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In March 2024, Dannen was named the seventeenth full-time athletic director at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. [11] His six-year contract paid an initial base salary of $1.6 million with an annual increase of $100,000. [ 1 ]
Alberts' annual base salary will go from $800,000 to $1.7 million and increase to $2.1 million in 2026, according to a news release from the university. ... Nebraska athletic director Trev Alberts ...
Resigned to become athletic director at Indiana: 9 Tippy Dye: 1962–1967 Resigned to become athletic director at Northwestern: 10 Bob Devaney: 1967–1992 Retired 11 Bill Byrne: 1992–2002 [h] Resigned to become athletic director at Texas A&M: 12 Steve Pederson: 2003–2007 Fired 13 Tom Osborne [13] [14] 2007–2013 [i] Retired 14 Shawn ...
Devaney's Nebraska Cornhuskers won consecutive national championships in 1970 and 1971 and three consecutive Orange Bowls. Devaney also served as the athletic director at Nebraska from 1967 to 1993, and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1981.
A favorite has reportedly emerged for the soon-to-be vacant Nebraska Cornhuskers athletic director job. Nebraska athletic director Bill Moos announced earlier this week that he will retire. Moos ...
Trev Kendall Alberts [1] (born August 8, 1970) is an American sports administrator and former professional football player who is the athletic director at Texas A&M University. He played professionally as a linebacker for the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League (NFL).
The announcement came as a surprise because the 70-year-old Moos has said publicly he wanted to stay in the job until he was comfortable the Cornhuskers football program had been turned around.
The twenty-four-year-old Stiehm – nicknamed "Jumbo" because of his large feet, a term he despised – was given an annual salary of $2,000 to serve as head football coach and director of athletics, the same as Booth's salary five years earlier but less than the $3,000 his predecessor earned for a less-demanding role.