Nebraska football assistants cumulatively made the third- or fourth-most money in the Big Ten conference in 2016 according to a USA Today analysis of assistant coach salaries.
NU coaches made $3,758,626 this season, which ranked third behind Ohio State ($4,583,100) and Michigan ($4,308,750). Penn State is shielded by state laws from reporting its salaries, so it's unknown whether the Nittany Lions paid their assistants more or less than Nebraska paid its crew of nine. Northwestern, a private university, also does not report its salaries, but the school is not believed to be salary competitive with the Huskers.
Iowa was just behind Nebraska, paying its assistants $3,610,000 last season.
Several private schools — such as Notre Dame, USC, Baylor, Duke and TCU, among others — do not report salaries. Thus, Nebraska ranks 20th nationally in the analysis — just behind Missouri — but may be lower based on the amounts non-reporting schools pay.
The Huskers get their coordinators — Mark Banker ($580,663) on defense and Danny Langsdorf ($527,875) on offense — at a relative bargain; neither among the top 50 highest-paid assistants in college football, and their combined salaries do not add up to the single salary for Tennessee defensive coordinator Bob Shoop, who made $1,155,000 this season to coordinate a defense that finished 109th nationally in total defense and 73rd nationally in scoring defense.