, which isn't too bad all things considered, but they had nine 4-star prospects decommit during this cycle.
Monday's news is some good PR when Florida State needs it and makes for a great sales pitch for Norvell.
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